Ibn Hammad (historian) explained
Ibn Hammad |
Native Name: | ابن حماد |
Native Name Lang: | arabic |
Birth Date: | 1153 |
Birth Place: | Qal'at Bani Hammad |
Death Date: | 1230 |
Death Place: | Marrakesh |
Occupation: | Historian, qadi, scholar |
Era: | Post-classical history |
Notable Works: | - Akhbar Muluk Bani Ubayd
- Al-Nubadh al-Muhtaja fi Akhbar Muluk Sanhaja bi-Ifriqiya wa-Bajaia
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Module: | Embed: | yes | Ism: | Shams al-Dīn | Nasab: | Abu ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn ʿAlī ibn Ḥammād ibn ʿĪsā ibn ʿAbī Bakr al-Ṣanhāj̲ī | Nisbah: | al-Lawātiyy aṭ-Ṭanjiyy | Kunya: | ʾAbū ʿAbd Allāh | Laqab: | Ibn Ḥamād |
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Abu ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn ʿAlī ibn Ḥammād ibn ʿĪsā ibn ʿAbī Bakr al-Ṣanhāj̲ī, known as Ibn Ḥammād or Ibn Ḥamādu (1153/54 - 1230 / AH 548 - 628), was a medieval Berber qadi and historian,[1] [2] author of a chronicle on the Fatimid caliphs in the Maghreb, known as ("account of the kings of the house of Ubaid and their deeds"), written in 1220 / AH 617.He was related to the Banu Hammad and a native of a village near their Qal'a.
Editions
- Histoires des Rois Obaidides, ed. and trans. M. Vanderyheiden, Paris, 1927.
- Akhbar muluk Bani Ubayd wa-siratuhum: Tahlil li-tarikh al-Dawlah al-Fatimiyah min khilal masdar turathi , Dar al-Ulum, 1981,
See also
References
Notes and References
- Jeremy Johns, Arabic Administration in Norman Sicily: The Royal Diwan, (Cambridge University Press, 2002), 265.
- Encyclopedia: 1986. Ibn Ḥamādu. Encyclopaedia of Islam. Brill Publishers. 1971. 9004081186. Peri Bearman. Clifford Edmund Bosworth. Wolfhart Heinrichs. Bearman. P.. Bianquis. Th.. Bosworth. C.E.. van Donzel. E.. Heinrichs. W.P..