FOOTNOTES
1. Ryckmans. vol 1, p. 26; Wellhausen, pp.34-45.
2. Ishtiqaq,p. 123.
3. ibid., p.133.
4. ibid.,p. 144.
5. Unidentified.
6. Ishtiqaq, p.315.
7. The last four names unidentified.
8. Taj al-'Arus, entries bss and zz.
9. Buldan, vol. iv, p.769.
10. ibid., vol. ii, p.229.
11. ibid., vol. iii, p. 816.
12. ibid., vol. iii, pp. 651-652.
13. ibid., vol. i,pp. 611-612.
14. Buldan, vol. i, pp. 622-623; Taj al-'Arus,
entries bss and zz.
15. Ar. ghardniq, lit. Numidian cranes,
16. Said to be one of the "abrogated" verses of the Koran; cf.
Tabari, vol.1, pp. 1192-1196.
17. Al-Tabari, Jami' al-Bay'dn fi Tafsir al-Qur'an, Cairo, 1323-1330,
vol. xxvii, pp.34-36. Also F. V. Winnett, "The Daughters of
Allah," in The Moslem World, vol. xxx (1940), pp. 113-130.
18. Surah LIII: 19-20. For Muhammad's compromise with
these deities and his subsequent repentence, see Tabari, vol. i, pp. 1192-1196;
cf. also Surah xvii: 75-76.
19. Buldan, vol. III. p.100.
20. Kosegarten, Ash'ar al-Hudhaliyin, pp. 79-99.
21. cf. Buldan, vol. iii, p. 100. The verses are not mentioned in
Kosegarten's edition.
22. cf. al-Aghani, vol. ii, pp. 166, 168.
23. Sifah, p.120; Buldan, vol. III, pp. 77-78.
24. Buldan, vol. iii, p.665; cf. al-Aghani', vol.II p. 168, line 4.
25. cf. Sifah, p.177; Buldan, vol. iii, pp.772-773.
26. Abu-Khirash Khuwaylid ihn-Murrah; al-Shi'r w-al-Shu'ara' p.48;
al-Aghani, vol. xxi, pp.54-70.
27. Ishtiqaq, p. 87, line 15.
28. Nahik in Lisan al-'Arab, entry hsb See Khizanat al-Adab,
vol. iv, p. 164, where his name is Nuhaykah ibn-al-Harith al-Mizini of the
Fararah tribe.
29. d. A.H. 10 / A.D. 631-632. Tabari, vol.1, pp. 1443-1448, 1745-1747;
al-Aghani. vol. xv, p.52; al-Shi'r w-al-Shu'ara; pp.191-192.
30. Buldan, vol. iv, pp.642-643.
31. cf. Buldan, vol.III, p.773.
32. cf. al-Aghani, vol. xiii, p. 2, where it is Dayatir.
33. Ishtiqaq, p.276.
34. Al-Aghani, vol: xiii, pp. 2-8.
35. One of four men who are supposed to have renounced idolatry during the Jahiliyah days. See Surah, pp. 143-149. Muhammad is said to have declared him one of the ten promised Paradise. See
al-Ma'arif, p. 29.
36. Unidentified.
37. Ryckmans, vol.I, pp.9, 71.
38. cf. al-Aghani, vol.III, pp.15-16.
39. Ishtiqaq, p 187.
40. Al-Aghani, vol. xxi, p.57.
41. cf. ibid., vol. xxi, pp.57-58.
42. Surah LIII: 19.
43. d. A.H. 1/ A.D. 622-623; Ishtiqaq, p.49; Tabari, vol.I, p.1261.
44. cf. Surah cxi; Sirah, pp. 231, 233, 276; Tabari, vol.I,
pp. 1170-1172; al-Marif, pp. 60-61.
45. cf. Buldan, vol.III, pp. 665-666.
46. A.H. 8 / A.D. 629-630, the year Mecca was captured.
47. The greatest Muslim general ; d. A.H. 21 / A.D. 642; see
ibn-Sa'd, vol. iv, Pt. 2, pp.1-2, vol. vii, pt. 2, pp.118-121; aI-Ma'drif,
p.136.
48. Sifah, p.127, line 1; Buldan, vol. iv, pp.769-770.
49. Taj al-'Arus, entry htf. A sub-tribe of the Kinanah.
50. Buldan, vol.III, p. 100.
51. cf. al-Aghani; vol. xxi, p. 58.
52. Ishtiqaq, p.110.
53. Linguistic notes precede and follow this sentence.
54. Surah LXXI: 22-23.
55. Ishtiqaq, p. 164.
56. ibid., p. 164.
