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{{other uses}}
{{Infobox person
{{Short description|12th-century Persian poet and author}}
| name = '''Khaqani<br> خاقانی'''
{{Infobox writer
| image = Nizami adına Ədəbiyyat Muzeyinin binasının pəncərəsində Əfzələddin Xaqani rəsmi (1).JPG
| image_size = | name = Khaqani
| native_name = {{lang|fa|خاقانی}}
| caption =
| image = Khaqani_Park3.JPG
| birth_date = 1121/1122
| image_size = 270
| birth_place = ], ]<ref name="Donzel1994" />
| caption = Khaqani statue in ], ], ]
| death_date = 1190
| birth_date = Between 1120 and 1127
| death_place = ], ]
| birth_place = ], ]
| occupation = ]
| death_date = Between 1186-87 and 1199
| genre = ]
| death_place = ], ]
| movement =
| genre = ] (prison poetry)
| influences =
| notableworks= ''Divān'', ''Tohfat al-ʿErāqayn''
| influenced =
| website =
}} }}
'''Afzal al-Dīn Badīl ibn ʿAlī ibn ʿOthmān''' ({{Langx|fa|افضل‌الدّین بدیل بن علی بن عثمان}}), commonly known as '''Khāqānī''' ({{langx|fa|خاقانی}}, {{IPA|fa|xɒːɣɒːˈniː|IPA}}, {{circa|1120|lk=on}}{{efn-lr|Using the decipherment of the poet's chronogram and corroborating references in his Divān, scholars have proposed 514–15/1120–1121,{{sfn|Clinton|Vil'Čevskij|1969|p=101}} circa 519/1125,{{sfn|Minorsky|1945|p=572}} and 1127{{sfn|Iranica}} as the most probable dates for his birth.}} – {{circa}} 1199), was a major ]{{efn-lr|He is invariably described as a Persian by all scholarly sources used herein.{{sfn|Iranica}}{{sfn|Britannica}}{{sfn|Minorsky|1945|p=550}}{{sfn|Rypka|2011}}{{sfn|Clinton|Vil'Čevskij|1969|p=97}}{{sfn|Gould|2016}}}} ] and ]. He was born in ] in the historical region known as ], where he served as an ode-writer to the ]s. His fame most securely rests upon the ]s collected in his '']'', and his autobiographical travelogue ''Tohfat al-ʿErāqayn''. He is also notable for his exploration of the genre that later became known as '']'' ("prison poetry").
'''Khāqāni ''' or '''Khāghāni''' ({{lang-fa|خاقانی}}) (1121/1122, ], ]<ref name="Donzel1994">{{cite book|last1=Donzel|first1=E. J. van|title=Islamic Desk Reference|date=1 January 1994|publisher=BRILL|isbn=90-04-09738-4|page=205|quote=Khaqani, Afdal al-Din Ibrahim: outstanding Persian poet from Shirwan; 1126-1199. He is known for having created a new type of qasida* for his panegyrics, but above all for his ascetic Sufi poetry.}}</ref> &ndash; 1190, ]), was a ]<ref name="Donzel1994" /><ref name="Robert T. Lambdin 2000. pg 134"/><ref name="Reinert, B 2009"/><ref name="iranicaonline.org"/><ref name="Annemarie Schimmel 2004. pg 260"/><ref name="Lloyd V. J 2001. pg 123"/><ref name="Khaqani"/> poet. He was born in the historical region known as ] (located now in present country of ]), under the ] (a vassal of the ] empire) and died in ], ].


