- Abdul Alhazred
:"This article is about the fictional literary character created by H.P. Lovecraft. For the character from the King's Quest video game, see ."
Abdul Alhazred is a
fictional character created by American horror writerH. P. Lovecraft . He is the so-called "MadArab " credited with authoring the imaginary book "Kitab al-Azif" (the "Necronomicon "), and as such an integral part ofCthulhu Mythos lore.Name
The name "Abdul Alhazred" is a pseudonym that Lovecraft created in his youth, which he took on after reading "
1001 Arabian Nights " at the age of about five years. The name was invented either by Lovecraft, or by Albert Baker, the Phillips family lawyer. [Harms, p. 7, "The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana".] "Abdul " is a common Arabic name component (but never a name by itself; additionally the ending -ul and the beginning Al- are redundant), but "Alhazred" may allude to "Hazard", a name from Lovecraft's family tree. It might also have been a pun on "all-has-read", since Lovecraft was an avid reader in youth. [Pearsall, "Alhazred, Abdul", "The Lovecraft Lexicon", p. 55.]"Abdul Alhazred" is not a real
Arabic name , and seems to contain the Arabic definite article morpheme "al-" twice in a row (anomalous in terms ofArabic grammar ). The more proper Arabic form might be "Abd-al-Hazred" or "Abdul Hazred". In Arabic translations, his name has appeared as "Abdullah Alḥ a ẓ red " (عبدالله الحظرد): Arabic "ḥaẓra"حظر = "he fenced in", "he prohibited". Hazred could come from the Persian or Arabic word "Hazrat" meaning Great Lord with a twist that makes it sound like "red" and "hazard" both indicative of danger.Similarly, an article (written from an in-universe perspective) in the Call of Cthulhu RPG speculates that it may be a corruption of "Abd Al-Azrad", which it claims translates to "The Worshipper of the Great Devourer".
The phrase "mad Arab", sometimes with both words capitalized in Lovecraft's stories, is used so commonly before Alhazred's name that it almost constitutes a title. A reference to the "Mad Arab" in
Cthulhu Mythos fiction is invariably a synonym for Abdul Alhazred.Biography
H. P. Lovecraft
According to Lovecraft's "History of the Necronomicon" (written 1927, first published 1938), Alhazred was:
:a mad poet of
Sanaá , inYemen , who is said to have flourished during the period of the Ommiadecaliph s, circa 700 A.D. He visited the ruins ofBabylon and the subterranean secret of Memphis and spent ten years alone in the great southern desert ofArabia —the Roba El Khaliyeh or "Empty Space" of the ancients—and "Dahna" or "Crimson" desert of the modern Arabs, which is held to be inhabited by protective evil spirits and monsters of death. Of this desert many strange and unbelievable marvels are told by those who pretend to have penetrated it. In his last years Alhazred dwelt inDamascus .In 730, while still living in Damascus, Alhazred supposedly wrote a book of ultimate evil in Arabic, "al-Azif", which would later become known as the "Necronomicon". Those who have dealings with this book usually come to an unpleasant end, and Alhazred was no exception. Again according to Lovecraft's "History":
:Of his final death or disappearance (738 A.D.) many terrible and conflicting things are told. He is said by Ebn Khallikan (12th cent. biographer) to have been seized by an invisible monster in broad daylight and devoured horribly before a large number of fright-frozen witnesses. Of his madness many things are told. He claimed to have seen the fabulous Irem, or City of Pillars, and to have found beneath the ruins of a certain nameless desert town the shocking annals and secrets of a race older than mankind. He was only an indifferent Moslem, worshipping unknown entities whom he called
Yog-Sothoth andCthulhu .August Derleth
August Derleth later made alterations to the biography of Alhazred, such as redating his death to 731. Derleth also changed Alhazred's final fate, as described in hisshort story "The Keeper of the Key", first published in May 1951. In the story, Professor Laban Shrewsbury (a recurring Derleth character) and his assistant at the time, Nayland Colum, discover Alhazred's burial site.While the two are heading a caravan from
Salalah ,Oman , they cross the border intoYemen and find the unexplored desert area that the "Necronomicon" calls "Roba el Ehaliyeh" or "Roba el Khaliyeh" — presumably a reference to theEmpty Quarter or "Rub al Khali".At the center of the area they discover the
Nameless City (the setting of the Lovecraft story of the same name) and in Derleth's text the domain of theGreat Old One Hastur . Shrewsbury, an old agent of Hastur and the devoted enemy of Hastur's half-brother, Cthulhu, crosses its gates in search of Alhazred's burial site.He indeed finds Alhazred's
burial chamber and learns of his fate. Alhazred had been kidnapped inDamascus and brought to the Nameless City, where he had earlier studied and learned some of the "Necronomicon"' s lore. As punishment for betraying their secrets, Alhazred was tortured. Then they blinded him, severed his tongue and executed him.Although the entrance to the chamber warns against disturbing him, Shrewsbury opens Alhazred's
sarcophagus anyway, finding that only rugs, bones, and dust remain of Alhazred. However, the sarcophagus also contains Alhazred's personal, incomplete copy of the "Necronomicon", written in theArabic alphabet . Shrewsbury then usesnecromancy to recall Alhazred's spirit and orders it to draw a map of the world as he knew it. After obtaining the map, which reveals the location ofR'lyeh and other secret places, Shrewsbury finally lets Alhazred return to his eternal rest.References
*cite book|author=August Derleth|chapter=The Keeper of the Key|origyear=1951|title=Quest for Cthulhu|year=2000|location=New York, NY|publisher=Carroll & Graf|id=ISBN 0-7867-0752-6
*cite book|last=Harms|first=Daniel|title=The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana|edition=2nd ed.|year=1998|location=Oakland, CA|publisher=Chaosium|id=ISBN 1-56882-119-0
*cite book|first=Howard P|last=Lovecraft|title=History of The Necronomicon|publisher=Necronomicon Press|location=West Warwick, RI|id=ISBN 0-318-04715-2|url=http://www.necfiles.org/nechisto.htm
*cite book|last=Pearsall|first=Anthony B.|title=The Lovecraft Lexicon|edition=1st ed.|year=2005|location=Tempe, AZ|publisher=New Falcon|id=ISBN 1-56184-129-3
Notes
ee also
*
Alchemy and chemistry in Islam
*Islamic astrology
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