Anon.: At Tahqiq fi sira ar raqiq (1250)
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The treatise is entitled: at-Tahqiq fī sira 'ar-raqiq. The location of the Ms: Maktabat at-Taimuriyya, Cairo, No. 48 of the department of Fada'il wa-rada'il. On p. 2, the author mentions the name of his client Şala ‘ad Din al-Malik aş-şali Ahmad b. al-Muzaffar Gazi b. al Muzaffar Yusuf b. Ayyub b. Sadi, which must be a grandson of Saladin (1202/1252AD). So the scripture will have been written around 1250 or something before that.
Taken from: Die Kunst des Sklavenkaufs : nach arabischen, persischen und türkischen Ratgebern vom 10. bis zum 18. Jahrhundert by Müller, Hans
Chapter 1: Advice on purchasing and studying the slave.
Chapter 2: The races of freemen and slaves, as well as the characteristics of the inhabitants of the places.
Chapter 3: Investigation and physiognomic observation of body organs with poet opinions on this.
Chapter 4: Characteristics and types of people (on long, short, thin, being fat, etc.)
Chapter 5: The relationships among the slaves.
Chapter 6: What activities corresponding male and female slaves.
Chapter 7: Be watchful for fraud of slavers.
As illustration only; This letter of Barut bin Yakut african slave in 1937 regent of Kalba in Persian Gulf. This letter asks the British support for his appointment.
(Under: not from this book)
You buy no slave who is accustomed to attacks, abuse and controversy. They say: The best slave is the one for which no stock
is broken, and the worst is the one for which no stock is purchased, when it is said: Buy no slave, unless you purchase simultaneously a stick, then it is meant for the Zang, because they are the worst slaves. The slave
labor only does well under the stock.
(1) Galen: Aelius Galenus or Claudius Galenus (129 – c. 216 CE), was a Greek physician, surgeon and philosopher in the Roman Empire.
Galen: In the black ten qualities not found or not present in the other: this statement is repeated endless: Al-Mas'udi (916), Abu Ubayd Al Bakri (1067), At Tahqiq fi sira ar raqiq (1250); Ibn al Jawzi (1257); Al-Qazwini(d. 1283); Al-Dimashqi (1325), Abulfida (1331), Al Amsati al Hanafi (1478).
(2) Only those authors of books (or parts of it) that refer (also) to Selling/ Prices (Taxes) and Qualities of black slaves are mentioned.
- Ja’far al Sadiq (765)
- Sahnun ibn Sa’id ibn Habib at-Tanukhi:(d 854)
- Al Jahiz's Kitab al-Hayawan; on castration (869)
- Al Jahiz , other works (d869)
- Ibn abi l Ash’ath (970)
- Abu’l-Faraj al-Isfahani: (d971)
- Ibn Abi al-Qasim al-Qayrawani (983)
- Constantine Porphyrogenitus: (10th cent)
- R. Hai Gaon (d1038)
- Ibn Butlan: (d1066)
- Abu al-Walid al-Baji; (d1081) (Spain)
- Kai Ka’us b. Iskander (1083)
- Al-Shayzari (1164)
- Samawal ibn Yahya al-Maghribi al-Israili; (1175)
- Al-Saqati (1210)
- At Tahqiq fi sira ar raqiq (1250)
- Nasir Al Din Al Tousi (1274)
- Amir Khusrau : I'jaz-i-Khusravi (1283)
- Written for Sultan al-Muzaffar: Nur al-ma'arif (1295)
- Al-Dimashqi (1325)
- Ibn al-Akfani, (1348)
- Khalil ibn Ishaq al-Jundi: (d1365)
- al Hasan ibn Ali al-Sharif al-Husayni (1412)
- al-Abshihi (1450)
- Al Amsati al Hanafi (1478)
(3) They have the cleanest teeth of mankind because they have much saliva. This is repeated with variations by: Al-Jahiz (869); Ibn Qutayba (880); Ibn Abd Rabbih (d940); Abu Hilal Al-Askari (1005 AD); Ibn Butlan (1066); Abu Ubayd Al Bakri (1067); Al-Raghib al-Isfahani (1109); Al-Zamakhshari (d1144); Ibn al Jawzi (1200); At Tahqiq fi sira ar raqiq (1250); al-Abshihi (1450); Al Amsati al Hanafi (1478).