Muḥammad ibn al-Ḳāsim al-Nuwayrī al-Iskandarānī

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Muḥammad ibn al-Ḳāsim al-Nuwayrī al-Iskandarānī al-Mālikī

al-Masʿūdī's Murūj in al-Nuwayrī's handwriting.[7]

The Kitāb al-Ilmām was edited in six volumes by

Aziz Atiya between 1968 and 1973.[3] Atiya regards al-Nuwayrī as the most important historian for the crusade of 1365 from the Egyptian perspective.[8]

Notes

  1. ^ For the spelling, see Bosworth 1995; Rosenthal 1968, pp. 458–59, uses Muḥammad ibn Qāsim ibn Muḥammad an-Nuwayrī as-Sikandarī al-Mālikī.
  2. ^ Bosworth 1995; Rosenthal 1968, p. 155.
  3. ^ a b c Bosworth 1995.
  4. al-Sakhāwī
    .
  5. ^ Rosenthal 1968, p. 155.
  6. ^ See Bosworth 1995 and Rosenthal 1968, pp. 458–59, but Van Steenbergen 2003, pp. 124–25, places his death in Alexandria in 1372.
  7. ^ Rosenthal 1968, pp. 458–59.
  8. ^ Van Steenbergen 2003, p. 123.

Bibliography

  • Atiya, Aziz Suryal
    (1977). A Fourteenth-Century Encyclopedist from Alexandria: A Critical and Analytical Study of al-Nuwairy al-Iskandarāni's "Kitāb al-Ilmām". Middle East Center, University of Utah.
  • Bosworth, C. E. (1995). "al-Nuwayrī, Muḥammad b. al-Ḳāsim". In .
  • Rosenthal, Franz (1968). A History of Muslim Historiography (2nd ed.). E. J. Brill.
  • Van Steenbergen, Jo (2003). "The Alexandrian Crusade (1365) and the Mamlūk Sources: Reassessment of the Kitāb al-Ilmām of an-Nuwayrī al-Iskandarānī (d. A.D. 1372)" (PDF). In K. Ciggaar; H. G. B. Teule (eds.). East and West in the Crusader States: Context – Contacts – Confrontations. Peeters. pp. 123–137. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-10-18.
  • Wrisley, David Joseph (2012). "Historical Narration and Digression in al-Nuwairī al-Iskandarānī's Kitāb al-Ilmām". In Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski; Kiril Petkov (eds.). Philippe de Mézières and His Age: Piety and Politics in the Fourteenth Century. Brill. pp. 451–473. .