Page:Baladhuri-Hitti1916.djvu/22

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6
THE ORIGINS OF THE ISLAMIC STATE

ist or reporter becomes now a chronicler. The annalistic method of aṭ-Ṭabari was followed by ibn-al-Athîr and abu-l-Fida.

Al-Mas‘ûdi inaugurated a new system of writing history. Instead of grouping events around years as center, he grouped them around kings, dynasties and races. His system was followed among others by ibn-Khaldûn, but did not win so much favor as that of aṭ-Ṭabari.

The first record we have regarding the life of al-Balâhuri is that of al-Fihrist.[1] Other sources for his life are Yâḳût, Mu‘jam al-Udabâ’, (pp. 127–132),[2] and al-Kutubi, Fawât al-Wafayât (Vol. I, pp. 8–9, Bûlâḳ, 1283). Ibn-Khallikân refers to him on more than one occasion but does not give his biography.[3] From these sources we learn that Aḥmad ibn-Yaḥya ibn-Jâbir al-Balâdhuri was a native of Baghdâd descended from Persian stock. His grandfather, Jâbir, was secretary to al-Khaṣîb, minister of the finances of Egypt under the caliph ar-Rashîd. Aḥmad was an intimate friend of the caliphs al-Mutawakkil and al-Musta‘in and tutored ‘Abdallâh, the brilliant son of al-Mu‘tazz. He distinguished himself in poetry—especially satires, tradition and genealogy. The year 279/892 saw his death, mentally deranged as a result of drinking the juice of the anacardia (balâdhur); hence his surname al-Balâdhuri. Besides writing Futûḥ al-Buldân, which is a digest of a larger work that has been lost, he wrote Ansâb al-Ashrâf,[4] of which only two volumes are preserved, one in the Schefer collection of the

  1. p. 113, ed. Flügel.
  2. Leiden, 1907, ed. Margoliouth.
  3. See also de Goeje's introduction to al-Balâdhuri; and Hamaker, Specimen Catalogi, p. 7 seq.
  4. Lineage of Nobles. See Ḥâjji Khalifah, vol. i, pp. 455 and 274, ed. Flügel, Leipzig, 1835.