Les Pensées de Zamakhschari, Texte Arabe, publié complet pour la première fois, avec une traduction et des notes, par C. Barbier de Meynard. Nawabigh el-Kelim (“Les Penses Jaillissantes”).
Al-Zamakhschari, Abu al-Qassim Mahmud ibn Umar.
Synopsis
Richly annotated edition of the book The Gushing Thoughts or Nawabigh el-Kelim (Les Pensees Jaillissantes) by the Muslim scholar Abu al-Qasim Mahmud ibn Umar, also known as al-Zamakhshari. Abu al-Qasim Mahmud ibn Umar al-Zamakhshari became a renowned scholar of the Mutazilite school of Islam. He used Persian in some of his works, although he was a strong supporter of the Arabic language as well as an opponent of the Shu’ubiyya movement, even composing an entire grammatical work to refute it. He is best known for Al-Kashshaaf, a seminal commentary on the Qur’an. The commentary is famous for its deep linguistic analysis of the verses. He lived in Mecca for many years, and he became known as Jar-Allah (“God’s neighbour”). He later returned to Khwarezm, where he died in 1144 in the capital Gorgan (in the present-day province of Gulestan, Iran). He studied in Bukhara and Samarkand while enjoying the fellowship of jurists of Baghdad.