57. Ibn-Sa'd, vol. ii, pt 1, p.105.
58. See above, p.19.
59. Also Alyas; cf. Ishtiqaq, p.20.
60. Ishtiqaq, pp. 19-20.
61. Grandfather of the Prophet.
62. For details, see Sirah, pp. 91-100.
63. One of "those whose hearts are reconciled" to Islam
(al-mu'allafah qulubuhum), namely Arab chiefs with whom the Prophet made terms
after the battle of Hunayn, A.H. 8 / A.D. 629. in order to
secure their aid. Sirah, pp. 880-883; cf. Sirah ix: 60. His son, Mu'awiyah, who
later founded the Umayyad dynasty. was another.
64. Sirah, pp. 555-592. In this battle, A.H. 3 / A.D. 625,
Muhammad himself was wounded. See also Tabari, vol.I, pp. 1383-1431.
65. cf. Ishtiqaq, p. 316.
66. See above, p. 8.
67. The sacred well within the precincts of the Sacred Mosque, supposed to he identical with the well from which Hagar and Ishmael drank
while in the wilderness. Buldan, vol.II, pp. 941-944; cf. Gen.
xvi: 4.
68. The uncle and guardian of Muhammad. Sirah, pp. 114-117.
69. The family of the Prophet.
70. Sirah, pp. 172-177. The banu-al-Ash'ar (al-Ash'arun in the text)
were a South Arabian tribe, See Lisan al-'Arab, entry sh'r. They
were also known as al-Ashair; see Shams al-Ulam, p. 56.
71. Al-Shi'r w-al-Shu'ara, pp. 145-147. See also Gustav von
Grunebaum, Bishr b. abi Khazim: Collection of Fragments," in Journal
of the Royal Asiatic Society (1939), pp. 533-567. For the verse see
no. xxvi, on p. 558.
72. Ryckmans, vol. I, p. 111.
73. ibid., vol.I, p. 175.
74. ibid., vol. 5, p. 267.
75. ibid., vol. I, p. 32.
76. Buldan, vol. II, p. 789.
77. Ishtiqdq, p. 154.
78. ibid, p. 154.
79. cf Sifah p. 56; Buldan, vol. ii, p. 789.
80. In al Maydini, Majma' al-Amthal, Cairo, 1310, the poet is
Masruh al Kalbi and in Taj al-'Aras, entry ghnz, he is Masruh ibn-Adham
al-Na'ami (a sub-tribe of the KaIb), and the verses are said against
Jarir.
81. In Lisan al-'Arab, entry ghnz," these verses are ascribed to
Jarir; entry yr at Ayy'ar is supposed to be a horse, and the verses are
ascribed to abu 'Ubayd, perhaps ibn-abi-Wajzab; cf. also Taj al-'Aras,
entries jrd and yr. In the "Jambarah" (Escurial MS), folio 215, the
verses are said against al-Nabighah al-Dhubyani.
82. Surah xvii 83.
83. cf. ibn-Hajar al-'Asqalani, al-Isabah fi Tamyiz al-Sahabah, Cairo, 1327, vol. ii, p. 185.
84. cf. Buldan, vol. iv, p. 950.
85. Ryckmans, vol.1, pp. 18, 129.
86. Ishtiqaq, p. 10.
87. ibid., p. 106.
88. Also al-Shaddakh; see Ishtiqaq, p 106; Lisan al-Arab, entry
shdkh; Tabari vol. i, p.1097.
89. Ar. abras, which literally means a leper. But the malady was
probably the very common bahaq which resulted in the loss of pigment.
90. d. A.H. 14 / A.D. 635; al-Baladhuri, Futah al-Buldan, ed. M. J. de-Goeje, Leyden, 1866, p. 119; cf. al-Ma'arif, p. 151; Istiqaq, p.49. Since ibn-al-Kalbi flourished almost two centuries later, there must be a lacuna in the chain of transmission.
91. Abu-Uhayhab; see above, p. 20.
92. Surah xxxviii: 4.
93. This recalls to one's mind the stone which Jacob set up and anointed at Bethel. See Gen. xxviii: 18-22.
94. Al-Shi'r w-al-Shu'ara, pp. 57-67; al-Aghani, vol. ix, pp. 146-158.
95. Ishtiqaq, pp. 276, 280.
96. His real name was Talhah ibn-'Abdullah ('Ubayd-Allah in Lisan al-'Arab, entry thl) ibn-Khalaf al-Khuza'i. See al-Ma'arif, p. 214; Ishtiqaq, p.280.
97. Surah vii: 193.