The Masnavi, Book One (Oxford World's Classics)
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Note on the Translation
xxviii S E L E C T B I B L I O G R A P H Y General Background J. T. P. De Bruijn, Persian Su fi Poetry: An Introduction to the Mystical Use of Classical Poems (Richmond, 1997). C. W. Ernst, The Shambhala Guide to Su fism (Boston, 1997). C. W. Ernst, tr., Teachings of Su fism (Boston, 1999). L. Lewisohn, ed., Classical Persian Su fism: From its Origins to Rumi (London and New York, 1993). J. Nurbakhsh, The Path: Su fi Practices (London and New York, 2002). A. Rippin, Muslims: Their Religious Beliefs and Practices, 2nd edn. (London and New York, 2001). M. Sells, ed. and tr., Early Islamic Mysticism (Mahwah, 1996). Reference Encyclopaedia Iranica, ed. E. Yarshater (New York, 1985– ; in progress; also available online at www.iranica.com). Encyclopaedia of Islam, ed. H. A. R. Gibb et al. (Leiden, 1960–2003). J. Nurbakhsh, Su fi Symbolism, 16 vols. (London and New York, 1980– 2003). On Rumi W. C. Chittick, ed., The Su fi Path of Love: The Spiritual Teachings of Rumi (Albany, NY, 1983). F. Keshavarz, Reading Mystical Lyric: The Case of Jalal al-Din Rumi (Columbia, SC, 1998). F. D. Lewis, Rumi, Past and Present, East and West: The Life, Teachings and Poetry of Jalal al-Din Rumi (Oxford, 2000). Rumi, Mystical Poems of Rumi, 1 and 2, tr. A. J. Arberry (New York, 1979). Rumi, Signs of the Unseen, tr. W. M. Thackston (Boston, 1994). A. Schimmel, The Triumphal Sun (London, 1978). Editions of the Masnavi Masnavi, ed. M. Estelami, 7 vols., 2nd edn. (Tehran, 1990). The seventh volume is a volume of indices. Each of the six volumes of text contains the editor’s commentary in the form of endnotes. The Mathnawi of Jalalu ddin Rumi, ed. and tr. R. A. Nicholson, E. J. W. Gibb Memorial, ns, 8 vols. (London, 1925–40). This set consists of the Persian text (vols. 1–3), a full translation in prose (vols. 4–6) and commentary (vols. 7–8). Masnavi, ed. T. Sobhani (Tehran, 1994). Masnavi-ye ma navi, ed. A.-K. Sorush, 2 vols. (Tehran, 1996). Interpretation of the Masnavi W. C. Chittick, ‘Rumi and wahdat al-wujud,’ in A. Banani, R. Hovannisian, and G. Sabagh, eds., Poetry and Mysticism in Islam: The Heritage of Rumi (Cambridge, 1994), 70–111. H. Dabashi, ‘Rumi and the Problems of Theodicy: Moral Imagination and Narrative Discourse in a Story of the Masnavi’, in A. Banani, R. Hovannisian, and G. Sabagh, eds., Poetry and Mysticism in Islam: The Heritage of Rumi (Cambridge, 1994), 112–35. R. Davis, ‘Narrative and Doctrine in the First Story of Rumi’s Mathnawi’, in G. R. Hawting, J. A. Mojaddedi, and A. Samely, eds., Studies in Islamic and Middle Eastern Texts and Traditions in Memory of Norman Calder (Oxford, 2000), 93–104. M. Mills, ‘Folk Tradition in the Masnavi and the Masnavi in Folk Tradition’, in A. Banani, R. Hovannisian, and G. Sabagh, eds., Poetry and Mysticism in Islam: The Heritage of Rumi (Cambridge, 1994), 136–77. P. Morewedge, ‘A Philosophical Interpretation of Rumi’s Mystical Poetry: Light, the Mediator and the Way’, in P. J. Chelkowski, ed., The Scholar and the Saint (New York, 1975), 187–216. J. Renard, All the King’s Falcons: Rumi on Prophets and Revelation (Albany, NY, 1994). E. Turkmen, The Essence of the Masnevi (Konya, 1992). Further Reading in Oxford World’s Classics The Arabian Nights’ Entertainments, ed. Robert Mack. The Koran, translated and edited by Arthur J. Arberry. The Qur an, translated and edited by M. A. S. Abdel Haleem. Select Bibliography xxx A C H RO N O L O G Y O F RU M I 1207 Rumi is born in Balkh, north-eastern Persia c. 1216 Rumi’s family emigrate from Persia 1219 Alaoddin Kay Qobad ascends Seljuk throne in Anatolia 1220 Death of Faridoddin Attar 1221 The Mongol army conquers Balkh c. 1222 Rumi’s family settle temporarily in Karaman, Anatolia 1224 Rumi marries Gowhar Khatun 1226 Birth of Soltan Valad c. 1229 Rumi’s family relocate to Konya 1231 Death of Baha Valad 1232 Borhanoddin Termezi arrives in Konya c. 1233 Rumi begins his studies in Syria 1235 Death of Ebn al-Farez in Egypt 1237 Rumi returns to Konya as leader of Baha Valad’s school Ghiyasoddin Kay Khosrow II ascends Seljuk throne in Anatolia 1240 Death of Ebn Arabi in Damascus 1243 The Mongols extend their empire to Anatolia 1244 Rumi meets Shams-e Tabriz in Konya for the first time 1246 Shams leaves Konya 1247 Shams returns to Konya c. 1247–8 Shams disappears Salahoddin the Goldsmith begins tenure as Rumi’s deputy 1258 Death of Salahoddin Hosamoddin Chalabi begins tenure as Rumi’s deputy The Mongols conquer Baghdad, the Abbasid capital 1260 The Mongols are defeated in Syria by the Mamluks c. 1262 The Masnavi is started c. 1264 The Masnavi is resumed after a pause on account of the death of Hosamoddin’s wife 1273 ( 17 December) Death of Rumi in Konya This page intentionally left blank T H E M A S NAV I book one This page intentionally left blank |
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