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Mīrzā

(548 words)

Author(s): Levy, R. | Burton-Page, J.
ou Mirzā, titre persan qui est une forme abrégée de Mīr-zāda ou Amīr-zāda, signifiant à l’origine «né d’un prince» (cf. Malik-zāda et Farhang-zāda, que l’on trouve chez Saʿdī, etc.). — 1. Dans l’usage persan. Ce titre, outre sa signification originale, était également attribué à des nobles et des gens de bonne naissance; il correspond ainsi au turc ag̲h̲a. Depuis l’époque de la conquête de l’Inde par Nādir S̲h̲āh, il fut en outre appliqué à des hommes instruits en dehors de la classe des mullās ou ʿulamāʾ. A l’époque moderne seulement, ce titre se place après le nom d’un prince,…

Pist

(60 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
(p.), sorte de mets composé de foies de gazelles ou d’amandes, etc. Une portion journalière de la grosseur d’une pistache ( pista) est prise par les derviches et d’autres personnes qui entreprennent de longs jeûnes, par ex. la čilla ou jeûne de quarante jours, et elle suffit à conserver la vie. (R. Levy) Bibliography Vullers, Lexicon Persico-Latinum, s.v. pist, čilla.

Mustawfī

(679 words)

Author(s): Levy, R. | Bosworth, C.E.
(a.), fonctionnaire de l’administration islamique médiévale chargé de la comptabilité et agissant ainsi en tant que comptable général. Le titre a commencé à être employé universellement dans les régimes qui ont succédé au califat ʿabbāside. Sous les G̲h̲aznawides. le mustawfī l-mamālik était responsable devant le vizir et tenait les comptes des recettes et des dépenses dans le dīwān-i wazīr (M, Nāẓim, The lift and times of Sulṭān Maḥmūd of Ghazna, Cambridge 1931, 132). Sous les Grands Sald̲j̲ūḳides, par ex. à l’époque de Niẓām al-mulk [ q.v.], le mustawfī ne le cédait en importanc…

Pūst

(177 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
(p.), peau, turc pōst ou pōstakī, peau de mouton tannée employée comme siège de cérémonie ou trône d’un pīr ou s̲h̲ayk̲h̲ d’une confrérie de derviches. La tête, les côtés et les pieds ont reçu des significations mystiques. Pūst correspond à l’arabe bisāṭ. D’après Ewliyā Čelebi (Istanbul 1314/1896-7, I, 495), le murīd, après avoir passé un examen devant le pīr, est appelé ṣāḥib pūst. Lors de cérémonies dans la confrérie des Bektās̲h̲is, la salle ou le couvent aurait eu le sol recouvert de douze pūsts de cuir blanc en souvenir des douze Imâms, ou représentant symboliquement douz…

Nawrūz

(1,375 words)

Author(s): Levy, R. | Bosworth, C.E. | Freeman-Greenville, G.S.P.
(p.), jour de l’an. — I. Dans les pays islamiques du centre. Ce terme se présente fréquemment dans les ouvrages arabes sous la forme Nayrūz, qui apparaît déjà chez al-Ak̲h̲ṭal [ q.v.] (voir al-Ḏj̲awālīḳī, Muʿarrab, éd. A. M. S̲h̲ākir, Téhéran 1966; al-Ḳalḳas̲h̲andī, Ṣubḥ al-aʿs̲h̲ā, II, 408). C’est le premier jour de l’année solaire persane, et il n’a pas d’équivalent dans l’année lunaire islamique (al-Masʿūdī, Murūd̲j̲., III, 416-17 = §§ 1301-2). A l’époque achéménide, l’année officielle commençait au Nawrūz, quand le soleil entre dans le signe du Bélier (é…

Anwarī

(480 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
, tak̲h̲alluṣ d’Awḥad al-dīn Muḥammad b. Muḥammad (? ou ʿAlī b. Maḥmūd) Ḵh̲āwarānī, que l’on proclama, dans un bayt bien connu, le maître de la ḳaṣīda persane. On sait peu de chose de certain sur sa vie, hors le fait qu’il devint l’un des poètes de cour du sultan sald̲j̲ūḳīde Sand̲j̲ar (m. 1157) vers la fin dela vie du prince, et qu’il écrivait des ḳaṣīdas en 540/1145 — deux portent cette date — époque à laquelle il devait être encore fort jeune. Il était né dans le district de Ḵh̲āwarān, au Ḵh̲urāsān, et il fit une partie de ses études à la madrasa Manṣūriy…

Pāʾ

(413 words)

Author(s): Levy, R. | Bosworth, C.E.
ou bāʾ-i fārsī ou bāʾ- i ʿad̲j̲amī: bāʾ avec trois points souscrits, inventé pour le persan comme supplément au ʾ arabe et pour représenter la bilabiale sourde par opposition à la sonore b [voir Bāʾ]. Ce phonème est parfois permutable avec le bāʾ (par ex. asp et asb; dapīr et dabīr), et plus fréquemment avec le fāʾ (par ex. sapīd et safīd; Pārs et Fārs). L’emploi usuel de cette lettre dans les manuscrits est relativement moderne, mais on la trouve dans de bons exemplaires du VIIe/XIIIe siècle, alors que parallèlement, son emploi fait souvent défaut dans des manuscrits de date …

