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suggests that some of Ibn al-Fuwati's works were destroyed during the subsequent sack of the
Rashidiya quarter. Ibn al-Fuwati's religious beliefs were not strictly categorizable, for he is variously claimed to have been a
34:(25 June 1244 – 1323), was a medieval librarian and historian who wrote a great deal, but whose works have mostly been lost. His most important extant work is the
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is not clearly defined, as it appears to include a wide array of people whose names Ibn al-Fuwati had come across. Most entries cover people from present-day
408:
403:
428:
384:
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Ibn al-Fuwati visited
Adharbayjan at least three times between 1304 and 1316. He retired to Baghdad after the execution of
100:(non-extant). He stayed in Maragheh together with Tusi's son and successor Asil al-Din. In 1281, Ibn al-Fuwati returned to
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never even existed. Melville notes that even if the work did exist, it was probably never completed. The
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itself was also never completed, for many entries are unfinished or left blank. The exact scope of the
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by Tusi. While in
Maragheh, Ibn al-Fuwati wrote a biographical dictionary of astronomers, the
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140:. He drank wine and was renowned for his calligraphical works. He died in 1323 in Baghdad.
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contains a wealth of information about the intellectual and cultural life of the
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Ibn al-Fuwait's most important extant work is his biographical dictionary, the
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203:; although he did not write books in Persian, he did own a memorabilia book (
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indicates that one of his parents was a seller of waist wraps (Arabic:
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72:). Aged 14, he was enslaved and incarcerated by the
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Kamāl al-Dīn ʿAbd al-Razzāḳ ibn Aḥmad ibn al-Fuwaṭī
323:
8:
311:"EBN AL-FOWAṬĪ, KAMĀL-AL-DĪN ʿABD-AL-RAZZĀQ"
347:The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition
46:Ibn al-Fuwati was born on 25 June 1244 in
355:. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 769–770.
315:Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. VIII, Fasc. 1
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156:is believed to be an abridgement of the
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80:(1258) and was subsequently brought to
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176:and present-day western and central
92:and was appointed librarian of the
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108:and was appointed director of the
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377:Beyond the Legacy of Genghis Khan
162:Majmaʿal-ādāb fī moʿjam al-alqāb
158:Majmaʿal-ādāb fī moʿjam al-alqāb
16:Medieval librarian and historian
409:14th-century Iranian historians
404:13th-century Iranian historians
160:. However, it may be that the
38:, a biographical dictionary.
1:
429:Historians from the Ilkhanate
207:) for Persian poetry. In his
28:عبد الرزاق بن أحمد بن الفوطي
98:Taḏkerat man qaṣada’l-raṣad
50:. His family originated in
450:
184:. Melville notes that the
379:. Brill. pp. 1–678.
375:Komaroff, Linda (2006).
84:. In 1261/2, he joined
322:Rosenthal, F. (1971).
195:Ibn al-Fuwati studied
117:Rashid-al-Din Hamadani
424:Writers from Baghdad
94:Maragheh observatory
86:Nasir al-Din al-Tusi
121:Charles P. Melville
110:Mustansiriya School
434:Iranian librarians
104:on the request of
317:. pp. 25–26.
307:Melville, Charles
292:, pp. 25–26.
106:Ata-Malik Juvayni
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78:Siege of Baghdad
30:) best known as
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369:Further reading
325:"Ibn al-Fuwaṭī"
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144:Literary output
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32:Ibn al-Fuwati
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52:Marw al-Rudh
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19:
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419:1323 deaths
414:1244 births
351:Volume III:
342:Schacht, J.
338:Pellat, Ch.
82:Adharbayjan
398:Categories
215:References
68:, plural:
361:495469525
330:Lewis, B.
197:Mongolian
190:Ilkhanate
130:Shafi'ite
126:Hanbalite
119:in 1318.
42:Biography
344:(eds.).
309:(1997).
90:Maragheh
56:Khurasan
300:Sources
205:majmu'a
201:Persian
182:Isfahan
134:Shi'ite
102:Baghdad
76:at the
74:Mongols
48:Baghdad
383:
359:
353:H–Iram
340:&
209:Talḵīṣ
186:Talḵīṣ
170:Talḵīṣ
166:Talḵīṣ
154:Talḵīṣ
152:. The
150:Talḵīṣ
136:, and
58:. His
36:Talḵīṣ
24:Arabic
328:. In
70:fowaṭ
61:nisba
381:ISBN
357:OCLC
199:and
178:Iran
174:Iraq
138:Sufi
66:fūṭa
88:in
54:in
400::
349:.
336:;
332:;
313:.
242:^
223:^
192:.
132:,
128:,
112:.
26::
389:.
363:.
22:(
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