Labīd

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Labīd ibn Rabīʿa Abū ʿAqīl al-ʿĀmirī ( Arabic لبيد بن ربيعة بن مالك أبو عقيل العامري, Labīd or Labīd ibn Rabīʿa for short , * around 560; † around 661 in Kufa ) was a poet from the Bedouin tribe of the Jafar. This belonged to the Banū ʿĀmir b. Saʿsaʿa, who in turn were a subgroup of the Hawāzin tribe. The Jafar lived in the western part of the Najd .

According to tradition, Labīd is said to have prevented Prince Nuʿmān II in al-Hīra from withdrawing favor from his tribe as a young man by means of a satire written in rajāz meter .

In 630, Labīd is said to have converted to Islam after meeting the Prophet Mohammed in Medina . According to Brockelmann , some of his poems have Islamic influences, so he assumes that Labīd continued to write after his conversion.

The surviving works of Labīd are mainly summarized in his Dīwān . One of his Qasīds was also included in the Muʿallaqāt , a collection of highly regarded ancient Arabic poems.

literature

  • Carl Brockelmann: Labīd b. Rabī'a. In: The Encyclopaedia of Islam. New Edition Vol. V. Brill, Leiden 1986, ISBN 90-04-07819-3 , p. 583/4
  • Agnes Imhof: Religious Change and the Genesis of Islam: The Ancient Arab Panegyric Image of Man in the 7th Century. Ergon, Würzburg 2004, ISBN 3-89913-346-3
  • Gottfried Müller: I am Labīd and that is my goal: on the problem of self-assertion in the ancient Arabic Qaside. F. Steiner, Wiesbaden 1981, ISBN 3-515-03145-6
  • Fuat Sezgin: The History of Arabic Literature. Vol. 2. Brill, Leiden 1975, ISBN 90-04-04376-4 , pp. 126/7

swell

  1. a b Fuat Sezgin: The history of Arabic literature. Vol. 2. Brill, Leiden 1975, p. 126.
  2. ^ Carl Brockelmann: Labīd b. Rabī'a. In: The Encyclopaedia of Islam. New Edition Vol. V. Brill, Leiden 1986, p. 583/4.