Musa ibn Khalil Mazandarani

Musā ibn Khalil ibn Taghi ibn Jafar ibn Mohammad Ebrāhim Māzandarāni (Persian: موسی بن خلیل بن تقی بن جعفر بن محمد ابراهیم مازندرانی), Persian scribe and scholar of nineteenth century Persia. Musa was born into a family of good standing which originated in the northern Iranian region of Mazandaran.

As far as is known, he lived and worked in the city of Lahijan where already his father had lived. He mentions the city as his place of residence in his work signing beside his name "resident of Lahijan" (Persian: ساكن لاهیجان)[1] while using "Māzandarāni" as a reference to his region of origin according to common Persian practice in 19th century. Lahijan, a town of the Iranian province Gilan bordering Mazandaran, birthplace of the Iranian Buyid dynasty[2] and home to Zahed Gilani, the 13th century spiritual master of the eponymous ancestor of the Safavid dynasty Safi-ad-din Ardabili,[3] was one of the oldest towns of the region with a long and vivid intellectual life.

According to the Iranian Books and Manuscripts Data Bank, there are two original manuscripts by Musa ibn Khalil Mazandarani:

References

  1. Iranian Books and Manuscripts Data Bank (بانك اطلاعات كتب و نسخ خطی). Hedāyat ol Mo'menin elal Hagh al Mobin: "موسي بن خليل بن تقي بن جعفر بن محمد ابراهيم مازنوراني الاصل ساكن لاهيجان" : "Musā ibn Khalil ibn Taghi ibn Jafar ibn Mohammad Ebrāhim Māzandarāni resident of Lahijan". , accessed 4/5/2016
  2. Wilferd Madelung. GĪLĀN iv. History in the Early Islamic Period. Encyclopaedia Iranica. Volume X, Fascicle 6, pages 634-635. "Lāhījān (earlier name Līāhej), from where the Deylamite Būyid dynasty had originated" ... Digital version: , accessed 4/6/2016
  3. Christian Bromberger. LĀHIJĀN, a city in the province of Gilān. Encyclopaedia Iranica. "The close connections between the Safavids and Lāhijān dated from the 13th century, when the mystic Shaykh Tāj-al-Din Zāhed Gilāni (1216-301) had been the spiritual master and father-in-law of Ṣafi-ad-Din Ardabili" ... Digital version:, accessed 4/6/2016
  4. Iranian Books and Manuscripts Data Bank (بانك اطلاعات كتب و نسخ خطی). Page titled Nan va Halva (Persian). Link: , accessed 4/5/2016
  5. Encyclopaedia Iranica. Volume III, Fascicle 4, pages 429-430. BAHĀʾ-AL-DĪN ʿĀMELĪ. Digital version: , accessed 4/7/2016
  6. Encyclopaedia Iranica. Volume III, Fascicle 4, pages 429-430. BAHĀʾ-AL-DĪN ʿĀMELĪ. Digital version: , accessed 4/6/2016
  7. Iranian Books and Manuscripts Data Bank (بانك اطلاعات كتب و نسخ خطی). Page titled Hedāyat ol Mo'menin elal Hagh al Mobin (Persian). Link: , accessed 4/5/2016
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.