== Life == == Life ==
Khaqani was born into the family of a carpenter in ].{{sfn|Iranica}} Khaqani's mother was originally a slave-girl of ] faith who had converted to Islam. According to Khaqani, she was a descendant of "the great Philippus", which some scholars such as ] (1945) have interpreted as meaning ].{{sfn|Minorsky|1945|p=574}} Khaqani lost his father at an early age and was brought up by his uncle, Kāfi-al-Din ʿOmar, a physician. Later in life, Khaqani wrote a poem in his praise, in which he used the similarity of his uncle's name and that of ] to compare their virtues.{{sfn|Aminrazavi|2011|p=49}}
Khaqani (real name, Afzaladdin Badil (Ibrahim) ibn Ali Nadjar)<ref name="Rypka">Jan Rypka, ''History of Iranian Literature''. Reidel Publishing Company. 1968. pp 203-208.</ref> was born into the family of a carpenter in ].<ref></ref> Khaqani lost his father at an early age and was brought up by his uncle, Kafi-eddin Umar Shervani, a doctor and astronomer at the ]’s court, who for seven years (until his death) acted "both as nurse and tutor" to Khaghani. Khaqani's mother, originally of ] faith, later accepted ]. The poet himself had a remarkable knowledge of ], and his poetry is profused with Christian imagery and symbols. He was also taught by his cousin (son of Kafi-eddin Umar) in philosophy. His master in poetry was the famous Abul-Ala Ganjavi who introduced him to the court of Khaqan Manuchehr Shirvanshah and Khaqani got his pen-name from this king. He also married daughter of Abul-Ala.


Khaqani may have been a ], since several of his poems can be dated to his early youth, indicating that he had become the eulogist of ] at an early age. In his early youth, Khaqani wrote under the ] ''Haqaiʿqi'' ("Seeker"). The Shirvanshahs bore the title ''Khaqan'', from which he later derived the pen name, ''Khaqani'' ("regal").{{sfn|Rypka|2011}} Some traditional stories describe him as being the pupil and son-in-law of the famed poet Abul-Ala Ganjavi, however, this is not corroborated by Khaqani's own writings.{{sfn|Iranica}}
== Work and legacy ==
]
In his youth, Khaghani wrote under the pen-name Haqai'qi ("Seeker"). After he had been invited to the court of the ] Abu'l Muzaffar Khaqan-i-Akbar Manuchiher the son of Faridun,<ref name="Rypka"/> he assumed the pen-name of Khaqani ("regal"). The na'at (a poem in praise of Prophet Muhammad) written at the time when his literary talent had reached its peak, procured him the title Hassān'l-A'jam (The Persian Hassān)(حسان العجم).<ref name="Rypka"/> ] being a famous Arabic poet who composed panegyrics in praise of Prophet Muhammad, Khaqani's title is reference to the fact that he was the Persian Hassan.


As well as Diwān,<ref name="Rypka"/> Khāqāni left some letters and a lesser known 'Ajaibu l-Gharyib (Curious Rarities).<ref name="Rypka"/> The life of a court poet palled on him, and he "fled from the iron cage where he felt like a bird with a broken wing" and set off a journey about the Middle East. His travels gave him material for his famous poem ''Tohfat-ul Iraqein'' (in Persian: تحفه العراقين meaning A Gift from the Two Iraqs), the two Iraqs being 'Persian Iraq' (western Iran) and 'Arabic Iraq' (Mesopotamia)).<ref name="Rypka"/> This book supplies us with a good deal of material for his biography and in which he described his impressions of the Middle East. He also wrote his famous qasida ''The Portals at Madain'' (in Persian: ايوان مداين) beautifully painting his sorrow and impression of the remains of Sassanid's Palace near ]. Khaqani in his youth decided to embark on a pilgrimage to ], against the wishes of his ruler and patron. In his first attempt to depart Shirvan, he was captured by Manuchihr's henchmen in the nearby ]. Charged with being insubordinate, he was imprisoned for a period of 5{{sfn|Gould|2016|p=21}} or 7{{sfn|Minorsky|1945|p=561}} months in an ancient fortress in ], near ]. Khaqani was condemned to a number of subsequent imprisonments, until in 1156-7 he succeeded in escaping and setting out on a lengthy expedition through the Middle East.{{sfn|Minorsky|1945|p=550}} His travels gave him material for his famous work ''Tohfat al-ʿErāqayn'' (''A Gift from the Two Iraqs''; in reference to western Iran ('Persian Iraq') and Mesopotamia ('Arabic Iraq').{{sfn|Rypka|2011}} He also composed his famous qasida ''The Portals at Madāʾen'', in which the contemplation of ] (the ruins of the Sassanid Palace near ]), according to Beelaert (2010) "elicits a warning about the transience of royal courts."{{sfn|Iranica}}
On return home, Khaqani broke off with the court of the ]’s, and Shah Akhsitan gave order for his imprisonment. It was in prison at ] that Khaqani wrote one of his most powerful anti-feudal poems called Habsiyye (Prison Poem). Upon release he moved with his family to ] where fate dealt with him one tragic blow after another: first his young son died, then his daughter and then his wife. Khaqani composed moving elegies for all three most of which have survived and are included in his diwan. Khagani was left all alone, and he soon too died in Tabriz. He was buried at the Poet’s Cemetery in Surkhab Neighbourhood of Tabriz.


