A Critical Edition of the Grammatical Treatise Mīzān al-ʿarabiyya by Ibn al-ʾAnbārī (d. 577/1181)

A. Kasher, A. Sadan

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

Abstract

Medieval Arab scholars held grammar in very high esteem due to two main reasons. First, intellectual curiosity led them to investigate the language and its structures. Secondly, the desire to better understand the holy text of the Qurʾān made Arabic grammar indispensable. The intellectual curiosity as well as the interconnection between grammar and the study of religion can be seen in the grammarians' writings and theories in general and in this book in particular.The book consists of a critical edition and the analysis of an early treatise in the field of Arabic grammar, based on two manuscripts located in England and Egypt. The work's title is Mīzān al-ʿarabiyya which literally means ‘the balance, or scales, of Arabic.’ It is a pedagogical work dedicated to Arabic grammar and written by the famous Arabic grammarian Ibn al-ʾAnbārī (died 577/1181) who is probably best known for his al-ʾInṣāf fī masāʾil al-ḫilāf bayn al-naḥwiyyīn al-baṣriyyīn wa-l-kūfiyyīn, a collection of Streitfragen (controversial issues) attributed to the Baṣran and Kūfan grammarians. Among his rather few other extant treatises is the celebrated ʾAsrār al-ʿarabiyya, mostly dedicated to theoretical reasoning behind linguistic facts. In addition to the critical edition of Mīzān al-ʿarabiyya, the book also contains a detailed comparison between this work and the above-mentioned ʾAsrār al-ʿarabiyya, both written by the same author.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationWiesbaden
PublisherHarrassowitz
Number of pages116
ISBN (Print)978-3-447-11004-4
StatePublished - 7 Mar 2018

Publication series

NameArabische Studien
Volume15
ISSN (Print)1860-5117

Bibliographical note

XII, 116 pages; More languages: Arabic

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