Yaqut al-Hamawi

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Muslim scholar
Yaqut ibn-'Abdullah al-Rumi al-Hamawi
Title Al Hamawi
Born 1179
Died 1229
Region Syria
Main interests Islamic history

Yāqūt ibn-'Abdullah al-Rūmī al-Hamawī) (1179–1229) (Arabic: ياقوت الحموي الرومي‎) was an Islamic biographer and geographer renowned for his encyclopedic writings on the Muslim world. "al-Rumi" ("from Rûm") refers to his Greek (Byzantine) descent; "al-Hamawi" is taken, as usual with slaves, from the family name of his master after Hama, Syria, and ibn-Abdullah is a reference to his father's name, Abdullah. This is common among slaves who don't know the name of their fathers, to call him Abdullah. The word yāqūt means ruby or hyacinth.

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[edit] History

Yaqut was a Greek sold as a slave to trader, Askar ibn Abi Nasr al-Hamawi, who lived in Baghdad, Iraq. His master taught him accounting and trading and sent him to trade on his behalf. He later freed him and that enabled Yagut to dedicate himself to his scholarly tasks. He was one of the last scholars who accessed to the libraries east of the Caspian Sea before Mongol invasion of Central Asia. He travelled to the peaceful scholarly city of ancient Merv in present-day Turkmenistan. There Yaqut spent two years in libraries, learning much of the knowledge he would later use in his works.[1] Yaqut spend the last few years of life in Aleppo and died there.

[edit] Works

  • Kitāb mu'jam al-buldān (معجم البلدان "Dictionary of Countries")
  • Mu'jam al-udabā', (معجم الأدباء "Dictionary of Writers") written in 1226.
  • al-Mushtarak wadh'ā wal-Muftaraq Sa'qā (المشترک وضعا والمفترق صعقا ), a version of which was printed in 1845 by Ferdinand Wüstenfeld.

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[edit] External links


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