Upon his return, Khaqani was immediately detained by Manuchihr's successor ]. To memorialize his incarceration in verse, Khaqani composed his most powerful anti-feudal poems in a genre that will later become known as '']'' (prison poetry). In total, five of his poems describe his ordeal in prison. One of the poems, widely known as the "Christian" qasida, is considered by ] (2016) to be "one of his boldest acts of literary rebellion".{{sfn|Gould|2016}} Minorsky (1945) identified ] as the patron to whom Khaqani addressed this poem.{{sfn|Minorsky|1945}}
Khaqani left a remarkable Persian-language heritage which includes some magnificent odes-distiches of as many as three hundred lines with the same rhyme, melodious ghazals, dramatic poems protesting against oppression and glorifying reason and toil, and elegies lamenting the death of his children, his wife and his relatives.


Between 1173–1175, Khaqani composed odes in honor of the Shirvan victory over the ], in which he reports the locations and details of the operations, including the destruction of 73 Russian ships.{{sfn|Minorsky|1945|p=558}}{{sfn|Clinton|Vil'Čevskij|1969|p=98}} His personal life at this time was filled with tragedy. He suffered several family bereavements, including the death of his first wife, and his young son, Rashid-al-Din. Khaqani composed elegies lamenting their deaths. About the same time, Khaqani went on a second pilgrimage, after which he retired from court life to settle at ]. According to accounts of him in various biographical works on poets, the date of his death ranges from 1186 to 1199.{{sfn|Iranica}} According to the gravestone in Tabriz, Khaqani died in ] 595, corresponding to July 1199.{{sfn|Clinton|Vil'Čevskij|1969|p=97}}
According to ]:


== Work and legacy ==
{{cquote|A Master of the language, a poet possessing both intellect and heart, who fled from the outer world to the inner world, a personality who did not conform to type - all this places him in the front ranks of ].<ref name="Rypka"/>}}
], the graveyard of many classical and contemporary persian poets including Khaqani.]]


Khaqani's Divān contains qasidas (both ] and non-panegyric odes), tarjiʿāt (strophic poems), ]s (profane love poems), and ]s (quatrains). His other famous work, ''Tohfat al-ʿErāqayn'', originally titled ''Khatm al-gharāʾeb'' ("Curious Rarities"), is written in couplet form (]) and is over three thousand verses long.{{sfn|Rypka|2011}}{{sfn|Iranica}} This book serves as an autobiography and also presents his impressions of the Middle East. Beelaert notes that, although the work is a mathnawi, it exhibits more affinities with his other qasidas.{{sfn|Iranica}} His surviving prose works include the prose introduction to the aforementioned mathnawi, and approximately sixty letters attributed to him.{{sfn|Iranica}}
Some of the quatrains of Khaqani are also recorded in the book ].


Khaqani lived within a partly Christian milieu, and according to Beelaert, he was "a product of the culturally complex milieu of the Caucasus."{{sfn|Iranica}} He established friendly contact with Byzantine, Armenian and Georgian royalty. His poetry is sometimes profused with Christian imagery and symbols,{{sfn|Britannica}} and according to Lewis (2009), he "imbues his Christian images with a positive aura and an insider's knowledge of ]."{{sfn|Lewis|2009}}
== Sample Rubaiyat (Quatrains) ==
{{Verse translation|italicsoff=y|rtl1=y|
{{lang|fa|rtl=yes|مرغی که نوای درد راند عشق است
پيکی که زبان غيب داند عشق است
هستی که به نيستيت خواند عشق است
وآنچ از تو ترا باز رهاند عشق است}}
|attr2=Translation by R. Saberi|
The bird that sings the song of pain is love
The courier who knows the tongue of the Unseen is love
The existence that call you to nonexistence is love
And that which redeems you from you is love}}


