Mustafa Naima (; Muá¹£á¹ÂafàNa'ëmÃÂ; 1655 – 1716) was an Ottoman bureaucrat and historian who wrote the chronicle known as the TÃÂrëḫ-i Na'ëmà(Naima's History). He is often considered to be the first official historian of the Ottoman Empire, although this formal office was probably not created until the time of his successor, Rashid.
MustafàNa'ëm was born the son of a Janissary in Aleppo, Ottoman Syria. He joined the palace guard in Constantinople and was educated as a secretary there. He rose in the financial administration of the empire until the palace intrigues caused him to be sent to a provincial administrative post in 1715.
As a historian Naima mentions the arrival of Mughal ambassadors: Qaim Beg, Sayyid Ataullah and Hajji Ahmad Saeed, sent by the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan. The ambassadors lodged in the Seraglio of Saiwush Pasha.
He died in Patras.
Na'ëmÃÂ's main work is the Ravà ¼atu'l-Ḥüseyn fë ḫulÃÂá¹£ati aḫbÃÂri'l-ḫÃÂfiḳeyn (ñÃÂöé çÃÂÃÂóÃÂàÃÂàîÃÂçõé ãîèçñ çÃÂîçÃÂÃÂÃÂàin Ottoman; literally: "The Garden of Hüseyin in the Summary of the Chronicles of East and West"). This work was finished in 1704 and dedicated to the vizier Amcazade Hüseyin Paà Âa. The book covers the events of the years from 1591 to 1660.