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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ibn Abi Tayyi (Arabic: إبن أبي طيء) Yaḥyā Abū Zakariyyā ibn Ḥamīd al-Najjār (1180–1228) was a Shi'i historian and poet from Aleppo.[1][2] Known for his Universal History, which is mostly lost, and is known to us through excerpts preserved by later writers. A valuable source for the history of Northern Syria in the times of the crusades, it also describes the Fatimid palaces in Cairo, the fall of the Fatimid dynasty, relations between Franks and Muslims, and the reign of Saladin and that of his son al-Ẓāhir Ghāzī.

He made use of a lost source also used by the anonymous author of the Būstān al-jāmiʿ.[3]

References

  1. ^ Eddé, Anne-Marie (2017-07-01). "Ibn Abī Ṭayyiʾ". Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE.
  2. ^ Donzel, E. J. Van (1994-01-01). Islamic Desk Reference. BRILL. ISBN 9789004097384.
  3. ^ Claude Cahen, "Une chronique syrienne du VIe/VIIe siècle: Le Bustān al-Jāmiʿ", Bulletin d'études orientales 7/8 (1937/1938), 113–158. JSTOR 41603412


This page was last edited on 6 February 2023, at 23:21
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