Abu Ubayda Ma'mar ibn al-Muthanna
728 CE–824 CE · Baghdad
Abu Ubayda Ma'mar ibn al-Muthanna was one of the founding scholars of Arabic philology (the study of language and texts) in the Iraqi city of Basra, then a great center of learning. Tradition places his birth around 110 AH (c. 728 CE) and his death there around 209 AH (c. 824 CE); the sources give the death year variously between 207 and 213 AH, so the dates are estimates. He was a mawla — a non-Arab client attached by patronage to an Arab tribe, here Taym of Quraysh. Medieval biographers report that he was of Persian and Jewish ancestry, a detail some later writers used against him; it cannot be confirmed independently.
He is best known for Majaz al-Qur'an, an early work explaining the figurative and idiomatic language of the Qur'an — pioneering, though some later scholars disagreed with parts of his method. He also collected the "battle-days of the Arabs" (Ayyam al-Arab), pre-Islamic tribal lore and poetry; Ibn al-Nadim's Fihrist lists over a hundred titles under his name, most now lost.
Around 188 AH (803-804 CE) he was summoned to Baghdad during the reign of Harun al-Rashid. Rivals accused him of Khariji sympathies (the Kharijites were an early dissenting movement) and of supporting the Shu'ubiyya, which rejected Arab ethnic superiority. Modern scholarship treats the Khariji label as a likely later misattribution rather than established fact.
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BasraבצרהSouthern Iraq — Persian Gulf port
What they did here
Tradition holds he was born in Basra around 110 AH (c. 728 CE), a mawla (client) of the tribe of Taym. Basra was his lifelong base: he studied under leading Basran philologists, taught, compiled his works, and died there around 209 AH (c. 824 CE). The death year is reported variously (207-213 AH), so it is an estimate. Sources: 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica s.v. 'Abu Ubaida'; Wikipedia/EI summary; P. Webb, 'Rebel's Advocate' (gives c. 114/732 - c. 210/825).
About Basra
Basra hosted one of the oldest Babylonian-Jewish communities, with continuous residence from the Talmudic era until the mid-20th century. R. Yosef Hayyim of Baghdad (Ben Ish Hai) maintained extensive correspondence with the Basra rabbinic court.
In Basra at the same time
al-Hasan al-Basri, Muhammad ibn Sirin, Qatada ibn Di'ama, Wasil ibn Ata, Amr ibn Ubayd, Shu'ba ibn al-Hajjaj
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.