Ibn BashkuwÃÂl, Khalaf ibn âÂÂAbd al-Malik ibn Mas'ud ibn Musa ibn BashkuwÃÂl ibn Yûsuf al-Ansârë, AbÃ
«'l-QÃÂsim () (var. Ḫalaf b.'Abd al- Malik b. Mas'Ã
«d b. MÃ
«sàb. BaÃ
¡kuwÃÂl, AbÃ
«'l-QÃÂsim; September 1101 in Córdoba â 5 January 1183 in Sarrión), was an influential Andalusian traditionist and biographer working in Córdoba and Seville.
Life
His ancestry was Arab and was a descendant of al-Ansar- he was known as Ibn BashkuwÃÂl ("son of Pasqual") in the Valencia region. His first teacher was his father (d.1139), to whom he dedicates a section in his biographical work. He studied with the most famous scholars of his time: Ibn al-'Arabë al-Ma'ÃÂfirë and the lawyer AbÃ
«l-Walëd ibn Ruschd (died 1126), the grandfather of the philosopher Averroës. In his hometown he worked as a consulting lawyer (faqëh muÃ
¡ÃÂwar) and for a short time as deputy QÃÂdë in Seville under Ibn al-'Arabë. It appears he never travelled to the East and his scholarship derived from the Andalusian-Islamic tradition. His biographer Ibn AbbÃÂr (d. Jan 1260) mentions 41 scholars in Córdoba and Seville, with whom he studied. His library held works by authors from the Islamic East; of which is the K. as-Siyar from AbÃ
« IshÃÂq al-FazÃÂrë, on whose title page he is documented as the owner of the work.
He died in January 1183 and was buried in the cemetery known then as Ibn 'AbbÃÂs Scholarsâ Cemetery in Córdoba
Works
Ibn BashkuwÃÂl's biographers attribute him authorship of twenty-six known books, treatises and monographs of biographical content, and list his teachers and the texts he studied. Among his few surviving works are:
- Aá¹£-á¹£ila fë ta'rëḫ a'immat al-Andalus (), âÂÂContinuation of the scholarly history of al-AndalusâÂÂ; continuation of Ibn al-Faraá¸Âë's (d. 1013) famous biographical dictionary of Islamic Spain's scholars, which contains 1541 biographies of 11th and 12th century Andalusian scholars. In a dedicated chapter (faá¹£l) he presents the life of the so-called "strangers" (al-ghurabÃÂ), who came to al-Andalus from the Orient and Ifrëqiya.
- Ibn al-AbbÃÂr (1199-1260) from Valencia wrote the supplement (Takmilat K. as-á¹£ila) and filled some gaps found in the original work. In the first volume he wrote a detailed biography of Ibn BaÃ
¡kuwÃÂl.
- Another supplement and continuation of Ibn BaÃ
¡kuwÃÂl's work was written by Ibn az-Zubair al-GharnÃÂá¹Âë (1230, Jaén (JayyÃÂn) â 1309, Granada (GharnÃÂá¹Âa)) entitled ilat aá¹£-á¹£ila ('The continuation of the á¹£ila') or: 'The story of the scholars of al-Andalus, in which he (the author) of the KitÃÂb aá¹£-á¹£ila continued by Ibn BaÃ
¡kuwÃÂl'. This book deals with the Andalusian scholars of the 12th and 13th centuries. A fragment of the work was published by the French orientalist ÃÂvariste Lévi-Provençal in 1937 (Rabat). Three further volumes with corrections and additions to the first edition were published in 1993 (Rabat).
- KitÃÂb áawÃÂmiḠal-asmÃÂ' al-mubhama al-wÃÂqi'a fë-'l-aḥÃÂdëṯ al-musnada (), âÂÂSecrets of indistinct names found in Hadiths with complete IsnadsâÂÂ; two-volume biographical compilation and explanation of personal names, names of ancestry contradictorily, or incorrectly, reported in the literature.
- ShuyÃ
«á¸¥'Abd AllÃÂh ibn Wahb al-Qurashë (), âÂÂTeachers of 'Abd AllÃÂh ibn Wahb al-QurashëâÂÂ; biographical dictionary of teachers of the Egyptian scholar 'AbdallÃÂh ibn Wahb with rich information about its importance as a primary source of Ibn Wahb. Contains an appended biography of Ibn Wahb.
- KitÃÂb al-mustaáëṯën bi-lÃÂhÃÂhi (), âÂÂBook of the beseechers of GodâÂÂ; collected hadith with complete isnÃÂd traditions containing the Holy Du'à' intercessions. In this work Ibn BashkuwÃÂl cites the titles and authors of thirteen source works. At the beginning of this collection for example, the intercession of the Prophet Muḥammad in the Battle of Badr is linked to the QurâÂÂÃÂn verse:
Literature
- The Encyclopaedia of Islam. New Edition. Brill. Leiden. Vol. 3, p. 733
- Manuela MarÃÂn (ed.): Ibn BaÃ
¡kuwÃÂl (m 578/1183): KitÃÂb al-mustagëṯën bi-llÃÂh. (En busca del socorro divino). Fuentes Arábico-Hispanas. 8th Madrid 1991.
- Carl Brockelmann: History of Arabic Literature. 2nd Edition. Brill, Leiden 1943. Vol.1, p. 415
- Fuat Sezgin: History of Arabic Literature. Vol.1. Brill, Leiden 1967.
- QÃÂsim'Alë Sa'd: Muḥaddiṯ al-Andalus al-ḤÃÂfiẠal-mu'arriḫ AbÃ
«'l-QÃÂsim b. BaÃ
¡kuwÃÂl. Ã
 aḫṣiyyatu-hu wa-mu'allafÃÂtu-hu. ('The Hadith scholar of al-Andalus, the historian AbÃ
«'l-QÃÂsim b BaÃ
¡kuwÃÂl, his personality and his works'). In: Maçallat æÃÂmi'at Umm al-Quràli-'ulÃ
«m aÃ
¡-Ã
¡arë'a wa -'l-luáa al-'arabiyya wa-dÃÂbi-hÃÂ. Vol.18, n.28 (Mecca, 2003), p. 222-288 (in Arabic)
References