Ali ibn Muhammad al-Iyadi
Abu 'al-Hasan Ali ibn Muhammad al-Iyadi (Arabic: علي بن محمد الإيادي) (died 976) was a Maghrebi Arabic poet in the tenth century from Tunis. He is the poet laureate of the Fatimids (in Kairouan and Mahdia), having served the caliphs al-Qa'im, al-Mansur and al-Mu'iz. He wrote a well-known poem (qasida) describing the Fatimid navy during al-Qa'im's reign, under whose reign the Fatimid fleet invaded Genoa and Sardinia.[1]
Ali ibn Muhammad al-Iyadi | |
---|---|
Born | ? |
Died | 976 Probably Cairo |
Occupation | poet |
Known for | poet laureate of the Fatimids |
Title | The Buhturi of the West |
Biography
Ali ibn Mohmmad al-Iyadi born in Tunis. He joined the Fatimid state service in Kairouan and Mahdia during the days of Al-Qa'im, and Ismail al-Mansur.
al-Iyadi died in 976, probably in Cairo.[2]
gollark: Ship destroyed? What the cryoapioidal hypertesseracts?
gollark: Can I retroactively turn off the jump drive?
gollark: Can I turn off the jump drive?
gollark: Naturally.
gollark: I can't give you more power without also utterly obliterating cooling, unfortunately.
References
- Shawqi Daif. تاريخ الأدب العربي (in Arabic). Dar al-Ma'arif. p. 225.
- Omar Farroukh. تاريخ الأدب العربي. Dar Al Malayin. p. 279.
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