Mīr

(241 words)

Author(s): Levy, R. | Burton-Page, J.
, titre persan qui est une forme abrégée de l’arabe amīr et s’en approche par le sens, de même que du titre de mīrzā [ q.v.]. (Sur la suppression de Iʾ alif initial, cf. Bū Sahl pour Abu Sahl, etc.). De même que le titre d’amīr, celui-ci s’applique aux princes (Manūèihrī, éd. A. de Biberstein-Kazimirski, Menoutchehri poète persan du onzième siècle de notre ère, Paris 1886, 96, en parlant de Masʿūd de G̲h̲azna, l’appelle «Mïr»), mais il est porté également par des poètes et autres hommes de ïettres (p. ex. Mīr ʿAlī S̲h̲īr, Mīr Ḵh̲wānd. Mī Muḥsin; cf. l’article suivant). Dans l’Inde et au …

Mustawfī

(699 words)

Author(s): Levy, R. | Bosworth, C.E.
(a.), an official in mediaeval Islamic administration who was in charge of official accounts and thus acted as an accountant-general. The title first becomes generally used in the successor-states to the ʿAbbāsid caliphate. Under the G̲h̲aznavids, the mustawfī al-mamālik was responsible to the vizier, and kept accounts of income and expenditure in the dīwān-i wazīr (M. Nāzim, The life and times of Sulṭān Maḥmūd of Ghazna , Cambridge 1931, 132). Under the Great Sald̲j̲ūḳs, e.g., in the time of Niẓām al-Mulk [ q.v.], the mustawfī was second in importance only to the vizier himsel…

Anwarī

(417 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
, the tak̲h̲alluṣ of awḥad al-dīn muh. b. muh. (? or ʿalī b. maḥmūd ) ḵh̲āwarānī , proclaimed in a well-known bayt to be master of the Persian ḳaṣīda . Of his life little is known for certain except that he became one of the court poets of the Sald̲j̲ūḳ sultan Sand̲j̲ar (d. 1157) at some period towards the end of the prince’s life and that he was writing ḳaṣīdas in 540/1145—two of them being thus dated—when he must still have been quite young. He was born in the district of Ḵh̲āwarān in Ḵh̲ūrāsān and received part of his education at the Manṣuriyya madrasa in Ṭūs. Either whi…

Pist

(59 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
(p.), a kind of food compounded of the liver of gazelles or almonds, etc. A daily portion of the size of a pistachio ( pista ) is taken by those derwīs̲h̲es and others who undertake long fasts, e.g. the čilla or fortyday fast, and is sufficient to maintain life. (R. Levy) Bibliography Vullers, Lexicon Persico-Latinum, s.v. pist, čilla.

Mīr

(228 words)

Author(s): Levy, R. | Burton-Page, J.
, a Persian title abbreviated from the Arab amīr and approximating in meaning both to it and to the title mīrzā [ q.v.]. (For the dropping of the initial alif cf. Bū Sahl for Abū Sahl, etc.). Like amīr the title is applied to princes (Manūčihrī, ed. A. de Biberstein-Kazimirsky, ¶ Menoutchehri , poète persan du onzième siècle de notre ère , Paris 1886, 96, speaks of Sultan Masʿūd of G̲h̲azna, as “Mīr”), but it is also borne by poets and other men of letters (e.g. Mīr ʿAlī S̲h̲īr, Mīr K̲h̲wānd, Mīr Muḥsin; cf. the following arts.). In India and Pakistan, Sayyids sometimes call themselv…

Pūst

(188 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
(p.), skin, Turkish pōst or pōstakī , a tanned sheepskin, used as the ceremonial seat or throne of a pīr or s̲h̲ayk̲h̲ of a dervish order. The head, sides and foot had mystical significances ascribed to them. It corresponds to the Arabic bisāṭ . According to Ewliyā Čelebi (Istanbul 1314/1896-7, i, 495), the murīd , after passing the test by the pīr, is called ṣāḥib pūst . On ceremonial occasions amongst the Bektās̲h̲ī order, the hall or convent was said to have been set out with twelve pūsts of white sheepskin in remembrance of the twelve Imāms or standing symbolicall…

Nawrūz

(1,347 words)