It is often believed that Khaqani's complex mode of expression has often been an obstacle to a full appreciation of his poetical value.{{sfn|Iranica}} Much of his poetry is considered to be abstruse, exhibiting a vast range of vocabulary and an abundance of ]. According to Minorsky the poems "bristle with rare words, unusual similes and allusions to astrology, medicine, theology, history, to say nothing of the numerous hints concerning happenings of the poet's own life and time".{{sfn|Minorsky|1945|p=550}} ] referred to him as "the inaccessible poet" and contrasted the difficulty of Khaqani's poems to the simplicity of ]'s poetry.{{sfn|Iranica}}
{{Verse translation|italicsoff=y|rtl1=y|
{{lang|fa|rtl=yes|دانی ز جهان چه طرف بربستم هيچ
وز حاصل ايام چه در دستم هيچ
شمع خردم ولی چو بنشستم هيچ
آن جام جمم ولی چو بشکستم هيچ}}
|attr2=Translation by R. Saberi|
Do you know what I benefitted from this world? Nothing
And what I gained from the days of life? Nothing
I am a candle of wisdom; but when extinguished, nothing
I am the cup of ]; but when broken nothing}}


]Khaqani is widely considered to be a major Persian language poet.{{efn-lr|He is, for example, referred to as a "major" poet by Beelaert{{sfn|Iranica}} and Vil'Čevskij,{{sfn|Clinton|Vil'Čevskij|1969|p=97}} and "one of the greatest Persian poets" by Minorsky,{{sfn|Minorsky|1945|p=550}} and ] considers him one of the great masters of the Persian tongue.{{sfn|Rypka|2011}}}} His ''habsiyāt'' ("prison poetry") is considered one of the finest of its kind.{{sfn|Britannica}} The genre has been described as the "medieval Islamic world's most aesthetically compelling corpus of texts dealing with incarceration."{{sfn|Gould|2016}} The naʿtiyas (poetry in praise of ]) procured him the title ''Hassān'l-Aʿjam'' ("The Persian Hassān"). ] being a famous Arabic poet who composed panegyrics in praise of Muhammad, Khaqani's title refers to the fact that he was the Persian Hassan.{{sfn|Rypka|2011}} It is believed that the work of figures such as ], ], ], ], and ] were parts of Khaqani's literary background. In turn, his work influenced such men as ], ], and likely Saadi and ].{{sfn|Iranica}} According to ]: "A Master of the language, a poet possessing both intellect and heart, who fled from the outer world to the inner world, a personality who did not conform to type — all this places him in the front ranks of ]".{{sfn|Rypka|2011}}
==See also==
{{portal|Poetry}}
*]
*]
*]
*]


==References== ==References==
===Footnotes===
* Jan Rypka, ''History of Iranian Literature''. Reidel Publishing Company. 1968 {{OCLC|460598}}. {{ISBN|90-277-0143-1}}
{{notelist-lr}}
* Anna Livia Beelaert, "Khaqani Sherwani" in Encyclopædia Iranica
===Citations===
*R. Saberi ''A Thousand Years of Persian Rubaiyat: An Anthology of Quatrains from the Tenth to the Twentieth Century Along With the Original Persian'' (Paperback) by Reza Saberi (Editor, Translator)
{{reflist|2}}
*Anna Livia Beelaert, "Khaqani Sherwani" in Encyclopædia Iranica
===Bibliography===
*Rebecca Ruth Gould, "The Political Cosmology of Prison Poetics: Khāqānī of Shirwān on Muslim–Christian Difference," Literature Compass 11.7 (2014): 496–515.


