SAMUEL IBN ʿĀDIYĀ

SAMUEL IBN ʿĀDIYĀ
SAMUEL IBN ʿĀDIYĀ (al-Samawal b. Ghārid Ablaq; mid-sixth century), poet in tayma , Hejaz, N. Arabia. Samuel b. Ādiyā's Arabic poetry ranks with the finest heroic traditional Arabic battle poetry of the pre-Islamic period and shows little trace of Jewish origins and themes. For a time he resided in the citadel of Ablaq near Tayma and was called "King of Tayma" by the local Arabs. His mother was an Arab of the Ghassan tribe. He was Jewish, although Shaikho, the Jesuit who published his diwan, attempted to prove that he was a Christian, or at least belonged to a Judaeo-Christian sect. He lived to be an old man and was known for his loyalty and fulfillment of pledges. When the noble Imruʾal-Qays deposited his arms in Samuel's home, and the castle was besieged by his enemies after he left for Byzantium, Samuel allowed his own son to be killed rather than surrender Imru's arms to the invader. This act earned him lasting fame among Arabs, and he is the subject of several poems by later authors. A popular proverb on the extent of one's loyalty was coined, "more loyal than Samuel" (Ar. Awfā min al-Samawʾal). His descendants were landowners in the region of Taima during the Umayyad dynasty and later converted to Islam. Moses Ibn Ezra in his book Shirat Israel (Helper edition, 49) notes Samuel as a Jewish poet. One of his sons and a grandson are said to have been poets, too. -Poetry Nine poems and fragments attributed to Samuel were collected by the philologist Nifṭawayh (d. 935). Most scholars agree that these poems were composed by a Jew but doubt that all were written by Samuel. The first poem is considered an example of classical Arabic poetry. Called Lāmiyyat al-Samawʾal, it expounds the virtues of purity of blood, generosity, honor, and strength. The battles of his people and their deaths on the battlefield are extolled, indicating the extent of the cultural assimilation of the Jews to Arab society. The second poem, however, expresses his belief in resurrection and glorifies the kings and prophets of Israel, also mentioning the splitting of the Red Sea. Its philological importance lies in the rhyming of certain stanzas as an aid to exegesis of the koran and in the traces of the Arabic dialect of the Jewish tribes. Poem number 6 exalts the fortress of Samuel's father and his loyalty to Imruʾal-Qays. A 26-line poem attributed to Samuel appears in the collection edited by Sheikho, who interpreted the phrase "our prophet came and brought peace to all men" as evidence of the poet's Christian origin. His opinion has been contested, as the poem possesses a koranic style and hence indicates its later composition by a Jew refuting Muslim claims. A fragment from the Cairo genizah , signed Samuel of the Qurayẓa (al-Quraẓi) tribe, had previously been attributed to Samuel ibn ʿĀdiyā. H.Z. Hirschberg, however, presumes that the author wrote this poem during the period of struggle between the Jews and muhammad , and therefore is not Samuel ibn ʿĀdiyā. Hirschberg sees the influence of the Jewish aggadah and Midrash in Samuel's poetry, rather than their Koranic adaptations. Schwartzbaum perceives these verses as poetic examples of the Israi'liyyāt and Qiṣaṣ al-Anbiyāʾ literature. The Muslim–Arab legends are literature which draws upon Jewish aggadic and midrashic sources, and especially upon the Jewish elements in the Koran. -BIBLIOGRAPHY: H. Hirschfeld, in: JQR, o.s. 15 (1903), 167–179; H.Z. Hirschberg, Yisrael ba-'Arav (1946), 242ff.; idem, Diwan des As-Samauʾal Ibn ʿAdyāʾ (1931); Baron, Social2, 3 (1957), 72f.; I. Lichtenstaedter, in: PAAJR, 10 (1939), 192. ADD. BIBLIOGRAPHY: H. Schwartzbaum-Ben-Yaacov, in: Horev, 5 (1939), 169–89; A. Goren, in: Ariel, 42 (1976), 55–65. (Shmuel Moreh / Leah Bornstein-Makovetsky (2nd ed.)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Samuel ibn Adiya — (fl. 6th cent.)    Arabian poet. He lived in Tamya in Hejaz, northern Arabia. His poetry is similar to that of other pre Islamic Arab poets …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • Samaw'al ibn 'Adiya — as Samaw’al bin ‘Ādiyā’ .AlSamuel ibn Adiya (Arabic: السموأل بن عادياء‎) (Hebrew: שמואל בן עדיה‎) was an Arabian poet and warrior, in the first half of the 6th century. His clan converted to Judaism when they were in Yemen. Later, they moved to… …   Wikipedia

  • QAZZĀZ, MANASSEH BEN ABRAHAM IBN — (AL ) (tenth century, also known as Menashe b. al Farrar), Jewish silk trader and governor in damascus from 990 to 996. In the year 980 he engaged in administering Yaʿqūb ibn Killis property. He must have played a leading part in the military… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Jewish military history — focuses on the military history aspect of the Jewish people in Jewish history from ancient times until the modern age.Ancient IsraelitesWhile complete details in the Biblical account of a system of fighting forms are not extant, the Midrashic,… …   Wikipedia

  • JUDEO-ARABIC LITERATURE — JUDEO ARABIC LITERATURE, written in Arabic by Jews for Jews. It is written in an idiom which is linguistically closer to the spoken form of Arabic than is the idiom used in Muslim literature. It may plausibly be assumed that, prior to the rise of …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • List of Jews from the Arab World — From the Arab Expansion until the 1960s, Jews were a significant part of the population of Arab countries. Before 1948, an estimated 900,000 Jews lived in what are now Arab states. Here is a list of some prominent Jews from the Arab World,… …   Wikipedia

  • Tayma — ( ar. تيماء; also transliterated Tema ) is a large oasis with a long history of settlement, located in northeastern Saudi Arabia at the point where the trade route between Yathrib (Medina) and Dumah begins to cross the Nefud desert. Tayma is… …   Wikipedia

  • Tayma — Aramäische Inschrift aus Tema (6. Jahrhundert v. Chr.) Tayma (oder Taima, Tema) (arabisch ‏تيماء‎, DMG Taymāʾ) ist eine große Oase in Saudi Arabien m …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • ORIENTAL LITERATURE — In the vast area between Morocco and the Pacific, Jewish writers were mainly active in   areas of Islamic culture; this survey is mainly concerned with the Middle East. Writers in the Arab World Few Jewish writers gained a place in the history of …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Taima (oasis) — Para otros usos de este término, véase Taima (desambiguación). Taima o Teima (en árabe تيماء‎; 27°37 30 N, 38°32 30 E) fue una antigua ciudad situada al noroeste de la actual Arabia, emplazada en medio de un vasto oasis históricamente habitado y… …   Wikipedia Español

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”