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Abu'l-Ma'ali Nasrallah

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"The New King Paraded around the Town on a White Elephant". Kalila and Dimna of Abu'l-Ma'ali Nasrallah, 1410-1425, Tabriz (resued by Baysunghur in Herat in 1431). Topkaki Saray Museum, H.362, fol. 169r.[1]

Nasrallah ibn Muhammad ibn Abd al-Hamid Shirazi (Persian: نصرالله بن محمد بن عبدالحمید شیرازی), better known as Abu'l-Ma'ali Nasrallah (ابوالمعالی نصرالله), was a Persian[2] poet and statesman who served as the vizier of the Ghaznavid Sultan Khusrau Malik.

Biography

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Nasrallah was born in Ghazni; he was the grandson of Abd al-Hamid Shirazi, a prominent Ghaznavid vizier, who himself was the son of the prominent Ghaznavid vizier Ahmad Shirazi, who was the son of Abu Tahir Shirazi, a secretary under the Samanids, whose family was originally from Shiraz in southern Iran. Nasrallah later became a secretary at the Ghaznavid court, and also became a poet.

Kalila wa Dimna

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Between 1143 and 1146, Nasrallah translated the Arabic translated Indian fable story Kalila wa Dimna to Persian,[3] and dedicated it to Sultan Bahram-Shah.

During the reign of the Bahram-Shah's grandson, the last Ghaznavid Sultan Khusrau Malik, Nasrallah was appointed as his vizier, but later fell into disfavor and was imprisoned, and then executed.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Sims, Eleanor (2002). Peerless images : Persian painting and its sources. New Haven : Yale University Press. pp. 208–210. ISBN 978-0-300-09038-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link)
  2. ^ Bosworth 2001, pp. 578–583.
  3. ^ Bosworth 1968, pp. 159.
  4. ^ Berthels & Brujin 1993, pp. 1016.

Sources

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Unknown Vizier of the Ghaznavid Empire
???
Unknown