Maqamat Badi' az-Zaman al-Hamadhani

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Maqamat Badi' al-Zaman al-Hamadhani (Arabic: مقامات بديع الزمان الهمذاني), are an Arabic collection of stories from the 9th century, written by Badi' al-Zaman al-Hamadani. Of the 400 episodic stories, roughly 52 have survived.

Description[edit]

The work consists of a series of anecdotes of social satire written and the narrative concerns the travels of a middle-aged man as he uses his charm and eloquence to swindle his way across the Arabic world.[1]

The work is characterized by the alternation of rhymed prose (sajʿ) and poetry.[2] They are narrated from the point of view of a fictitious character, 'very likely a traveling merchant who has money and time', ʿĪsā ibn Hishām, about the adventures of an eloquent beggar named Abū al-Fatḥ al-Iskandarī'.[3] The Maqamat are also known for their intertextuality and narrative construction.[4]

According to Ailin Qian,

The core of the Hamadhānian maqāmah is dialogue, and al-Hamadhānī, by using techniques such as isnād and framing, simulated some kind of public presentation. Al-Hamadhānī’s efforts to preserve the characteristics of oral performance in his maqāmāt played a great role in creating their prosimetric style.[5]

A century later, these maqamat inspired the maqamat of Al-Hariri of Basra, which in turn inspired the Hebrew Tahkemoni. The Abbasid artist and poet, Yahya Al-Wasiti, who lived in Baghdad in the late Abbasid era (12th to 13th-centuries) and was one of the pre-eminent exponents of the Baghdad School, is known to have transcribed and illustrated the work in 1236-37, Maqamat (also known as the Assemblies or the Sessions).[6]

Sample[edit]

One of the numerous riddles in the work, in the rajaz metre, runs as follows:

Pointed is his spearhead, sharp are his teeth,
His progeny are his helpers, dissolving union is his business.
He assails his master, clinging to his moustache;
Inserting his fangs into old and young.
Agreeable, of goodly shape, slim, abstemious.
A shooter, with shafts abundant, around the beard and the moustache.[7]

The answer is 'a comb'.

Editions and translations[edit]

  • The Maqámát of Badí‘ al-Zamán al-Hamadhání (the original version in Arabic Wikisource)
  • Al-Hamadhānī, Badīʿ al-zamān. Dīwān. Edited by ʿAbd al-Wahhāb Raḍwān and Muḥammad Shukrī Afandī al-Makkī. Cairo: Maṭbaʿat al-mawsūʿāt, 1903.
  • Al-Hamadhānī, Badīʿ al-zamān. Maqāmāt. Edited by Fārūq Saʿd. Beirut: Dār al-āfāq al-jadīdah, 1982.
  • Al-Hamadhānī, Badīʿ al-zamān. Maqāmāt Abī al-Faḍl Badīʿ al-zamān al-Hamadhānī. Edited by Muḥammad ʿAbduh. Beirut: Dār al-Mashriq, 1973.
  • W. J. Prendergast (trans.), The Maqāmāt of Badīʿ al-Zamān al-Hamadhānī (London: Luzac, 1915)[8]
  • Ahmad, Momtazuddin. Sahl al-Maʿālī fī Sharḥ Maqāmāt Badīʿ az-Zāmān al-Hamadhānī. (Commentary)[9]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Esanu, O., Art, Awakening, and Modernity in the Middle East: The Arab Nude, Routledge, 2017, [E-book edition], n.p.
  2. ^ Qian, Ailin (1 January 2012). "The maqamah as prosimetrum: A comparative investigation of its origin, form and function". Dissertations available from ProQuest: 1–315.
  3. ^ Qian, Ailin (1 January 2012). "The maqamah as prosimetrum: A comparative investigation of its origin, form and function". Dissertations available from ProQuest: 1–315.
  4. ^ ""There is a Jahiz for every age": Narrative construction and intertxtuality in la-Hamdhani's maqamat". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 2016-03-23.
  5. ^ Qian, Ailin (1 January 2012). "The maqamah as prosimetrum: A comparative investigation of its origin, form and function". Dissertations available from ProQuest: 1–315.
  6. ^ "Baghdad school," in: Encyclopedia Britannica,
  7. ^ The Maqāmāt of Badiʻ al-Zamān al-Hamādhāni, trans. by W. J. Prendergast (London: Curzon Press, 1973) [first publ. 1915], p. 129 [Maqama 31].
  8. ^ "The Maqamat of al-Hamadhani Index". www.sacred-texts.com.
  9. ^ al-Kumillai, Muhammad Hifzur Rahman (2018). كتاب البدور المضية في تراجم الحنفية (in Arabic). Cairo, Egypt: Dar al-Salih.

Further reading[edit]

Hämeen-Anttila, J., ‘’Maqama: A History of a Genre’’, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 2002 (especially see pp 15-65 for a discussion of al-Hamadhani’s ‘’Maqamat’’.)