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Abu Ubayda Ma'mar ibn al-Muthanna

Abu Ubayda Ma'mar ibn al-Muthanna

728 CE824 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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Stop 1 of 2728–824Born / Lived / Taught / Died

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.

See other sages who lived in Basra

Works

No works attributed in the corpus yet.