Nizami

Nizami Ganjavi (Persice نظامی گنجوی Niẓāmī Ganjavī = 'Niẓāmī Gangiensis') vel simpliciter Nizami, cuius nomen publicum erat Jamal ad-Dīn Abū Muḥammad Ilyās ibn-Yūsuf ibn-Zakkī,, natus Gangiae in Atropatene circa 1141 et ibidem mortuus anno 1209, fuit poeta clarissimus Persicus sectae Sunniticae.

Nizami
Nizami Ganjavi in tapeta pictus (1939). Museum Gangiense Atropatenae.
Nizami
Nizami Ganjavi in hospitio shah. Miniatura, 1570. Museum Historiae Atropatenicum.

Nizami in litteris Persicis amoris habetur poeta epicus maximus, qui quotidianum realisticumque loquendi genus ad poemata epica Persica adhibuit. Eius opera late in Afgania, Atropatene, Irania, regione Kurdistanica, et Tadzikistania leguntur magnique aestimantur.

Nizami
Chosroes Parviz Shirin se lavantem in lacu invenit.

Nizami nec philosophus modo Avicennae, nec expositor Sufismi theoretici modo Ibn 'Arabi fuit; aestimatur autem philosophus et gnosticus qui varias cogitationis Islamicae provincias perdidicit, quas vicissim modo miscuit qui traditiones hakimorum posteriorum sicut Qutb al-Din Shirazi in memoriam redigit.

Nizami
Exercitatio Perficit. Imago e quodam Haft Paikar Nizamiano. Museum Brooklyniense.

Eius nomen personale fuit Ilyas. Tris mulieres in matrimonium duxit.

Nizami
Salīm cum Majnun in desertis colloquitur. E libro Indico sexto sedecimo exeunte scripto.

Goethius de Nizamo opinabatur: "Ingenium clemens, ingeniosissimus, qui, cum Firdausi collectas traditiones heroicas confecisset, pro rebus suorum poematum dulcissimos amoris altissimi congressus elegit."

Nizami
Atabeg Atropatenicus Qizil Arslan Nizami salutat.

Quinarium (Panj Ganj vel Khamsa)

Nezami Quinario (Panj Ganj 'Quinque Thesauris') innotuit, magnis poematum narrativorum libris, quorum omnes exstant.

  • Makhzan al-Asrar (Persice مخزن الاسرار) Thesaurus Mysteriorum (1163) (vel fortasse ex anno 1176), circa 2250 disticha Persica.
  • Khosrow o Shirin (Persice خسرو و شیرین) Chosroes et Širin (1177–1180).
  • Layli o Majnun (Persice لیلی و مجنون) Layla et Majnun (1192).
  • Eskandar-nameh (Persice اسکندرنامه) Liber Alexandri Magni (1194 vel 1196–1202), circa 10 500 disticha.
  • Haft Paykar (Persice هفت پیکر) Septem Pulchritudines (1197) (liber etiam Bahram-Nama appellatus).
Nizami 
Khusrau in ripis canalis stant. E Khamseh Nizamiano.

Nexus interni

Pinacotheca

Notae

Bibliographia

  • Browne, E. G. 1998. Literary History of Persia. 4 vol. ISBN 0-7007-0406-X.
  • Burgel, Johan Christoph, et Christine van Ruyuymbeke. 2011. "Nizami: A Key to the Treasure of the Hakim." Amstelodami: Amsterdam University Press. Google Books z5YccgAACAAJ.
  • Chelkowski, Peter J. 1975. "Mirror of the Invisible World." Novi Eboraci: Metropolitan Museum of Art. Google Books WnTlAAAAMAAJ.
  • Chopra, R. M. 2014. Nizami Ganjavi (1141–1209): The Greatest Master of Persian Romantic Mesnavi. Colcatae: Sparrow Publication. ISBN 978-81-89140-75-5.
  • Ganjavi, N. 1995. Haft Paykar: A Medieval Persian Romance. Conv. J. S. Meisami. Novi Eboraci: Oxford University Press.
  • Meisami, Julie Scott. 1995. The Haft Paykar: A Medieval Persian Romance. Novi Eboraci et Oxoniae: Oxford University Press. Google Books: 8vxjAAAAMAAJ.
  • Parrello, Domenico. Khamsa. Encyclopædia Iranica.
  • Ruymbeke, Christine van. 2008. Science and Poetry in Medieval Persia: The Botany of Nizami's Khamsa. University of Cambridge Press. Catalogus.
  • Ruymbeke, Christine van. 2002. From culinary recipe to pharmacological secret for a successful wedding night: the scientific background of two images related to fruit in the Xamse of Nezâmi Ganjavi. Festschrift in honour of Professor J. T. P. de Bruijn. Persica, Annual of the Dutch-Iranian Society (Leiden), 127–36.
  • Rypka, Jan. 1968. History of Iranian Literature. Reidel Publishing Company. OCLC 460598. ISBN 90-277-0143-1.
  • Storey, C. A., et Franço de Blois. 2004. Persian Literature: A Biobibliographical Survey. Poetry of the Pre-Mongol Period, 5. Ed. 2a, retractata. RoutledgeCurzon. ISBN 0-947593-47-0.
  • Talattof, K., et J. W. Clinton. 2001. The Poetry of Nizami Ganjavi: Knowledge, Love, and Rhetoric. Novi Eboraci.
  • Talattof, Kamran. Nizami's Unlikely Heroines: A Study of the Characterizations of Women in Classical Persian Literature.

Nexus externi

Nizami 
Museum Nizamianum Litterarum Atropenicarum Bacuae in urbe Atropatenae.
Nizami 
Nizami in manat Atropatenico pictus (1993).
Nizami  Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Nizami spectant.
    De scaena Nezamiana

Tags:

Nizami Quinarium (Panj Ganj vel Khamsa)Nizami PinacothecaNizami NotaeNizami BibliographiaNizami Nexus externiNizami11411209AtropateneGangiaIraniaPersicePoetaSunni

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki Latina:

Solanum lycopersicumCroatiaMiles regularisDuxMichael (archangelus)Oeconomia1993Ramus interventricularis anteriorAdiectivumIudaeiRes militarisColumna vertebralisLucas (evangelista)VodcaLinguisticaBasilica VaticanaArgentinaIndex dierum calendarii RomaniNihil prius fideAngelo di MonteverdeLudovicus XIVBlogRoma antiquaLiberum arbitriumOrdo IlluminatorumPhilippus BiagioliGeographiaSol23 AprilisThe Mule (pellicula 2018)Lucius Annaeus Seneca minorRegnum HierosolymitanumOceanographiaDies solarisOnnateRes publicaAutocinetumHieronymusEdictum generale de protectione datorumAshley Judd10 AprilisBalduinus IV (rex Hierosolymitanus)LondiniumWalloSententia (gnome)Lingua InterslavicaLiberApoplexia cerebriAdinianum (Croatia)MathematicaAurelianumBitGens humanaNationes mundiLingua AnglicaVicimaniaFaustina minorIaponiaHomo mensuraAnimeReligio IudaicaLettoniaCloeliaSecundum bellum mundanumLaotiaMeridiesEpicurusVerrucaAmerica SeptentrionalisSestertiusTyrannis🡆 More