Khalīl ibn Aybak al-Ṣafadī, or Salah al-Dīn al-Ṣafadī; full name - Salah al-Dīn Abū al-Ṣafa Khalīl ibn Aybak ibn ‘Abd Allāh al-Albakī al-Ṣafari al-Damascī Shafi'i. (1296 – 1363); he was a
Turkic Mamluk
Mamluk ( ar, مملوك, mamlūk (singular), , ''mamālīk'' (plural), translated as "one who is owned", meaning " slave", also transliterated as ''Mameluke'', ''mamluq'', ''mamluke'', ''mameluk'', ''mameluke'', ''mamaluke'', or ''marmeluke'') ...
author and historian. He studied under the historian and
Shafi'i
The Shafii ( ar, شَافِعِي, translit=Shāfiʿī, also spelled Shafei) school, also known as Madhhab al-Shāfiʿī, is one of the four major traditional schools of religious law (madhhab) in the Sunnī branch of Islam. It was founded by ...
scholar,
al-Dhahabi
Shams ad-Dīn adh-Dhahabī (), also known as Shams ad-Dīn Abū ʿAbdillāh Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad ibn ʿUthmān ibn Qāymāẓ ibn ʿAbdillāh at-Turkumānī al-Fāriqī ad-Dimashqī (5 October 1274 – 3 February 1348) was an Islamic historia ...
.
He was born in
Safad
Safed (known in Hebrew as Tzfat; Sephardic Hebrew & Modern Hebrew: צְפַת ''Tsfat'', Ashkenazi Hebrew: ''Tzfas'', Biblical Hebrew: ''Ṣǝp̄aṯ''; ar, صفد, ''Ṣafad''), is a city in the Northern District of Israel. Located at an eleva ...
, Palestine under Mamluk rule. His wealthy family afforded him a broad education, memorising the Qur’ān and reciting the books of Ḥadīth. He excelled in the social sciences of grammar, language, philology and calligraphy. He painted on canvas, and was especially passionate about literature. He taught himself poetry, its systems, transmitters and meters.
His teachers
Among Ṣafadī’s many teachers from Safad, Damascus, Cairo and Aleppo were:
* Al-Ḥāfīz
Fatḥ al-Dīn ibn Sayyid al-Nās (d.734AH / 1333), with whom he studied literature in Cairo.
*
Ibn al-Nabatah Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad al-Farqī al-Maṣrī (d.768AH / 1367)
*
Abū Hayyan al-Gharnatī (d.745AH / 1345); with whom he studied grammar and philology.
*
Maḥmūd ibn Salmān Ibn Fahd (d.725AH / 1325-26), author o
Ḥusn al-tawassul ilá ṣināʻat al-tarassul () and narrated much of his poetry.
*Judge Badr al-Dīn ibn Jamāt, Muḥammad ibn Ibrāhīm ibn Sa’d al-Kattanī (d. 733AH / 1333-34).
*
Taqi al-Din al-Subki
Abu Al-Hasan Taqī al-Dīn Ali ibn Abd al-Kafi ibn Ali al-Khazraji al-Ansari al-Subkī ( ar, أبو الحسن تقي الدين علي بن عبد الكافي بن علي الخزرجي الأنصاري السبكي), was a leading polymath a ...
(d.756AH / 1356-57)
*The Ḥadīth Abū Al-Nūn Yūnus ibn Ibrāhīm al-Dabusi (d.729AH / 1329-30)
*Hafiz Jamal al-Din
Yusuf ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Mizzi
Jamāl al-Dīn Abū al-Ḥajjāj Yūsuf ibn al-Zakī ʻAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Yūsuf ibn ʻAbd al-Malik ibn Yūsuf al-Kalbī al-Quḍā’ī al-Mizzī, ( ar, يوسف بن عبد الرحمن المزي), also called Al-Ḥāfiẓ Abī al-Ḥajj ...
(d.742AH / 1342), and studied by the Ḥadīth in Dar al-Hadith Ashrafieh in Damascus.
*Al-Ḥafiz
Shams al-Dīn Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad ibn Uthman al-Dhahabī (d.749AH / 1347-48); with whom he studied the Hadith and history.
Books
*''Ikhtirāʿ al-Khurāʿ'' ("Invention of Absurdity"); on scholastic pedantry, a satirical work in the tradition of Arabic parodies, it is one of his most famous works.
*
Kitab al-Wafi bi'l-Wafayat () (29 vols.);
biographical dictionary
A biographical dictionary is a type of encyclopedic dictionary limited to biographical information. Many attempt to cover the major personalities of a country (with limitations, such as living persons only, in ''Who's Who'', or deceased people onl ...
of notable people.
*
Nakt al-Humyān fī Nukat al-Umyān, biographies of notable blind people, with a section on the causes of blindness.
*''Al-Ghayth al-Musajam fi Sharh Lamiyyat-Ajam'' (''Flowing Desert Rains in the Commentary upon the L-Poem of the Non-Arabs'');
an encyclopedic commentary on
Togharayi's ''Lamiyyat al-Ajam''.
*''al-Ḥusn aṣ-ṣarīḥ fī miʾat malīḥ'' ('Pure Beauty: on one hundred handsome lads'), also a solo-authored
maqāṭīʿ-collection composed between 1337 and 1338
*''Al-Rawḍ al-bāsim wa-l-ʿarf an-nāsim'' ('The Smiling Garden and the Wafting Fragrance'), a 444-poem solo-authored maqāṭīʿ-collection in forty-six chapters composed sometime before 1355
*''Alḥān as-sawājiʿ bayn al-bādī wa-l-murājiʿ'' ('Tunes of Cooing Doves, between the Initiator and Responder
n Literary Correspondence), an epistolary anthology
[Adam Talib, ''How Do You Say “Epigram” in Arabic? Literary History at the Limits of Comparison'', Brill Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures, 40 (Leiden: Brill, 2018); .]
* ''Kashf al-ḥāl fī waṣf al-khāl'' ('Revealing the Situation about Describing Beauty Marks')
*''Rashf al-zulāl fī waṣf al-hilāl'' ('A Sip of Pure Water: describing the crescent moon')
*''Ladhdhat al-samʿ fī waṣf al-dam'' ('Pleasing the Ears by Describing the Tears'), also known as ''Kitāb Tashnīf as-samʿ bi-nsikāb ad-damʿ''
Notes
The Internet Archive hosts a copy of كتاب الوافي بالوفيات (Kitab Al-Wafi Bi-Al-Wafayat) at https://archive.org/details/FP49931.
References
External links
Works on Al-Ṣafadīlisted in ''Mamluk Bibliography Online''
1290 births
1363 deaths
14th-century biographers
14th-century Syrian historians
14th-century philologists
Encyclopedists of the medieval Islamic world
Muslim historians of Islam
People from Safed
Supporters of Ibn Arabi
Historians from the Mamluk Sultanate
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