Ibn Duraid Explained

Ibn Duraid
Birth Name:Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan al-Azdī ibn Durayd
Birth Date:837/838 CE
Birth Place:Basra, Abbasid Caliphate (modern-day Iraq)
Death Date:August 13, 933 CE
Death Place:Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate (modern-day Iraq)
Occupation:Philologist, Lexicographer, Poet
Notable Works:Jamharat al-Lugha, Kitāb al-Ishtiqāq, al-Malāḥin
Era:Abbasid era
Influences:Abū Hātim as-Sijistāni, ar-Riāshi, Abd ar-Rahmān Ibn Abd Allah, Abū Othmān Saīd Ibn Hārūn al-Ushnāndāni, al-Tawwazī, al-Ziyādi
Influenced:Abū al-Faraj al-Iṣbahānī

Abū Bakr Muhammad ibn al-Ḥasan ibn Duraid al-Azdī al-Baṣrī ad-Dawsī Al-Zahrani (Arabic: أبو بكر محمد بن الحسن بن دريد بن عتاهية الأزدي البصري الدوسي الزهراني), or Ibn Duraid (Arabic: إبن دريد)[1] (c. 837-933 CE), a leading grammarian of Baṣrah, was described as "the most accomplished scholar, ablest philologer and first poet of the age",[2] was from Baṣra in the Abbasid era.[3] [4] Ibn Duraid is best known today as the lexicographer of the influential dictionary, the Jamharat al-Lugha (Arabic: جمهرة اللغة). The fame of this comprehensive dictionary of the Arabic language[5] is second only to its predecessor, the Kitab al-'Ayn of al-Farahidi.[6] [7]

Life

Ibn Duraid was born in Baṣrah, on "Sālih Street", (233H / c. 837CE) in the reign of the Abbasid caliph Al-Mu'tasim;[5] [4] [2] [8] [9] [10] Among his teachers were Abū Hātim as-Sijistāni, ar-Riāshi (Abū al-Faḍl al-'Abbās ibn al-Faraj al-Riyāshī)), Abd ar-Rahmān Ibn Abd Allah, surnamed nephew of al-Asmāi (Ibn Akhī’l Asmāi), Abū Othmān Saīd Ibn Hārūn al-Ushnāndāni, author of Kitāb al-Maāni,[2] al-Tawwazī, and al-Ziyādi. He quoted from the book (Gestures of Friendship of the Nobles) written by his paternal uncle al-Ḥasan ibn Muḥammad.[11] Ibn Duraid himself identified with the Qahtanite Arabs, the larger confederacy of which Azd is a sub-group. Ibn Khallikān in his biographical dictionary gives his full name as:

Abū Bakr M. b. al-Hasan b. Duraid b. Atāhiya b. Hantam b. Hasan b. Hamāmi b. Jarw Wāsī b. Wahb b. Salama b. Hādir b. Asad b. Adi b. Amr b. Mālik b. Fahm b. Ghānim b. Daus b. Udthān b. Abd Allāh b. Zahrān b. Kaab b. al-Hārith b. Kaab b. Abd Allāh b. Mālik b. Nasr b. al-Azd b. al-Gauth b. Nabt b. Mālik b. Zaid b. Kahlān b. Saba b. Yashjub b. Yārub b. Kahtān, of the Azd tribe, native of Baṣrah.[12] Ibn al-Nadim writing two centuries earlier gives a slightly curtailed genealogy with some variation:

Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan ibn Durayd bin ‘Atāhiyah ibn Ḥantam ibn Ḥasan, son of Ḥamāmī, whose name came from a village in the region of ‘Umān called Ḥamāmā and who was the son of Jarw ibn Wāsi‘ ibn Wahb bin Salamah ibn Jusham ibn Ḥādir ibn Asad bin ‘Adī ibn ‘Amr ibn Mālik ibn Naṣr ibn Azd ibn al-Ghawth.When Basra was attacked by the Zanj and Ar-Riāshī murdered in 871 he fled to Oman, then ruled by Muhallabi. He is said to have practiced as a physician although no works on medical science by him are known to survive.[13] After twelve years Khallikan says he returned to Basra for a time and then moved to Persia In Al-Nadim's account he moved to Jazīrat Ibn ‘Umārah (this may refer to the Baṣra suburb) before he moved to Persia where he was under the protection of the governor Abd-Allah Mikali and his sons, and where he wrote his chief works. Abd-Allah appointed him director of the government office for Fars Province and it is said while there each time his salary was paid he donated almost it all to the poor. In 920 he moved to Baghdad, and received a monthly pension of fifty dinars from the caliph Al-Muqtadir in support of his literary activities which continued to his death. In Baghdad he became an acquaintance of Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari.[14]

Illness and Death

Ibn Khallikan reports many tales of Ibn Duraid's fondness of wine and alcohol so when towards the age of ninety Ibn Duraid suffered partial paralysis following a stroke, he managed to cure himself by drinking theriac,[15] he resumed his old habits and continued to teach. However the palsy returned the next year much more severe so he could only move his hands. He would cry out in pain when anyone entered his room. His student Abū Alī Isma’il al-Kāli al-Baghdādi remarked: The Almighty has punished him for saying in his Maksūraī:

“Oh Time! You have met someone who, were the heavenly spheres to fall upon him, would not utter complaint.” He remained paralysed and in pain for two more years, although his mind remained sharp and he answered, as quick as thought, questions from students on points of philology. To one such, Abū Hātim, he responded:

Had the light of my eyes been extinguished, you would not have found one as able to quench your thirst for knowledge.”His last words were in reply to Abū Alī:

“Hāl al-jarīd dūn al-karīd” (the choking stops the verse).[16] (These were the proverbial words of the jahiliyya poet ʿAbīd ibn al-Abraṣ uttered on the point of being put to death on the orders of the last king of Hīra, an-Nomān Ibn al-Mundir al-Lakhmi, and commanded to first recite some of his verse.)[2] [9] [13] [15] [17]

Ibn Duraid died in August of 933, on a Wednesday,[7] [10] [18] [19] [20] He was buried on the east bank of the Tigris River in the Abbasiya cemetery, and his tomb was next to the old arms bazaar near the As-Shārī ‘l Aazam. The celebrated muʿtazilite philosopher cleric Hāshim Abd as-Salām al-Jubbāi died the same day. Some of Baghdad cried "Philology and theology have died on this day!"[16]

Works

He is said to have written over fifty books of language and literature. As a poet his versatility and range was proverbial and his output too prodigious to count. His collection of forty stories were much cited and quoted by later authors, though only fragments survive.[21] Perhaps drawing on his Omani ancestry, his poetry contains some distinctly Omani themes.[10]