* {{cite web |last1=Beelaert |first1=Anna Livia |title=ḴĀQĀNI ŠERVĀNI |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/kaqani-servani |website=Encyclopædia Iranica |access-date=30 October 2019|ref=CITEREFIranica}}
==Notes==

{{Reflist|refs=
* {{cite journal|last1=Minorsky|first1=V.|title= Khāqānī and Andronicus Comnenus.|journal= Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies|year=1945|volume=11|issue=3|pages=550–578|doi=10.1017/S0041977X0007227X|jstor=609336}}
<ref name="Robert T. Lambdin 2000. pg 134">Robert T. Lambdin, Laura C. Lambdin, ''Encyclopedia of Medieval Literature'', Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000. pg 134: "The Twelfth century Persian Khaqani Sharvani wrote a poem entitled "The Language of the Birds" apparently related to the better-known work of his Persian contemporary Farid Ud-Din Attar, the '''Conference of the Birds'''</ref><ref name="Reinert, B 2009">Reinert, B. "Ḵh̲āḳānī , afḍal al-dīn ibrāhīm (Badīl) b. ʿalī b. ʿut̲h̲mān." ''Encyclopaedia of Islam'', Second Edition. Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis , C.E. Bosworth , E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs. Brill, 2009. Brill Online. Excerpt: ", outstanding Persian poet, born about 520/1126, d. 595/1199, who left a diwan , the mathnawi called Tuhfat al-Irāqayn and sixty letters. "</ref><ref name="iranicaonline.org">Anna Livia Beelaert, "Khaqani Sherwani" in Encyclopedia Iranica: "ḴĀQĀNI ŠERVĀNI (or Šarvāni), AFŻAL-AL-DIN BADIL B. ʿALI B. ʿOṮMĀN, a major Persian poet and prose writer (b. Šervān, ca. 521/1127; d. Tabriz, between 582/1186-87 and 595/1199). " </ref><ref name="Annemarie Schimmel 2004. pg 260">Annemarie Schimmel, Burzine K. Waghmar , ''The empire of the great Mughals: history, art and culture'', Reaktion Books, 2004. pg 260: "The poet call this portrayal 'Fragrant Bouquet,' ''Dastanbu'', a word user by the Persian poet Khaqani (died 1199) in a poem of praise to spouse of his patron"</ref><ref name="Lloyd V. J 2001. pg 123">Lloyd V. J. Ridgeon, ''Islamic interpretations of Christianity'', Palgrave Macmillan, 2001. pg 123: "Quatrain attributed to the Persian poet Khaqani (d. 1200)</ref><ref name="Khaqani"> in ]:"Persian poet, whose importance rests mainly on his brilliant court poems, satires, and epigrams."</ref>

}}
* {{cite journal|last1=Clinton|first1=Jerome W.|last2=Vil'Čevskij|first2=O. L. |title= The Chronograms of Khaqani.|journal= Iranian Studies|year=1969|volume=2|issue=2/3|pages=97–105|doi=10.1080/00210866908701380|jstor=4310036}}

* {{cite journal|last1=Gould|first1=Rebecca Ruth|authorlink=Rebecca Gould|title= Wearing the Belt of Oppression: Khāqāni's Christian Qasida and the Prison Poetry of Medieval Shirvān|journal= Journal of Persianate Studies|year=2016|volume=9|issue=1|pages=19–44|doi=10.1163/18747167-12341296}}

* {{cite web |title=Khaqani |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Khaqani |publisher=Encyclopedia Britannica |access-date=27 October 2019| ref=CITEREFBritannica}}

* {{cite book |last1=Rypka |first1=Jan |authorlink=Jan Rypka|title=History of Iranian Literature |year=2011 |publisher=Springer |isbn=9789401034814}}

* {{cite book |last1=Aminrazavi |first1=Mehdi |title=The Wine Of Wisdom |year=2011 |publisher=Oneworld Publications |isbn=978-9695191385}}

* {{cite journal|last1=Lewis|first1=Franklin|title= Sexual Occidentation: The Politics of Conversion, Christian-love and Boy-love in 'Attār.|journal= Iranian Studies|year=2009|volume=42|issue=5|pages=693–723|doi=10.1080/00210860903306002| jstor=40646791|s2cid=161283849}}

{{portal|Poetry}}


== Further reading ==
==External links==
{{commons category|Khaqani}}
* at ]


* {{Cite web |last=Beelaert |first=Anna Livia |date=2023 |title=Khāqānī Shirvānī |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_35479 |url-access=subscription |access-date=1 March 2024 |website=]}}
{{Persian literature}} {{Persian literature}}


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Latest revision as of 10:10, 26 October 2024

