- Source: Abu Amr Ishaq ibn Mirar ash-Shaybani
Abū ‘Amr Isḥaq ibn Mirār ash-Shaybānī (d. 206/821, or 210/825, or 213/828, or 216/831) was a famous lexicographer-encyclopedist and collector-transmitter of Arabic poetry of the Kufan School of philology.
Abu Amr was born in Kufa in the first quarter of the second/eighth century.
A native of Ramādat al-Kūfah, who lived in Baghdad, he was a mawla (client) under the protection of the Banū Shaybān, hence his nisba. Descended from an Iranian landowner (dihqān) on his paternal side, his mother was an Arab 'Nabataean' (an Aramaic-speaking, rural Iraqi), and he reportedly knew a little of the 'Nabataean' language (an unattested form of Aramaic). The biographers al-Nadīm and Ibn Khallikān quote a claim by Ibn al-Sikkit's that he lived to the age of one hundred and eighteen and wrote in his own hand up to his death, in 213/828. However this is disputed by a claim that he died in 206/821 aged one hundred and ten, and this latter is deemed credible.
Abū 'Amr's teachers were Rukayn b. Rabī' ash-Shāmī, a transmitter of ḥadīth and al-Mufaddal ad-Dabbi, who developed his love of poetry. His son ‘Amr relates that he collected and classed poems, diwans (collections), from the jahiliyya (pre-Islamic) period from more than eighty Arab tribes. He wrote more than eighty volumes in his own hand and deposited these in the mosque of Kūfah.
The eminent scholars Ibn Hanbal, al-Kasim ibn Sallām, and Ibn as-Sikkit, the author of the Islāh al-Mantik, learned from him.
Of his lexicographical works, often of a very specialized nature, only the Kitāb al-Jīm (Kitab al-Lughat or Kitab al-Huruf), survives.
Works
The Strange in the Ḥadīth
On Dialects, or Rare forms Known by the Jīm (the J); Kitāb al-Jīm, or Kitāb al-Hurūf, or Kitab al-Lughat
The Great Collection of Anecdotes, or Rare Forms, in three manuscript editions, large, small, and medium;
Treatise on Bees
The Palm
Treatise on The Camel
The Disposition of Man
Letters
Commentary on the book “Eloquent Style”
Treatise on the Horse
book
Al-Jim is one of the first and oldest dictionaries that has been praised continuously and is compiled based on the letters of the alphabet. It seems that Abu Amr's intention in writing this book was to compile unfamiliar and far-fetched words. Al-Jaim's book has explained and interpreted
One of the features of this book is that many dialects of different Arab tribes are recorded in it. In addition, the author has given the names of the people from whom he took the materials of the book, the book of Al-Jeem, which is the only remaining work of Abu Amr, this book is in 3 volumes, Ebrahim Abiari (Vol. 1), Abdul Alim Tahawi (Vol. 2). and Abdul Karim Ezbawi (Vol. 3) has been published in Cairo.
Poets edited by Abū ‘Amr ash-Shaybānī
Al-Ḥuṭay’ah
Labīd ibn Rabī’ah
Tamīm ibn Ubayy ibn Muqbil
Durayd ibn al-Ṣimmah
‘Amrj ibn Ma’dī Karib
Al-A’shā al-Kabīr (Maymūn ibn Qays)
Mutamminm ibn Nuwayrah
Al-Zibraqān ibn Badr
Ḥumayd ibn Thawr al-Rājiz
Ḥumayd al-Arqaṭ
Abū al-Aswad al-Du’alī
Abū al-Najm al-‘Ijlī
Al-‘Ajjāj al-Rājaz
References
Sources
Dodge, Bayard, ed. (1970). The Fihrist of al-Nadim, A Tenth-Century Survey of Muslim Culture. New York & London: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-02925-X.
Yāqūt (1993). Iḥsān ʿAbbās (ed.). Muʿjam al-udabāʾ. Vol. 2. Beirut. pp. 625–8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
al-Qifṭī (1973) [1950]. Muḥammad Abū l-Faḍl Ibrāhīm (ed.). Inbāh al-ruwāt. Vol. 1. Cairo. pp. 221–9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Ibn Khallikān (1968). Iḥsān ʿAbbās (ed.). Wafayāt al-aʿyān. Vol. 1. Beirut. pp. 201–2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
al-Ṣafadī (1971). Muḥammad Yūsuf Najm (ed.). al-Wāfī bi-l-wafayāt. Vol. 8. Wiesbaden. pp. 425–6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
al-Suyūṭī (1964). Muḥammad Abū l-Faḍl Ibrāhīm (ed.). Bughyat al-wuʿāt. Vol. 1. Cairo. pp. 439–40.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
al-Suyūṭī (2005). Ḥasan al-Malkh and Suhā Naʿja (ed.). Tuḥfat al-adīb fī nuḥāt Mughnī l-labīb. Vol. 2. Irbid. pp. 613–7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Sources
Versteegh, K. (1997). "al-S̲h̲aybānī". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs, W. P. & Lecomte, G. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Volume IX: San–Sze. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 394–395. ISBN 978-90-04-10422-8.