Kitāb al-Maqṣūrah

Kitāb al-Ishtiqāq

Jamhara fi 'l-Lughat

Other Titles

Commentaries On His Work

See also

Notes and References

  1. Ibn Duraid . 14 . 220 . Griffithes Wheeler . Thatcher.
  2. https://archive.org/stream/WafayatAl-ayantheObituariesOfEminentMenByIbnKhallikan/Vol3Of4WafayatAl-ayantheObituariesOfEminentMenByIbnKhallikan/about/ Wafayat al-Ayan (The Obituaries of Eminent Men) by Ibn Khallikan
  3. Robert Gleave, Islam and Literalism: Literal Meaning and Interpretation in Islamic Legal Theory, pg. 126. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2012.
  4. Abit Yaşar Koçak, Handbook of Arabic Dictionaries, pg. 23. Berlin: Verlag Hans Schiler, 2002.
  5. Introduction to Early Medieval Arabic: Studies on Al-Khalīl Ibn Ahmad, pg. xii. Ed. Karin C. Ryding. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 1998.
  6. John A. Haywood, "Arabic Lexicography." Taken from Dictionaries: An International Encyclopedia of Lexicography, pg. 2,441. Ed. Franz Josef Hausmann. Volume 5 of Handbooks of Linguistics & Communication Science, #5/3. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1991.
  7. A. Cilardo, "Preliminary Notes on the Meaning of the Qur'anic Term Kalala." Taken from Law, Christianity and Modernism in Islamic Society: Proceedings of the Eighteenth Congress of the Union Européenne Des Arabisants Et Islamisants Held at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, pg. 3. Peeters Publishers, 1998.
  8. J. Pederson, "Ibn Duraid." Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1st ed. Eds. M. Th. Houtsma, T.W. Arnold, R. Basset and R. Hartmann. Brill Online, 2013.
  9. Cyril Elgood, A Medical History of Persia and the Eastern Caliphate: From the Earliest Times Until the Year A.D. 1932, pg. 247. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.
  10. [Donald Hawley]
  11. Al-Nadim, Kitab al-Fihrist Book1, ch.ii;1
  12. [Ibn Khallikan]
  13. Harold Bowen, The Life and Times of 'Alí Ibn 'Ísà, 'the Good Vizier, pg. 277. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Archive, 1928.
  14. Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari, History of the Prophets and Kings, vol. 1, pg. 79. Trns. Franz Rosenthal. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1989.
  15. Ibn Khallikan, Deaths, pg. 41.
  16. Ibn Khallikan, Deaths, pg. 42.
  17. https://archive.org/details/diwansofabidibna21abiduoft The Diwans of Abid ibn al-Abras, of Asad, and Amir ibn at-Tufail, of Amir ibn Sasaah
  18. Fedwa Malti-Douglas, Power, marginality, and the body in medieval Islam, pg. 416. Volume 723 of Collected studies. Farnham: Ashgate Publishing, 2001.
  19. [Gregor Schoeler]
  20. Shawkat M. Toorawa, Ibn Abi Tahir Tayfur and Arabic Writerly Culture: A Ninth Century Bookman in Baghdad. Routledge Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures. Routledge eBook; published 2005, digitized 2012.
  21. Alexander E. Elinson, Looking Back at Al-Andalus: The Poetics of Loss and Nostalgia in Medieval Arabic and Hebrew Literature, pg. 53. Volume 34 of Brill studies in Middle Eastern literatures. Ledien: Brill Publishers, 2009.
  22. Book: Durayd (Ibn), Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan. Ibn Duraid. Kitāb al-Ishtiqāq (Ibn Doreid's genealogisch-etymologisches Handbuch) . Wüstenfeld. F.. Göttingen. Dieterich . 1854. ar .
  23. Yasir Suleiman, The Arabic Language and National Identity: A Study in Ideology, pg. 60. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2003.
  24. Yasir Suleiman, "Ideology, Grammar-Making and Standardization." Taken from In the Shadow of Arabic: The Centrality of Language to Arab Culture, Pg. 20. Ed. Bilal Orfali. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 2011. Print.
  25. https://archive.org/details/waq83608waq Jamhara fi 'l-Lughat
  26. Abit Yaşar Koçak, Handbook, pg. 26.
  27. Rafael Ṭalmôn, Arabic Grammar in Its Formative Age: Kitāb Al-ʻAyn and Its Attribution to, pg. 70. Volume 25 of Studies in Semitic Languages and Linguistics. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 1997.
  28. [Ramzi Baalbaki]
  29. M.G. Carter, "Arabic Lexicography." Taken from Religion, Learning and Science in the 'Abbasid Period, pg. 112. Eds. M. J. L. Young, J. D. Latham and R. B. Serjeant. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006.
  30. [Kees Versteegh]
  31. Abit Yaşar Koçak, Handbook, pg. 24.
  32. https://archive.org/details/FPmujmuj Al-Mujtanaa