For other uses, see Khaqani (disambiguation). 12th-century Persian poet and author
Khaqani
Khaqani statue in Khaqani Park, Tabriz, IranKhaqani statue in Khaqani Park, Tabriz, Iran
Native nameخاقانی
BornBetween 1120 and 1127
Shirvan, Shirvanshahs
DiedBetween 1186-87 and 1199
Tabriz, Eldiguzids
GenreHabsiyāt (prison poetry)
Notable worksDivān, Tohfat al-ʿErāqayn

Afzal al-Dīn Badīl ibn ʿAlī ibn ʿOthmān (Persian: افضل‌الدّین بدیل بن علی بن عثمان), commonly known as Khāqānī (Persian: خاقانی, IPA: [xɒːɣɒːˈniː], c. 1120 – c. 1199), was a major Persian poet and prose-writer. He was born in Transcaucasia in the historical region known as Shirvan, where he served as an ode-writer to the Shirvanshahs. His fame most securely rests upon the qasidas collected in his Divān, and his autobiographical travelogue Tohfat al-ʿErāqayn. He is also notable for his exploration of the genre that later became known as habsiyāt ("prison poetry").

Life

Khaqani was born into the family of a carpenter in Shirvan. Khaqani's mother was originally a slave-girl of Nestorian Christian faith who had converted to Islam. According to Khaqani, she was a descendant of "the great Philippus", which some scholars such as Minorsky (1945) have interpreted as meaning Marcus Julius Philippus. Khaqani lost his father at an early age and was brought up by his uncle, Kāfi-al-Din ʿOmar, a physician. Later in life, Khaqani wrote a poem in his praise, in which he used the similarity of his uncle's name and that of Omar Khayyam to compare their virtues.

Khaqani may have been a child prodigy, since several of his poems can be dated to his early youth, indicating that he had become the eulogist of Manuchihr III at an early age. In his early youth, Khaqani wrote under the pen name Haqaiʿqi ("Seeker"). The Shirvanshahs bore the title Khaqan, from which he later derived the pen name, Khaqani ("regal"). Some traditional stories describe him as being the pupil and son-in-law of the famed poet Abul-Ala Ganjavi, however, this is not corroborated by Khaqani's own writings.

Khaqani in his youth decided to embark on a pilgrimage to Mecca, against the wishes of his ruler and patron. In his first attempt to depart Shirvan, he was captured by Manuchihr's henchmen in the nearby Beylagan. Charged with being insubordinate, he was imprisoned for a period of 5 or 7 months in an ancient fortress in Shabaran, near Darband. Khaqani was condemned to a number of subsequent imprisonments, until in 1156-7 he succeeded in escaping and setting out on a lengthy expedition through the Middle East. His travels gave him material for his famous work Tohfat al-ʿErāqayn (A Gift from the Two Iraqs; in reference to western Iran ('Persian Iraq') and Mesopotamia ('Arabic Iraq'). He also composed his famous qasida The Portals at Madāʾen, in which the contemplation of Taq-i Kisra (the ruins of the Sassanid Palace near Ctesiphon), according to Beelaert (2010) "elicits a warning about the transience of royal courts."

Upon his return, Khaqani was immediately detained by Manuchihr's successor Akhsitan I. To memorialize his incarceration in verse, Khaqani composed his most powerful anti-feudal poems in a genre that will later become known as habsiyāt (prison poetry). In total, five of his poems describe his ordeal in prison. One of the poems, widely known as the "Christian" qasida, is considered by Gould (2016) to be "one of his boldest acts of literary rebellion". Minorsky (1945) identified Andronicus Comnenus as the patron to whom Khaqani addressed this poem.

Between 1173–1175, Khaqani composed odes in honor of the Shirvan victory over the Russians, in which he reports the locations and details of the operations, including the destruction of 73 Russian ships. His personal life at this time was filled with tragedy. He suffered several family bereavements, including the death of his first wife, and his young son, Rashid-al-Din. Khaqani composed elegies lamenting their deaths. About the same time, Khaqani went on a second pilgrimage, after which he retired from court life to settle at Tabriz. According to accounts of him in various biographical works on poets, the date of his death ranges from 1186 to 1199. According to the gravestone in Tabriz, Khaqani died in Shawwal 595, corresponding to July 1199.

