D. | G. | Serial. | TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES. |
Part IV, Chapter XXI = XCVI. On the pecularities of animals and their curious effects. | |||
f80b | f347a | 2009 | In the introduction the author states that, since he has dealt fully with the nature and temperament of mankind throughout the collection, and in order to make this book more comprehensive and valuable, he thinks proper to devote a few chapters to the animal kingdom also. |
On the elephant: its domestic nature, its constitution, and longevity. A quotation from the book called Ṭabá’i‘-i-Ḥayawánát, about the inverted tip of the tongue of the animal; according to some Indian Philosophers, the animal could have spoken if only its tongue were located in the right direction (i.e. tip forwards like man). Further, they have found support for this conjecture in the keen sense and discipline in the nature of the animal. (Cf. D. H. H. II, p. 269; Q. A. M. p. 400.) Certain methods of hunting the elephant. (The anecdote concludes with a couplet of Táju’d-Dín Sarakhsí). | |||
f81b | f347b | 2010 | A Story of the spiteful nature of the animal: The elephant that killed the son of a certain Muḥammad Fílawí in Marw, in the reign of Maliksháh. (The Kitáb-i-Ṭabá’í‘-i-Ḥayawánát of Marwazí as the source, see above, p. 89). |
” | ” | 2011 | A story told by the Author on the authority of a friend (Shamsu’d-Dín Qayṣar (?), probably a physician in Nahrwála) about the elephant that took vengeance upon a tailor. Certain further peculiarities of the animal. |
” | ” | 2012 | How Sharafu’z-Zamán Ṭáhir Marwazí (the court-physician of Maliksháh, whose work is often cited in matters connected with medicine and natural history) treated the wound of a royal elephant in Marw in 478 A.H. = 1085—6 A. D. (See above, pp. 88—9). |
” | f348a | 2013 | The camel: its peculiar constitution and various breeds. |
D. | G. | Serial. | TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES. |
f82a | f348a | 2014 | The grudge of the camel, and the story of an Arab. |
” | ” | 2015 | Some medicinal properties of the parts of a camel. |
” | ” | 2016 | The buffalo: its habit of sinking in water and killing fleas. (Cf. Q. A. M. p. 383, D. H. H. p. 229). |
” | ” | 2017 | A person coaxes his sunken buffalos by music. |
f82b | ” | 2018 | The ox: various kinds, Byzantine cows with 4 horns; a peculiar method of breeding bees from the corpse of a calf, and some aspects of bee-hiving. |
” | f348b | 2019 | Sheep: their usefulness, wool, difference in colour arising from the different waters they drink, with illustrative examples, and their special breeds. |
f83a | ” | 2020 | The goat of a butcher fed on flesh and its delicious meat. |
” | f349a | 2021 | The deer: its kinds, common and musk-deer; the theory of the congestion of blood in the gland of the animal, and how the Tibetans and other Central Asian tribes hunt after these musk-bladders. The association of a partridge with a deer. |
f83b | ” | 2022 | A fowler entices partridges by wearing the skin of a deer. |
” | ” | 2023 | The antelope: its horns, its fondness for music, the account by Dioscorides of the medicinal properties of its horn. (Probably taken from an Arabic version of his work on zoology mentioned by H. Kh. vol. III, p. 121, No. 4662; see above, p. 98, n. 3 and cf. Q. T. H. p. 183). |
f84a | f349b | 2024 | The horse: a noble-natured animal, illustrations from the Qur’án. |
” | ” | 2025 | Ptolemy’s account of the famous breed of war-horses, of which one was owned by Alexander the Great. |
” | ” | 2026 | The myth of the progenitor of the famous breed of horses in Arabia, which is supposed to be one of Solomon’s steeds. |
f84b | ” | 2027 | A horse found among the Kurds with small horns in the forehead, and [al-Bírúní’s] account of such an animal being presented to the Sámánids in Bukhárá in 339 A. H. (See above, p. 98). |
” | f350a | 2028 | How Muḥammad b. Maslama defeated the Byzantines by threatening their horses with the stuffed skins of camels. |
f85a | ” | 2029 | The famous steed of Sa‘d b. Abí Waqqáṣ, called Balqá, and the exploit of Abú Miḥjan ath-Thaqafí the poet on the eve of the Battle of Qádisiyya, and his release and penitence, (The [Kitábu’l-]Maghází as the source.) (Cf. Ibn Qutayba’s Kitábu ’sh-Shu‘ará’, ed. De Goeje, pp. 251—2). |
” | f350b | 2030 | The marvellous feat of Bukayr b. ‘Abdu’llah al-Laythí on his horse, by jumping it over a stream at Qádisiyya. |
f85b | ” | 2031 | The theory of the Greek philosophers about the influence of shape and colour at the time of conception, either on animals or men. Experiments tried at the time of the coupling of mares and also on human intercourse. |
” | ” | 2032 | The mule: the famous breeds of Armenia, Sharwán and Tiflís, and the special breed of the West in Andulus. |
” | ” | 2033 | Account given by Dioscorides, the Greek philosopher, of the medicinal properties of the various parts of an ass. (Cf. Q. A. M. pp. 376—7). |
The chapter contains no eulogy but ends with a reference to the coming chapter. |