Badr al-Din al-Kashmiri ( Arabic: بدر الدين الكشميري ) is a prolific Central Asian writer of the second half of the 16th century. Kashmiri works are important sources on the political, social, cultural, and religious history of Central Asia.
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Biography
His full name: Badr ad-Din al-Kashmiri ibn Abd al-Salam al-Husayini ibn Seyyid Ibrahim, Mutribi Smarkandi called him the World of Kashmiri . Kashmiri was closely associated with the Bukhara sheikhs Juybarids - Khoja Muhammad Islam (d. 1563), his son Khoja Saad (d. 1589) and their patron Abdullah Khan . Most of the information about Kashmiri is known from his own works. There are only two references to it in the writings of other authors: in the tazkir from Mutribi in “Nusha-e-ziba-e Jahangir” and in the hagiography about the origin of the Juybarids “Matlab at-talibin”.
Known for his work “Ravzat ar-rizvan wa Hadikat al-gilman”, which describes the economic, political and cultural life of Mavarannahr in the second half of the 16th century, Iran’s relations with the Bukhara Khanate , poetry from the cities of Bukhara , Samarkand , and Merv are collected. There is information about how the Kazakhs regained the cities on the coast of Syrdaria , about the development of crafts in the Kazakh Khanate .
Literature
- KAŠMIRI, BADR-AL-DIN - article from Encyclopædia Iranica
- Badr ad-Din al-Kashmiri // Kazakhstan. National Encyclopedia . - Almaty: Kazakh encyclopedias , 2004. - T. I. - ISBN 9965-9389-9-7 .
- Abduraimov M. A., Essays on agrarian relations in the Bukhara Khanate in the 16th - 1st floor. 19 century, t. 1-2, Tash., 1966, 1970;
- Akhmedov B. A. Historical and geographical literature of Central Asia of the 16-18 centuries: Written monuments, Tash., 1985;
When writing this article, material from the “ Kazakhstan. National Encyclopedia ”(1998-2007), provided by the editors of the“ Kazakh Encyclopedia ”under a Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 Unported license .