Work and legacy

Mausoleum of Poets, the graveyard of many classical and contemporary persian poets including Khaqani.

Khaqani's Divān contains qasidas (both panegyrics and non-panegyric odes), tarjiʿāt (strophic poems), ghazals (profane love poems), and rubaʿis (quatrains). His other famous work, Tohfat al-ʿErāqayn, originally titled Khatm al-gharāʾeb ("Curious Rarities"), is written in couplet form (mathnawi) and is over three thousand verses long. This book serves as an autobiography and also presents his impressions of the Middle East. Beelaert notes that, although the work is a mathnawi, it exhibits more affinities with his other qasidas. His surviving prose works include the prose introduction to the aforementioned mathnawi, and approximately sixty letters attributed to him.

Khaqani lived within a partly Christian milieu, and according to Beelaert, he was "a product of the culturally complex milieu of the Caucasus." He established friendly contact with Byzantine, Armenian and Georgian royalty. His poetry is sometimes profused with Christian imagery and symbols, and according to Lewis (2009), he "imbues his Christian images with a positive aura and an insider's knowledge of Christianity."

It is often believed that Khaqani's complex mode of expression has often been an obstacle to a full appreciation of his poetical value. Much of his poetry is considered to be abstruse, exhibiting a vast range of vocabulary and an abundance of play-on-words. According to Minorsky the poems "bristle with rare words, unusual similes and allusions to astrology, medicine, theology, history, to say nothing of the numerous hints concerning happenings of the poet's own life and time". Ali Dashti referred to him as "the inaccessible poet" and contrasted the difficulty of Khaqani's poems to the simplicity of Saadi's poetry.

Illuminated leaf from Tohfat al-ʿErāqayn, Houghton Library MS Typ 536

Khaqani is widely considered to be a major Persian language poet. His habsiyāt ("prison poetry") is considered one of the finest of its kind. The genre has been described as the "medieval Islamic world's most aesthetically compelling corpus of texts dealing with incarceration." The naʿtiyas (poetry in praise of Muhammad) procured him the title Hassān'l-Aʿjam ("The Persian Hassān"). Hassan ibn Thabit being a famous Arabic poet who composed panegyrics in praise of Muhammad, Khaqani's title refers to the fact that he was the Persian Hassan. It is believed that the work of figures such as Omar Khayyam, al-Maʿarri, Unsuri, Masud Sa'd Salman, and Sanai were parts of Khaqani's literary background. In turn, his work influenced such men as Nezami Ganjavi, Jami, and likely Saadi and Hafez. According to Jan Rypka: "A Master of the language, a poet possessing both intellect and heart, who fled from the outer world to the inner world, a personality who did not conform to type — all this places him in the front ranks of Persian literature".

References

Footnotes

  1. Using the decipherment of the poet's chronogram and corroborating references in his Divān, scholars have proposed 514–15/1120–1121, circa 519/1125, and 1127 as the most probable dates for his birth.
  2. He is invariably described as a Persian by all scholarly sources used herein.
  3. He is, for example, referred to as a "major" poet by Beelaert and Vil'Čevskij, and "one of the greatest Persian poets" by Minorsky, and Rypka considers him one of the great masters of the Persian tongue.

Citations

  1. Clinton & Vil'Čevskij 1969, p. 101.
  2. Minorsky 1945, p. 572.
  3. ^ Iranica.
  4. ^ Britannica.
  5. ^ Minorsky 1945, p. 550.
  6. ^ Rypka 2011.
  7. ^ Clinton & Vil'Čevskij 1969, p. 97.
  8. ^ Gould 2016.
  9. Minorsky 1945, p. 574.
  10. Aminrazavi 2011, p. 49.
  11. Gould 2016, p. 21.
  12. Minorsky 1945, p. 561.
  13. Minorsky 1945.
  14. Minorsky 1945, p. 558.
  15. Clinton & Vil'Čevskij 1969, p. 98.
  16. Lewis 2009.

Bibliography

  • "Khaqani". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  • Aminrazavi, Mehdi (2011). The Wine Of Wisdom. Oneworld Publications. ISBN 978-9695191385.

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