Author(s): Levy, R. | Bosworth, C.E. | Freeman-Greenville, G.S.P.
(p.), New (Year’s) Day. 1. In the Islamic heartlands. The word is frequently represented in Arabic works in the form Nayrūz , which appears in Arabic literature as early as the verse of al-Ak̲h̲ṭal [ q.v.] (see al-D̲j̲awālīḳī, Muʿarrab , ed. A.M. S̲h̲ākir, Tehran 1966; al-Ḳalḳas̲h̲andī, Ṣubḥ al-aʿs̲h̲ā , ii, 408). It was the first day of the Persian solar year and is not represented in the Muslim lunar year (al-Masʿūdī, Murūd̲j̲ , iii, 416-17 = §§ 1301-2). In Achaemenid times, the official year began with Nawrūz, when the sun entered the Zodiac…

Nawrūz

(599 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
(p.), New (Year’s) Day, frequently represented in Arabic works in the form Nairūz (Ḳalḳas̲h̲andī, Ṣubḥ al-Aʿs̲h̲ā, ii. 408). It was the first day of the Persian solar year and is not represented in the Muslim lunar year (Masʿūdī, Murūd̲j̲, iii. 416 sq.). In Achaemenid times the official year began with Nawrūz, when the sun entered the Zodiacal Sign of Aries (the vernal equinox). Popular and more ancient usage however would appear to have regarded the midsummer solstice as Nawrūz (Bīrūnī, Chronology, transl. Sachau, p. 185, 201). It was the time of harvest and was celebrated…

Mīrzā Taḳī K̲h̲ān

(654 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
, Amīr-i Niẓām or Amīr-i Kabīr, was born at Farāhān of humble parents, his father having been first the cook and then the steward of the Ḳāʾim Maḳām, Mīrzā Abu ’l-Ḳāsim, who ended his life as the first minister of Muḥammad S̲h̲āh Ḳād̲j̲ār (1834-1848). In 1829, as a young menial, Taḳī Ḵh̲an accompanied the Persian Commander-in-Chief on the Mission which was sent to St. Petersburg after the murder at Ṭihrān of the Russian ambassador Grebaiodoff. On his return to Persia after this visit to Europe, he was promoted to be a mīrzā or writer, and subsequently was advanced to the rank of k̲h̲ā…

ʿUrf

(529 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
(a.), defined by Ḏj̲urd̲j̲ānī ( Taʿrīfāt, ed. Flügel, p. 154) as “[Action or belief] in which persons persist with the concurrence of the reasoning powers and which their natural dispositions agree to accept [as right]”. It stands therefore to represent unwritten custom as opposed to established law, s̲h̲arʿ (cf. Māwardī, ed. Enger, p. 5; Bābur-nāma, ed. Beveridge, f. 124b, line 7; transl., p. 194) though attempts have not been lacking to regard it as one of the uṣūl (cf. Goldziher, Ẓāhiriten, p. 204 sq). It is sometimes held to be equivalent to case law or common law. This ma…

Pāʾ

(335 words)

Author(s): Levy, R. | Bosworth, C.E.
or bāʾ-i fārsī or bāʾ-i ʿad̲j̲amī , i.e. the bāʾ with three points subscript, invented for Persian as supplement to the Arabic bāʾ and to represent the unvoiced, as opposed to the voiced, bilabial plosive (for the voiced b, see bāʾ). It is sometimes interchangeable with bāʾ (e.g. asp and asb , dabīr and dapīr ) and, more frequently, with fāʾ (e.g. sapīd and safīd , Pārs and Fārs ). The regular use of the letter in manuscripts is comparatively modern, but it is found in good ones of the 7th/13th century while at the same time it is often omitted in manuscripts of much later date ( GIPh

Ḳurrat al-ʿAin

(1,711 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
, the Bābī heroine and one of the original apostles of the Bābī faith. The date of her birth is uncertain and the sources are not very explicit with regard to the order of the events of her life. Her father, Ḥād̲j̲d̲j̲ Mullā Muḥammad Ṣāliḥ, was an influential mud̲j̲- tahid of Ḳazwīn, but he was at one time the friend of Ḥād̲j̲d̲j̲ī Saiyid Kāẓim of Res̲h̲t, the chief disciple and the successor of S̲h̲aik̲h̲ Aḥmad Aḥsāī,ʾ founder of the S̲h̲aik̲h̲ī sect ( Nuḳṭat al- Kāf, ed. E. G. Browne, G. M. S., xv., 1910, p. 139). It was from the Saiyid that she first heard of the new teachings and …

Pūst

(111 words)

Author(s): Levy, R.
or pōst (P.), skin; Turkish: pōstakī; a tanned sheepskin, used as the ceremonial seat or throne of a pīr or s̲h̲aik̲h̲ of a derwīs̲h̲ order. The head, sides and foot had mystical significances ascribed to them. It corresponds to the Arabic bisāṭ. According to Ewliyā Čelebi (Stambul, i. 495), the murīd, after passing the test by the pīr, is called ṣāḥib pūst. On ceremonial occasions amongst the Baktas̲h̲ī order, the hall or convent was set out with twelve pūsts of white sheepskin in remembrance of the twelve imāms. (R. Levy) Bibliography J. P. Brown, The Darvishes, Oxford 1927 G. Jacob, in Türki…
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