Kalīlah wa Dimnah
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- influence on early Spanish literature
- In Spanish literature: The beginnings of prose
…(1251) of the beast fable Kalīlah wa Dimnah exemplifies early storytelling in Spanish. A romance of the Seven Sages, the Sendebar, was translated likewise through Arabic, with other collections of Eastern stories.
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- In Spanish literature: The beginnings of prose
- influenced by “Pachatantra”
- In Panchatantra
ad 760), known as Kalīlah wa Dimnah, after the two jackals that figure in the first story. The Kalīlah wa Dimnah led to various other versions, including a second Syriac version and an 11th-century version in Greek, the Stephanites kai Ichnelates, from which translations were made into Latin and…
Read More - In fable, parable, and allegory: India
…version) as the mid-8th-century Arabic Kalīlah wa Dimnah. Kalīlah and Dimnah are two jackals, counselors to the lion king, and the work is a frame story containing numerous fables designed to teach political wisdom or cunning. From the Arabic this was translated into many languages, including Hebrew, which rendition John…
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- In Panchatantra
- translation by Rūdakī
place in
- Islamic literature
- In Arabic literature: The concept of adab
…which he titled in Arabic Kalīlah wa Dimnah (“Kalīlah and Dimnah”); its narrative method and its particular style were among its contributions to the development of a new secretarial mode of composition. He also composed a manual for secretaries, Kitāb ādāb al-kabīr (“The Major Work on Secretarial Etiquette”). At a…
Read More - In Islamic arts: Development of literary prose
… into Arabic under the title Kalīlah wa Dimnah. These fables provided Islamic culture with a seemingly inexhaustible treasure of tales and parables, which are to be found in different guises throughout the whole of Muslim literature. He also introduced into Arabic the fictitious chronicles of the Persian Khvatāy-nāmak (“Book of…
Read More - In Islamic arts: Belles lettres
The fables of Kalīlah wa Dimnah, for example, were retold several times in Persian. The most famous version, though a rather turgid one, is called Anvār-e soheylī (“Lights of Canopus”) and was composed by a famous mystic, Ḥoseyn Wāʿeẓ-e Kāshefī of Herāt (died 1504). The “cyclic story” form…
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- In Arabic literature: The concept of adab
- Persian literature
- In Persian literature: The Arab invasion
…of Indian fables known as Kalīlah wa Dimnah (“Kalīlah and Dimnah”), which in the 6th century had been translated from Sanskrit to Middle Persian. Ibn al-Muqaffaʿ made an Arabic version during the 8th century that was later retranslated into Persian. He also translated the Khwatāy-nāmak (“Book of Kings”), a compilation…
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- In Persian literature: The Arab invasion