Şiirler
Start new search. Download as XML
Summary View
- Country
- Turkey
- City
- Istanbul
- Institution
- Süleymaniye Yazma Eser Kütüphanesi
- Collection
- Nafız Paşa
- Shelfmark
- no. 939
Contents
- Work 2: Poems (Awḥad al-Dīn Kirmānī, Ḥāmid ibn Abī al-Fakhr, -1237 or 1238)
-
- LOC subject headings
- Sufi poetry, Persian
- Author
- Awḥad al-Dīn Kirmānī, Ḥāmid ibn Abī al-Fakhr, -1237 or 1238
- Show other names
- اوحدالدين كرمانى، حامد بن ابى الفخر
- Awḥad al-Dīn Kirmānī, d. 1238
- Evhadüddîn-i Kirmâni
- Awḥad al-Dīn Kirmānī, Ḥāmid ibn Abī al-Fakhr, -1237 or 1238 (authorised)
- Awḥad al-Dīn Kirmānī, Ḥāmid ibn Abī al-Fakhr, d. 1237 or 8 (variant)
- Evhadü'd-Din, -1237 or 1238 (variant)
- Evhadü'din Hâmid b. Ebi'l-Fahr el-Kirmanı̂, -1237 or 1238 (variant)
- Ḥāmid ibn Abī al-Fakhr Awḥad al-Dīn Kirmānī, -1237 or 1238 (variant)
- Kirmânı̂, -1237 or 1238 (variant)
- Kirmānī, Awḥad al-Dīn Ḥāmid ibn Abī al-Fakhr, -1237 or 1238 (variant)
- Şeyh Evhadü'd-din-i Kirmânı̂, -1237 or 1238 (variant)
- اوحد الدين كرمانى، حميد بن ابى الفخر (variant)
- اوحدالدين كرمانى، حامد بن ابى الفخر (variant)
- Biographical notes
- A famous Iranian Sufi who left Kerman at an early age and lived first in Baghdad, where he taught Shafi law at the Hakkâkiyye Medresesi. He later became a disciple of Rukn al-Din Sujāsī .and consequently connected teachings of Quṭb al-Dīn Abharī. and ʻAbd al-Qāhir ibn ʻAbd Allāh Suhrawardī, 1097-1168, being the former who introduced him to Sufism and inspired him to travel. During his travels, he met apparently with Ibn al-ʻArabī, 1165-1240 and later visited Anatolia at the beginning of the 13th century [1200-1215 CE] where his beliefs became influenced by other Sufi masters he met in his journeys. Among them Shams-i Tabrīzī -1247, Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī, Maulana, 1207-1273, Ṣadr al-Dīn al-Qūnawī, Muḥammad ibn Isḥāq, -1273 or 1274 and Fakhr al-Dīn Ibrāhīm ʻIrāqī, -1289?. (See (Weischer, B.M.. "Kirmānī." Encyclopaedia of Islam. , [n.d.] referenceworks.brillonline.com.)). He is considered as a shāhidbāzī Sufi because of his conception of mystical philosophy based on “the contemplation of the divine beauty in earthly forms, preferably in beautiful boys” (See (Weischer, B.M.. "Kirmānī." Encyclopaedia of Islam. , [n.d.] referenceworks.brillonline.com.)). During the last years of his life he lived in Baghdad where he received the support of the ʿAbbāsid caliph Mustaʻṣim in 632 AH [1234-1235 CE]. The date of his death, according to Jāmī, 1414-1492, is 3 Shaʿbān 635 [1238 CE]
- Title
- Poems
- Notes
- A collection of poems containing sayings and teachings of the author.
- Bound with Tabrīzī's work
- Main language of text
- Persian
- Foliation
- ff. 36-39
- Bibliography
- Editions
- Kirmānī, Awḥad al-Dīn Hāmid ibn Abī al-Fakhr. Heart's witness: the Sufi quatrains of Awḥaduddīn Kirmānī. Edited by Weischer, Bernd Manuel. Translated by Lamborn Wilson, Peter. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1978.
- Studies
- Azamat, Nihat. "EVHADÜDDÎN-i KİRMÂNİ." Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı İslam Ansiklopedisi. 11, [n.d.]: 518-520.
- De Nicola, Bruno. "The ladies of Rūm: A hagiographic view of women in thirteenth and fourteenth century Anatolia." Journal of Sufi Studies. 3, no. 1 2014.
- Weischer, B.M.. "Kirmānī." Encyclopaedia of Islam. , [n.d.] referenceworks.brillonline.com.
Physical Description
- Number of folios
- ff.
- Dimensions of folio
- width 14.5cm, height 20.5cm
- Dimensions of written area
- width 7cm, height 15cm
- Columns
- 2
- Ruled lines
- 21
- Seal
- Waqf seal of Yenikapı Mevlevîhânesi (İstanbul)
History
- Date of copy
- late 15th or 16th century