Ḥāfiẓ-i Abrū (born, Herāt, Khorāsān [now in Afghanistan]—died 1430, Zanjān, Azerbaijan) was a Persian historian, one of the most important historians of the Timurid period (1370–1506).
Ḥāfiẓ-i Abrū was apparently educated in the city of Hamadān. Later he became an extensive traveler and went with the Turkic conqueror Timur on a number of campaigns, including those in the Middle East against Aleppo and Damascus in 1400–01. After the ruler’s death, Ḥāfiẓ-i Abrū entered the service of Timur’s son, Shāh Rokh (1405–46), and his grandson, Prince Baysunqur (d. 1433), as court historian and thus settled in Herāt. He died on the return from Shāh Rokh’s second campaign in Azerbaijan in 1430.
Among his major works is the Majmūʿa (“Collected Work”), which was commissioned by Shāh Rokh; it is mainly a collection of three older well-known historical works with continuations and an introduction and index by Ḥāfiẓ-i Abrū. His Majmaʿ al-tavārīkh (“The Compendium of History”) is a world history divided into four volumes (arbāʿ, “quarters”) that cover the pre-Islāmic prophets and ancient Iran, a history of Muḥammad and the caliphate up to 1258, Iran during the Seljuq and the Mongol periods, and, finally, Iran under the Timurid rulers. The last section was dedicated to Prince Baysunqur and has a separate title, Zubdat at-tavārīkh-i Bāysunghurī (“Baysunqur’s Cream of History”). He also translated a geographic work from Arabic, the Masālik al-mamālik wa suwar al-akālīm (“The Roads of the Kingdoms and the Forms of the Climes”), in which he included historical sections on various provinces of Iran.