Al-’Iqd al-Farid wa bi Hamishihi Zahr al-Adab wa Thamr al-Albab li Abi Ishaq Ibrahim bin Ali, al-Ma’arouf bi al-Qairawani. THREE VOLUMES.

Ibn ‘Abd Rabbih, Ahmad ibn Muhammad. Edited by Hamad al-Fayumi al-’Ijmawi.

Book ID: 20203

£600.00

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4to. Volume I: 8 pp. (contents) + 350 pp., Arabic text within borders, printed text on margin / Volume II: 4 pp. (contents) + 323 pp., browned paper, modern had back binding, some ink inscriptions on margin, few wormhole affecting margin of volume one, ex-library stamps, Al-Matba’a al-Azhariyyah al-Misriyah, first edition, 1321 A. H. / 1903.

Synopsis

Al-`Iqd al-Farid (The Unique Necklace), is one of the classics of Arabic literature. Compiled in several volumes by an Andalusian scholar and poet named Ibn `Abd Rabbih (246–328 H. / 860–940 C.E.), it remains a mine of information about various elements of Arab culture and letters during the four centuries before his death. Essentially it is a book of adab, a term understood in modern times to specifically mean literature but in earlier times its meaning included all that a well-informed person had to know in order to pass in society as a cultured and refined individual. This meaning later evolved and included belles lettres in the form of elegant prose and verse that was as much entertaining as it was morally educational, such as poetry, pleasant anecdotes, proverbs, historical accounts, general knowledge, wise maxims, and even practical philosophy.
Ibn `Abd Rabbih’s imagination and organization saved his encyclopaedic compendium from easily being a chaotic jumble of materials by conceiving of it as a necklace composed of twenty-five ‘books’, each of which carried the name of a jewel. Volume 1 comprises: The Book of the Pearl, The Book of the Nonpareil Jewel, The Book of the Chysolite, and The Book of the Nacre.
Each of the twenty-five ‘books’ was organized around a major theme and had an introduction written by Ibn `Abd Rabbih, followed by his relevant adab selections of verse and prose on the theme of the ‘book’. He drew on a vast repertoire of sources including the Bible, the Qur’an, and the Hadith, and the works of al-Jahiz, Ibn Qutayba, al-Mubarrad, Abu `Ubayda ibn al-Muthanna and several others, and the diwans of many Arab poets including his own poetry, which is why The Unique Necklace is a standard text for those interested in classical Arabic literature.

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