Imrani
Emrānī (or Imrānī; 1454–1536) was a Judæo-Persian poet, being "one of the most prominent Jewish poets of Iran".[1][2] Emrānī was inspired by the earlier poet Shāhīn to choose "as his field the post-Mosaic era from Joshua to the period of David and Solomon".[3]
His major work, Fatḥ-Nameh ("The Book of the Conquest," begun in 1474, unfinished), describes in poetry "the events of the biblical books of Joshua, Ruth, and Samuel".[3] Emrānī's last great work, Ganj-Nameh ("The Book of the Treasures"), is "a free poetic paraphrase of and commentary on the mishnaic treatise Avot".[3]
Like his predecessor Shahin, he sought to compose a national epic analogous to the Shahnameh.[4]
Major works
[edit]- Fatḥ-Nameh ("The Book of the Conquest," begun in 1474, unfinished)
- Ganj-Nameh ("The Book of the Treasures", completed in 1536)
References
[edit]- ^ Yeroushalmi, David (1995), The Judeo-Persian poet ʻEmrānī and his "Book of treasure": ʻEmrānī's Ganǰ-nāme, a versified commentary on the Mishnaic tractate Abot, Brill Publishers, ISBN 978-90-04-10301-6
- ^ Yeroushalmi, David. "EMRĀNĪ". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2 April 2017.
- ^ a b c Jewish Virtual Library, JUDEO-PERSIAN
- ^ Lieberman, Phillip I. (2021-12-23). "Jews as Producers and Consumers of History in the Medieval Islamicate World". Quaderni di Studi Arabi. 16 (1–2): 292–312. doi:10.1163/2667016X-16010012. ISSN 2667-016X.