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Arab poet from Mecca (b. 644) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
'Umar ibn Abi Rabi'ah al-Makhzumi (Arabic: عمر بن أبي ربيعة) (November 644, Mecca – 712/719, Mecca, full name: Abū ’l-Khattāb Omar Ibn Abd Allah Ibn Abi Rabia Ibn al-Moghaira Ibn Abd Allah Ibn Omar Ibn Makhzūm Ibn Yakaza Ibn Murra al-Makhzūmi[1]) was an Arab poet. He was born into a wealthy family of the Quraysh tribe of Mecca, his father being Abd Allah and his mother Asmā bint Mukharriba.[citation needed] He was characterised by the biographer Ibn Khallikan as 'the best poet ever produced by the tribe of Quraysh'.[2]
Umar ibn Abi Rabi'ah | |
---|---|
Born | November 644 |
Died | 712/719 Mecca |
Father | Abd Allah Ibn Abi Rabia |
He is known for his love poetry and for being one of the originators of the literary form ghazel in Islamic literature.[3] He was "impassioned by everything beautiful that he saw in the street or during pilgrimage.".[4] According to Ibn Khallikan, the most prominent object of his affections was al-Thuraya bint Ali Ibn Abd Allah Ibn al-Harith Ibn Omaiya al-Ashghar Ibn Abd Shams Ibn Abd Manāf, granddaughter of the famous poet Qutayla bint al-Nadr, who married Suhail Ibn Abd al-Rahmān Ibn Auf al-Zuhri, on which occasion Umar recited the following famous verses, which pun on the fact that the married couple's names are both names of heavenly bodies (Suhail being Canopus and al-Thuraiya being the Pleiades):
O thou who joinest in marriage ath-Thuraiya and Suhail, tell me, I pray thee, how can they ever meet? The former rises in the north-east, and the latter in the south-east![5]
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