Ibn Bashkuwal Explained

Ibn Bashkuwāl
Other Names:Chalaf ibn'Abd al-Malik ibn Mas'udd ibn Mūsā ibn Bashkuwāl, Abūl-Qāsim (Arabic: خلف بن عبد الملك بن مسعود بن موسى بن بشكوال, أبو القاسم), and Ḫalaf b.'Abd al- Malik b. Mas'ūd b. Mūsā b. Baškuwāl, Abū'l-Qāsim
Birth Date: September 1101
Birth Place:Córdoba
Death Place:Sarrión
Occupation:biographer, historian, encyclopedist

Ibn Bashkuwāl, Khalaf ibn ‘Abd al-Malik ibn Mas'ud ibn Musa ibn Bashkuwāl ibn Yûsuf al-Ansârī,[1] Abū'l-Qāsim (Arabic: خلف بن عبد الملك بن مسعود بن موسى بن بشكوال بن يوسف, أبو القاسم) (var. Ḫalaf b.'Abd al- Malik b. Mas'ūd b. Mūsā b. Baškuwāl, Abū'l-Qāsim; September 1101 in Córdoba – 5 January 1183 in Sarrión), was an influential Andalusian traditionist and biographer working in Córdoba and Seville.

Life

His ancestry was Arab and was a descendant of al-Ansar- he was known as Ibn Bashkuwāl ("son of Pasqual") in the Valencia region. His first teacher was his father (d.1139), to whom he dedicates a section in his biographical work. He studied with the most famous scholars of his time: Ibn al-'Arabī al-Ma'āfirī and the lawyer Abūl-Walīd ibn Ruschd (died 1126), the grandfather of the philosopher Averroës. In his hometown he worked as a consulting lawyer (faqīh mušāwar)[2] and for a short time as deputy Qādī in Seville under Ibn al-'Arabī. It appears he never travelled to the East and his scholarship derived from the Andalusian-Islamic tradition. His biographer Ibn Abbār (d. Jan 1260)[3] mentions 41 scholars in Córdoba and Seville, with whom he studied.[4] His library held works by authors from the Islamic East; of which is the K. as-Siyar from Abū Ishāq al-Fazārī, on whose title page he is documented as the owner of the work.[5]

He died in January 1183 and was buried in the cemetery known then as Ibn 'Abbās Scholars’ Cemetery in Córdoba[6]

Works

Ibn Bashkuwāl's biographers attribute him authorship of twenty-six known books, treatises and monographs of biographical content,[7] and list his teachers and the texts he studied.[8] Among his few surviving works are:

Literature

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ibn Khallikan. Ibn Khallikan's Biographical Dictionary, Volume 1. Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain & Ireland. 1843. Leadenhall Street, London. 491–492.
  2. For the meaning: Reinhart Dozy: Supplément aux dictionnaires arabes. Brill. Leiden 1867. Vol. 1, p. 801; on the function: Christian Müller: Court practice in the city-state of Córdoba. The right of society in a Malay-Islamic legal tradition of the 5th/11th century. Brill. Leiden. 1999. pp. 151-154.
  3. The Encyclopaedia of Islam, New Edition. Brill, Leiden. Vol.3, p.673
  4. Manuela Marín (1991), pp. 17-20
  5. [Miklos Muranyi]
  6. Torrés Balbás: Cementerios hispanomusulmanes. In al-Andalus 22 (1957), p. 165.
  7. Manuela Marín (1991), pp.23-25
  8. [Heinrich Schützinger]
  9. The Encyclopaedia of Islam. New Edition. Brill, Leiden. Vol. 3, p. 762
  10. 1541 is the total of entries in the series Al-maktaba al-andalusiyya , 6. In two vols., Cairo 1966.
  11. http://menadoc.bibliothek.uni-halle.de/ssg/content/titleinfo/573671 Edited by F. Codera. Madrid 1882-1883 in two volumes
  12. Edited by F. Codera. Madrid 1888-1889 in two volumes. The beginning of the work up to the letter jīm appeared in Algiers in 1920
  13. The Encyclopedia of Islam. New Edition. Brill, Leiden. Vol.3, p.976
  14. The statement in The Encyclopaedia of Islam. New Edition. Brill, Leiden. Vol.3, p.673, where the continuation of Takmila by Ibn al-Abbār is wrong.
  15. Edited by 'Abd as-Salām al-Harrās and Sa'īd A'rāb. Publications of the Ministry of Waqf and Religious Affairs.
  16. Beirut, 1987.
  17. See: Fuat Sezgin (1967), p.466, n.4. The note "ibn private possession of Ibr. al-Kattānī in Rabāṭ" should be deleted.
  18. Edited by 'Āmir Ḥasan Ṣabrī. Beirut 2007
  19. Published and translated into Spanish by Manuela Marín (1991)
  20. Manuela Marín (1991), pp.29-33.