- Ibn Bibi
Ibn Bibi is author of the primary source for the history of the Seljuq Sultanate of Rum during the
13th century . He served as head of the chancellery of the Sultanate inKonya and reported on contemporary events.Ibn Bibi’s father, a native of
Gorgan , lived for a time at the court of the Jalal al-Din Kwarezmshah and later worked at the Seljuq chancellery. His mother was a famous astrologer fromNishapur invited to Konya byKayqubad I . The family was part of an exodus of Persian intellectuals from Mongol-dominatedIran .Ibn Bibi’s memoir is written in Persian and covers the period between
1192 and1280 . A single manuscript, produced forKaykhusraw III , survives inIstanbul (Aya Sofya 2985). An abridged Persian version called "Mukhtaṣar" was produced during the author's lifetime in1284 -85. An Ottoman Turkish adaptation, sometimes called the "Seljukname", is included in the "Oğuzname" of the early15th century court historianYazicioğlu Ali . Several manuscripts of the latter survive inAnkara ,Berlin ,Istanbul , Leiden,St Petersburg ,Moscow , and Paris.H.W. Duda supplies the definitive text with a German translation in his "Die Seltschukengeschichte des Ibn Bībī" (Copenhagen 1959). A facsimile of Aya Sofya 2985 with an introduction by A.S. Erzi is published as "El-Evāmirü'l-'Alā'iyye fī'l-Umuri'l-'Ala'iyye", Türk Tarih Kurumu Yayınlarından I. Seri, no. 4a (Ankara, 1957).
ources
*H.W. Duda, “Ibn Bībī” "Encyclopaedia of Islam", ed. by P. Bearman, et al. (Brill 2007).
*Andrew S. Ehrenkreutz, “Ibn Bībī” "Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium" (Oxford University Press 1991), v. 2, p. 973.
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