A few words may be devoted to the great Mu'tazilite commentator and philologist Abu'l-Qásim Maḥmúd b. 'Umar az-Zamakhsharí. az-Zamakhsharí, who was born at Khwárazm (the modern Khiva) in A.D. 1074, and died near the same place in A.D. 1143. He lived for some time at Mecca, whence he is often entitled Járu'lláh (“God's neighbour”). Though a strong opponent of the Shu'úbiyya, who held the Persians to be superior to the Arabs, he composed an Arabic-Persian lexicon for the use of his countrymen, which was published at Leipzig by Wetzstein in A.D. 1844. The Kashsháf, his great commentary on the Qur'án; the Mufaṣṣal, a very notable work on Arabic grammar; his geographical dictionary, entitled Kitábu'l-Amkina wa'l-Jibál wa'l-Miyáh; and his “Collars of Gold” (Aṭwáqu'dh-Dhahab), all written in Arabic, are his most important and celebrated works.
Of Abu'l-Fatḥ Muḥammad b. Abi'l-Qásim b. 'Abdu'l-