Qudama ibn Ja'far
Qudāma ibn Jaʿfar al-Kātib al-Baghdādī, was a Syriac scholar and administrator for the Abbasid Caliphate.
Life
Little is known with certainty about Qudama's life and work. He was probably born ca. 873/874, possibly at Basra. His grandfather was a Syriac Christian. Whether it was his grandfather, or he himself, who converted to Islam under al-Muktafi bi-Allah in ca. 902–908 is unclear. Ibn al-Nadim described him as a master of literary style, a polished writer and distinguished philosopher of Logic despite having an uneducated father.He held various junior administrative positions in the caliphal secretariat in Baghdad, and eventually rose to a senior post the treasury department. Various dates for his death have been supplied, ranging from 932 to 939/940 and 948.
Works
Of his several books on philosophy, history, philology, and administration, only three survive:- the Kitab al-Kharaj, for which Qudama is chiefly known. The last four sections of the original eight, survives. It was written after 928 as a manual for administrators, and deals with the structure of the state and the army, as well with geographic details, including valuable accounts on the Caliphate's neighbours, especially the Byzantine Empire. It also included a now lost section on literary rhetoric.
- the Kitab al-Alfaz or Jawahir al-Alfaz, a compilation of synonyms and phrases for the use of poets and orators, as well as containing an introduction on the figures of speech.
- the Kitab Naqd al-Shi'r, an essay and guide on composing good poetry.
- The Cleanser of Sorrow
- Dismissal of Anxiety
- Epistle about Abu 'Ali ibn Muqlah known as "The Brilliant Star"
- Withstanding Grief
- Wines of Thought
- Book of Unconsciousness
- Book of Politics
- Refutation of Ibn al-Mu'tazz
- The Pleasure of Hearts and the Provision of the Traveller