Author
Al-Jazari, Shams al-Din, Muhammad bin Ibrahim bin Abi Bakr bin Ibrahim bin Abdul Aziz al-Dimashqi, Abu Abdullah, 739 AH/1338 AD.
Author Original
الجزري، شمس الدين، محمد بن إبراهيم بن أبي بكر بن إبراهيم بن عبد العزيز الدمشقي، أبو عبد الله، هـم
Publication Date
Not available
Publication Place
Baghdad - Iraq -
Not identified
Subject
the date.
Type
kitap
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
Yes
Library
Al-Furqan Islamic Heritage Foundation
Library Asset ID
، الرسالة
Record ID
VP 218371
Library Location
Iraq (Baghdad) - The Iraqi Scientific Complex Library - Iraq (Baghdad) - The Iraqi Scientific Complex Library
Date
Not available
Notes
It was written on the title page, in a different bad handwriting: “A great history book, which contains the history of Damascus, the Levant, Iraq, Egypt, Abyssinia, and many histories, may God have mercy on the author.” Beneath it is the seal of its author, and it is appended to 1047. It is a rich history in which good things are mentioned that are not found in others. It is an appendix to the book “Mirror of Time” by Sibt ibn al-Jawzi (d. 654 AH). Al-Hafiz al-Mizzi (d. 739 AH = 1339 AD), al-Dhahabi (d. 748 AH = 1348 AD), and al-Barzali (d. 739 AH = 1339 AD) reviewed it and quoted it, and he arranged it over the years, in the style of “The History of Islam,” by al-Dhahabi. It is in parts believed to be seven. The last part begins with events in the year 726 AH, and ends in the year 738 AH - Its title in some sources is “The Great History” and in others it is “The Incidents of the Time and Its Reports and the Deaths of the Great and Notables from Its Sons.” And in (“The Index of Manuscripts”: Dar al-Kutub al-Misriyah 1: 226): “Jawahir al-Suluk fi the Caliphs and the Kings.” - And “The History of al-Jazari” when printed was a small piece from the Paris edition, entitled “The History of the Events of the Time and Its Notables from its Sons.” Verified by: Habib Zayat (Al-Lawyer Press - Zahle, 1928; 42 pages). The last part, this one, which begins with events in the year 726 AH, and ends in the year 738 AH; translated into Turkish by: Ismail Haqqi Al-Azmiri, and printed in 1941. See about it: (“Introduction to Historians” 1: 177 - 178 - the author is a historian who approaches history He collected it, and heard from a group of poets. Al-Safadi said: He was a good scholar, well-informed, truthful, and in his history there were wonders, curiosities, and common knowledge. Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani said: “He collected famous histories and composed moderate poetry.” Al-Barzali emerged as a sheikh for him. Its translation and news in: (Habib Zayat: “The History of Damascus”: “Al-Athar” Magazine, Zahle: Parts 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 - Fifth Year 1928), (Abbas Al-Azzawi: “Translation by Al-Jazari”: “Journal of the Arab Scientific Academy in Damascus 19 (1944) Part 11 and 12, pp. 524-530), (Dr. Salah al-Din al-Munajjid: “Journal of the Manuscript Institute Al-Arabiya” 2 [Cairo - May 1956] Part 1: 103-104), and the various references mentioned by these people that dealt with his translation and his book “The Great History.” - The three sections: including the first section, illustrated with fatstats from a photocopied copy in the Egyptian House of Books, No. 995 Date, from a handwritten copy in Coprelli in Istanbul, No. 1047. It was written in the year 739 AH, and at the end of it is Al-Khazri’s translation of Al-Barzali, beginning in the year 726 AH. - It was mentioned in (“Index of Manuscripts”: Dar al-Kutub al-Misriyah 1: 118): (History of al-Jazari: written by Muhammad bin Ibrahim al-Jazari, who died in the year 739 AH: What is extant is a part divided into two volumes, in which they include from deaths in the year 689 AH to the first events of the year 699 AH, illustrated with the fatwas of the two illustrated volumes kept in the Timur Library, numbered 2159 dates, in 9/151 plates, 10/152 plate (No. 11666 AH). And in another place (Al-Fahrist, p. 226): “Jawahir Al-Suluk fi Al-Khalifa’ wa Al-Muluk,” written by Muhammad bin Ibrahim Al-Jazari, who died in the year 739 AH. The existing volume begins during the deaths of the year 689 AH and ends in the year 699 AH, a copy in the usual handwriting of Mahmoud Sidqi the copyist in the year 1357 AH. 1938 AD. - Quoted from a photographic copy from Paris preserved in the Timurid Treasury, No. 2159 history, in 250 pp., 18-25 cm (No. 7575 H). - Among the Arabic manuscripts preserved in the National Library in Paris, there are two histories, entitled “Jawahir al-Suluk fi Caliphs and Kings,” the first with No. 1616. The indexer mentioned that it is by an unknown author. The correct one is by Jalal al-Din. Al-Suyuti, which was printed by Nassau, not in Calcutta, and was translated into English. The second had the aforementioned title written in a different handwriting, and this is by Al-Jazari, and the Paris copy, numbered 6379, includes deaths in the year 689 to events in the year 699 AH. Al-Dhahabi chose a copy of this in Coprelli, numbered 1147 In Al-Dhahabi’s own handwriting, he said in its introduction, “This is a short summary of the history of Al-Mawla Shams Al-Din.” Among them is a photocopy that was in the treasury of Abbas Al-Azzawi in Baghdad. The orientalist Sauvage published this piece in Paris, entitled: J. Sauvaget, La Chronique de Damas d’Al Gazari, Paris 1949 - for additional access to the written copies, see the references mentioned in the documentation and (Dr. Lotfi Abdel Badie: “Index of Manuscripts”). Al-Musawwariya" 2: 58; No. 106).
Sample Text
Basmala..., then entered the year seven hundred and twenty-six, its first
Satır sayısı
26 _ 27
Kaynakça
GAL, S، ج 2، ص 45؛ معجم المؤلفين، ج 8، ص 194؛ الأعلام، ج 6، ص 189؛ المؤرخون الدمشقيون وآثارهم المخطوطة، ص 43 - 44؛ معجم المطبوعات العربية والمعربة، ص 696.
Cilt numarası notları
من الصفحة 1 - 201.