Ahmad ibn Arabshah

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Abu Muhammad Shihab al-Din Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Abd Allah ibn Ibrahim also known as Muhammad ibn Arabshah (Arabic: أحمد بن عربشاه ), (1389–1450), was a writer and traveller who lived under the reign of Timur (1370–1405).[1]

He was born and grew up in Damascus. Later when Timur invaded Syria, he moved to Samarkand and later to Transoxiana. He later moved to Adarna and worked in the court of Sultan Muhammad Uthman translating Arabic books to Turkish and Persian. He later returned to Damascus after having been absent from the city for 23 years. Later he moved to Egypt and died there.

The famous Muslim scholar, Abd al-Wahhab ibn Arabshah, is his son.

The autograph of Ahmad ibn Arabshah, Aja'ib al-Maqdur fi Akhbar Taymur, dated 839, Adilnor Collection.

His works

  • Aja'ib al-Maqdur fi Nawa'ib al-Taymur (The Wonders of Destiny of the Ravages of Timur), which he finished in Damascus on 12 August 1435. This book was translated and printed first time in Latin; Ahmedis arabsiadae itae et rerum gestarum Timuri, qui vulgo Tamerlanes dicitur, historia. Lugduni Batavorum, ex typographia Elseveriana, 1636.
  • al-Ta'lif al-tahir fi shiyam al-Malik al-Zahir (Life of Zahir)
  • Fakihat al-Khulafa' wa Mufakahat al-Zurafa'
  • Jami' al-Hikayat; translated from Persian to Turkish.
  • al-'Aqd al-Farid fi al-Tawhid
  • Ghurrat al-Siyar fi Duwal al-Turk wa al-Tatar
  • Muntaha al-Adab fi Lughat al-Turk wa al-Ajam wa al-'Arab

References

  1. AKA, ISMAIL. 1996. “THE AGRICULTURAL AND COMMERCIAL ACTIVITIES OF THE TIMURIDS IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE 15TH CENTURY”. Oriente Moderno 15 (76) (2). Istituto per l'Oriente C. A. Nallino: 9. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25817400.