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VAḤŠI BĀFQI
(1,779 words)
(ca. 1532-1583), Kamāl-al-Din (or Šams-al-Din Moḥammad), Persian poet of the Safavid period, who was born in Bāfq and died in Yazd.
VAḤŠI BĀFQI, KAMĀL-AL-DIN (or Šams-al-Din Moḥammad), Persian poet of the Safavid period (b. Bāfq, ca. 1532; d. Yazd, 1583). Vaḥši was born in the agricultural town of Bāfq, southeast of Yazd, where he received his earliest training in poetry from his elder brother Morādi and the local literary luminary Šaraf-al-Din ʿAli of Bāfq. He continued his education in the provincial capital of Yaz…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2017-03-02
NAẒIRI NIŠĀPURI
(1,595 words)
Indo-Persian poet of the late 16th and early 17th centuries (b. Nishapur, ca. 1560; d. Ahmadabad, between 1612 and 1614).
NAẒIRI
NIŠĀPURI, Moḥammad Ḥosayn, Indo-Persian poet of the late 16th and early 17th centuries (b. Nishapur, ca. 1560–d. Ahmadabad in Gujarat, between 1612 and 1614). Naẓiri left his native city of Nishapur as a young man after the death of his father. Though he traveled to western Persia as a merchant, he was already an accomplished poet when he met the literary biographer Taqi-al-Din Kāši in 158…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2014-05-28
SĀQI-NĀMA
(2,396 words)
(Book of the Cupbearer), a poetic genre in which the speaker, seeking relief from his hardships, losses, and disappointments, repeatedly summons the sāqi or cupbearer to bring him wine.
SĀQI-NĀMA (Book of the Cupbearer), a poetic genre in which the speaker, seeking relief from his hardships, losses, and disappointments, repeatedly summons the
sāqi (Arazi; Hanaway; Soucek) or cupbearer to bring him wine and the
moḡanni or singer to provide a song. The prototypical form of the genre—an independent poem of 150-300 rhymed couplets in the
motaqāreb meter—was consolidated in the early…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2016-09-08
ṬĀLEB ĀMOLI
(1,660 words)
Persian poet of the early 17th century (b. Mazandaran, ca. 1580; d. India, 1626-7).
ṬĀLEB ĀMOLI (Taleb of Amol), Sayyed Moḥammad, Persian poet of the early 17th century (b. Mazandaran, ca. 1580-d. India, 1626-7). A precocious talent, Taleb embarked on his literary career in his late teens, composing praise poems to notables in his native Mazandaran and
ḡazals (lyrics) under the penname Āšub. Beginning a lifetime of constant travel, he soon sought to further his career in the major literary centers of Persia. In Kashan (Kāšān), his maternal uncle held …
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2012-10-26
KAMĀL ḴOJANDI
(2,326 words)
(ca. 1320-1401), Persian poet and Sufi also known as Shaikh Kamāl. A version of this article is available in print Volume XV, Fascicle 4, pp. 412-414
KAMĀL ḴOJANDI, known also as Shaikh Kamāl, Persian poet and Sufi (b. Ḵojand, a town in Central Asia, ca. 720/1320; d. Tabriz, 803/1400-1401). Nothing is known of Kamāl’s family background or early life. Even his personal name is uncertain; Masʿud is the consensus of most modern scholars (Ṣafā, III, p. 1131; Nafisi, I, p. 210; Rypka, p. 262), but early manuscripts of his
divān give his name as Moḥammad, sometimes adding the patronymic (
konya) Abu…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2012-10-19
SAʿDI
(3,776 words)
Persian poet and prose writer (b. Shiraz, ca. 1210; d. Shiraz, d. 1291 or 1292), widely recognized as one of the greatest masters of the classical literary tradition.
SAʿDI, Abu Moḥammad Mošarref-al-Din Moṣleḥ b. ʿAbd-Allāh b. Mošarref Širāzi, Persian poet and prose writer (b. Shiraz, ca. 1210; d. Shiraz, d. 1291 or 1292), widely recognized as one of the greatest masters of the classical literary tradition. The present article examines the sources for his biography, including his major works; for the articles on these in detail, see the links given below. Little about Saʿdi’s life is …
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2015-08-03
MOḤTAŠAM KĀŠĀNI
(2,774 words)
(1528/29-1588), Šams-al-Šoʿarā Kamāl-al-Din, Persian poet of the Safavid period who was born and died in Kashan.
MOḤTAŠAM KĀŠĀNI, Šams-al-Šoʿarā Kamāl-al-Din, Persian poet of the Safavid period (b. Kashan, between 1528 and 1529; d. Kashan, February 1588). Like many poets of the time, Moḥtašam had mercantile origins. His father, Ḵᵛāja Mir Aḥmad (d. 1554), was active in Kashan’s prosperous cloth industry, and the poet seems to have pursued the same occupation before a business setback led him to take up poetry as …
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2017-03-01
ʿORFI ŠIRAZI
(1,931 words)
Persian poet of the latter half of the 16th century (b. Shiraz, 1555; d. Lahore, Aug. 1591).
ʿORFI ŠIRAZI, Persian poet of the latter half of the 16th century (b. Shiraz, 1555; d. Lahore, Aug. 1591). His name is given as Jamāl-al-Din Moḥammad Sidi (or Sayyedi) in the early sources. His father, Zeyn-al-Din ʿAli Balawi, was a prominent official of the provincial administration whose dealings with customary law (
ʿorf) in the course of his professional duties led to his son’s choice of ʿOrfi as his penname (
taḵalloṣ). The young ʿOrfi soon established himself as a leading figure in th…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2012-12-10
QODSI MAŠHADI
(1,259 words)
(ca. 1582-1646), ḤĀJI MOḤAMMAD JĀN, Persian poet of the first half of the 17th century, was born in Mashad and died in Lahore.
QODSI
MAŠHADI, ḤĀJI MOḤAMMAD JĀN (b. Mashad, ca. 1582; d. Lahore, 1646), Persian poet of the first half of the 17th century. The earliest biographical notices depict Qodsi as a prosperous and prominent community leader in Mashad, the city of his birth (
Karvān-e Hend II, p. 1096). By his mid-thirties, he had performed the pilgrimage to Mecca and had come to be regarded as the leading grocer in the city. His cordial relations with local …
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2017-03-02
JĀMI
(12,250 words)
ʿABD-AL-RAḤMĀN NUR-AL-DIN b. Neẓām-al-Din Aḥmad-e Dašti, Persian poet, scholar, and Sufi (1414-1492). A version of this article is available in print Volume XIV, Fascicle 5, pp. 469-482
JĀMI, ʿABD-AL-RAḤMĀN NUR-AL-DIN b. Neẓām-al-Din Aḥmad-e Dašti, Persian poet, scholar, and Sufi of the 15th century (b. Ḵarjerd-e Jām, November 7, 1414/d. Herat, November 9, 1492). For a music sample, see Ḥazin. For a music sample, see Ḥeṣār - part 2. JĀMI i. Life and Works LIFE Though born in the hamlet of Ḵarjerd, Jāmi would take his penname from the nearby village of Jām (lying about…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2017-09-27
