The two oldest Arabic prose works of importance (except
the Qur'án) which have come down to us are Ibn Isḥáq's
(† A.D. 767) Biography of the Prophet in the recension of Ibn
Hishám († A.D. 834),*
and a work on genealogy by Ibnu'l-
Brockelmann in his admirable Geschichte der Arabischen Litteratur (Weimar, 1897- ) divides the earlier portion of his subject into the following periods:—
I. The purely Arabian literature (almost entirely consisting of poems composed by pagan, and a few Jewish and Christian, poets), from the earliest times till the time of the Prophet.
II. The literature (also purely Arabian, and, with the exception of the Qur'án, poetical) of the Prophet and his time.
III. The literature (also purely Arabian) of the Umayyad period (A.D. 661-750).
IV. The classical period (A.D. 750-1000) of Muhammadan literature, composed in the Arabic language, but no longer exclusively, or even mainly, by Arabs.
V. The post-classical period (A.D. 1000-1258) of the same, down to the Mongol invasion, sack of Baghdad, and extinction of the 'Abbásid dynasty.
Of these periods the first three but slightly concern us, and all that is needful for our purpose has been already said. The periods subsequent to the Mongol invasion lie also beyond the scope of this work, since even before this momentous event the national life of Persia had been definitely detached from that of Arabia and Western Asia, and the Persian language had become the main vehicle of Persian thought. The fourth and fifth periods, on the other hand, concern us closely; for during the first (A.D. 750-1000) the Persian tongue had scarcely re-emerged, as a literary language, from the eclipse which it suffered at the Arab Conquest; and during the second, although it was once more widely and successfully cultivated for all literary purposes, there was in Persia a large co-existent Arabic literature produced by Persians. The Arabic literature produced in Persia after the Mongol Invasion was far more restricted in scope, and was mainly confined to the domains of Theology, Philosophy, and Jurisprudence.
From the Persian point of view, then, whence we here regard the matter, it is the Arabic literature of 'Abbásid times with which our concern chiefly lies, and, in the present chapter, those writers who belong to what we have defined as “the Golden Age” (A.D. 749-847). A list of the most important of these, arranged in order of the dates of their decease, here follows.
(1) Ibnu'l-Muqaffa' († A.D. 757), the converted Magian, who, notwithstanding the fact that he was born a Persian and a Zoroastrian, is counted by Ibn Muqla († A.D. 939) and Ibn Khaldún the Moor († A.D. 1405-6) amongst the past-masters of the Arabic tongue. He was also, as has been already remarked, an accomplished Pahlawí scholar, and translated from this language many works into Arabic. Of these, his Arabic version of Kalíla and Dimna, still a classic in all Arabic-speaking countries, alone survives in its entirety, his much more important translation of the Pahlawí “Book of Kings” (Khudháy-náma) being only known to us by citations in later histories.
(2) Ibn 'Uqba († A.D. 758), the oldest biographer of the Prophet, whose work, as it would seem, is unfortunately entirely lost.
(3) Muḥammad b. as-Sá'ib al-Kalbí († A.D. 763), who, together with his son Hishám b. al-Kalbí († A.D. 820), was well versed in the history of the ancient Arabs.
(4) 'Ísá b. 'Umar ath-Thaqafí († A.D. 766), one of the founders of Arabic grammar, the teacher of both Khalíl b. Aḥmad (the alleged inventor of the Science of Prosody in Arabic) and the great Síbawayhi, the Persian.
(5) Ibn Isḥáq († A.D. 767), the biographer of the Prophet, whose work (though possibly, as de Goeje thinks, still extant in its original form in the Kyüprülü Library at Constantinople) is known to us only in the recension of Ibn Hishám.
(6) Abú Ḥanífa an-Nu'mán († A.D. 767), one of the four orthodox “Imáms” of the Sunnís, the founder of the Ḥanafí school, of Persian origin, and in strong sympathy with the descendants of 'Alí.
(7) Ḥammád b. Sábúr (Shápúr) ar-Ráwiya († A.D. 772-775), of Persian (Daylamite) origin, the collector and editor of the seven ancient Arabic poems known as the Mu'allaqát.
(8) Jábir b. Ḥayyán, the occultist (circ. A.D. 776; see p. 274 supra).
(9) Muḥammad b. 'Abdu'lláh al-Azdí (circ. A.D. 777), who wrote a history of the Conquest of Syria.
(10) Abú Duláma († A.D. 777), a negro, “more jester and Court-
(11) Bashshár b. Burd († A.D. 783), the blind Persian sceptic and poet, to whom reference has already been made.
(12) Al-Mufaḍḍal aḍ-Ḍabbí († A.D. 786), tutor to the Caliph al-
(13) As-Sayyidu'l-Ḥimyarí (“the Ḥimyarite Sayyid,” † A.D. 789), a zealous Shí'ite, “whose poems” (mostly in praise of the Prophet and his family) “are distinguished,” says Brockelmann (p. 83), “like those of Abu'l-'Aṭáhiya and Bashshár, by simplicity of language.”
(14) Khalíl b. Aḥmad († A.D. 791), the grammarian and prosodist mentioned under (4) supra.
(15) Síbawayhi († A.D. 793), the Persian grammarian, also mentioned under (4) supra.