D. | G. | Serial. | TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES. |
Part IV, Chapter II = LXXVII: On the Disadvantages of the Service of Kings. | |||
f7a | f292b | 1799 | Introduction on the instability of the favour of rulers and the risks that one has to confront in their service. How the Caliph Hárún ignored his pledges to the Barmecides and disgraced them publicly; and an account of one of the pledges which Yaḥyá, the Barmecide, wore on his neck as an amulet. |
f7b | ” | 1800 | The Caliph al-Hádí wants to avoid the company of his old friend, ‘Alí Muqátil, after he rose to the Caliphate. |
” | f293a | 1801 | Parwíz’s reproach to Bahrám Chúbín for punishing a servant; and his ironical suggestion to sheathe two swords in one case. (Cf. N. S. N., p. 76; see above, p. 81). |
f8a | ” | 1802 | The admonishment of Sultan Maḥmúd to his brother, Amír Naṣr, on an occasion of similar disregard of the royal authority: Maḥmúd orders the royal drums to be beaten at the palace of his brother. (Anec. repeated, I, ix, 494). (The Ta’ríkh-i-Dawlat-i-Yamíní mentioned as the source, see above, pp. 61, 63). |
” | ” | 1803 | Intrigues at the court of Walíd II against Ṭurayḥ b. Ismá‘íl ath-Thaqafí, the poet-laureate of the Caliph. |
” | ” | 1804 | Núshírwán punishes his impertinent courtiers when he assumes the royal dignity. (The Ta’ríkh-i-Mulúk-i-‘Ajam as the source, see above, p. 56). |
f8b | f293b | 1805 | Núshírwán punishes a courtier for the crimes of his protégé, a fugitive governor. (Cf. I, ix, 503). |
” | ” | 1806 | ‘Abdu’llah b. Málik al-Khuzá‘í, once suspected of treason, could hardly commend himself to the favour of the Caliph Hárún. |
f9a | ” | 1807 | ar-Rabí‘, the Chamberlain, is reproached by the Caliph al-Manṣúr for presenting a request at an inauspicious hour. |
” | f294a | 1808 | The treachery of the Caliph al-Manṣúr towards, and his assassination of, his benefactor and the founder of the ‘Abbásid Caliphate, Abú Muslim al-Khurásání. (Cf. I, ix, 485). |
The chapter concludes with a remark on the merits and defects of the service of kings and a panegyric on the Wazír. |