Bahman Nameh

The Bahman-nama (Persian: بهمن نامه) is a Persian epic poem of 9500 Distichs (couplets)[1] about Bahman, the son of Esfandiyar of the royal Kayanid dynasty. The earliest attestation of this work is in the book Mojmal al-tawarikh, which gives the author as Īrānšāh b. Abi'l Khayr.[2]

Manuscripts

gollark: > Even something as featureful as Atheme might not have everything your network needs. For those cases, Atheme offers both an extremely clean C API and a powerful, well-structured Perl interface. Extending services has never been easier!Oh no.
gollark: I imagine it's *possible* to use ngircd's server-server protocol from another thing.
gollark: Idea: what if accursedIRCservicesserver™ by osmarks.net™ software automation™?
gollark: Anyway, some sort of identity system would be useful so that I can have persistently set avatars or something.
gollark: ping bee

See also

References

  1. W. L. Hanaway, Jr., "BAHMAN-NĀMA" in Encyclopaedia Iranica
  2. The manuscript reads Iranshan however Bahar believes that this is scribal error and it should be Iranshah. Most scholars have followed his convention


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.