Abu al-Aswad al-Duʾali (Arabic: أَبُو ٱلْأَسْوَد ٱلدُّؤَلِيّ, Abū al-ʾAswad al-Duʾalīy; c.-16 BH/603 CE – 69 AH/689 CE), whose full name is ʾAbū al-Aswad Ẓālim ibn ʿAmr ibn Sufyān ibn Jandal ibn Yamār ibn Hīls ibn Nufātha ibn al-ʿĀdi ibn al-Dīl ibn Bakr,[1] surnamed al-Dīlī, or al-Duwalī, was the poet companion of Ali bin Abu Talib and was one of the earliest, if not the earliest, Arab grammarians. He is known for writing the earliest treatise on Arabic grammar, through study of the Quran, explaining why he is sometimes known as the "Father of Arabic Grammar."[2][3]
Abu al-Aswad al-Du'ali أَبُو ٱلْأَسْوَد ٱلدُّؤَلِيّ | |
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Title | The Father of Arabic Grammar |
Personal | |
Born | 16 BH (603 CE) Hejaz, Arabia |
Died | AH 69 (688/689) Basrah, Umayyad Caliphate (present-day Iraq) |
Religion | Islam |
Era | Islamic golden age |
Region | Umayyad Empire |
Known for | Muslim scholar |
Muslim leader | |
Influenced by
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Influenced
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Al-Du'alī is said to have introduced the use of diacritics (consonant and vowel markings) to writing, and to have written the earliest treatises on Arabic linguistics, and grammar (nahw).[4] He had many students and followers.[5]
With the expansion of the early Islamic Empire, with millions of new converts to Islam wishing to be able to recite and understand the Quran, the adoption of a formalised system of Arabic grammar became necessary, and al-Du'ali helped develop it, such as with the concepts of Nahw and Taskheel. His science of grammar led in turn, to the establishment of the first great School of grammarians at Basrah, that would be rivalled only by the school at Kufah.
Al-Duʾali is credited with inventing a system of placing large colored dots above certain letters to differentiate consonants (because several groups share the same shape), and indicate short vowels (because the sounds are not otherwise indicated).[6]: 664 [7]: 131 Consonant differentiation is called I'jam (or naqt). Vowel indication is called tashkil. Al-Du'ali's large-dot system addressed both of these, resolving readers' confusion and making clear how to read and write Arabic words.[7]: 131
Although effective, the large dots were difficult to use on small-size fonts and on any but a limited selection of scripts. They were also time-consuming to make on any size font or script. Thus, the Umayyad governor al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf al-Thaqafi asked two of al-Duʾali's students to create and codify a new system that was simpler and more efficient. A new tashkil (vocalization) system was developed by Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi (d. 786). It has been universally used for Arabic script since the early 11th century.[7]: 131
A chapter on the Grammarians of al-Baṣra in the tenth century book 'Kitab al-Fihrist' by Ibn al-Nadim, contains quotes about al-Duʾalī from several early commentators:
This is also the opinion of the language specialist Abu ʿUbaydah (d. 210 AH), and the lexicographer al-Zubaydi (d. 397 AH) said about Abu al-Aswad:
Abu ʿUbaydah said:
Abu Saʿīd al-Sirafi described how once al-Duʾalī encountered a Persian from Nūbandajān,[10][11] named Sa'd. Saʿd and a group of fellow Persians had converted to Islam and become protégés of Qudāmah ibn Maẓ'ūn. Al-Duʾalī noticing Saʿd walking leading his horse asked "Oh Sa'd, why don't you ride?" To this Saʿd replied "My horse is strong (ḍāli)", causing some bystanders to laugh. He had meant to say "lame" (ẓāli). Then al-Duʾalī rebuked them, saying:
A first-hand account of al-Nadim in his Al-Fihrist supports the view that al-Duʾalī was the first grammarian. He visited a book collector, Muḥammad ibn al-Husayn in the city of Haditha, who had the most marvelous library al-Nadim had ever seen. It contained Arabic books on grammar, philology and literature, and ancient books. He had visited a number of times and found the collector friendly, but wary; fearful of the Clan of Hamdan [of Aleppo]. He was shown a large trunk left Al-Husayn by a Kufan collector of ancient writings. This trunk, filled with parchments, deeds, pages of paper from Egypt, China, Tihamah, 'adam' (sg. 'adim' type of parchment) skins, and paper of Khurasan, seen by Al-Nadim, had bundles of notes on grammar and language written in the hand of scholars like Abu 'Amr ibn al-'Ala', Abu Amr al-Shaybani, Al-Asmaʿi, Ibn al-A'rābī, Sibawayh, al-Farrā', and Al-Kisa'i, as well as the penmanship of authorities of the Hadith, such as Sufyān ibn 'Uyaynah, Sufyan al-Thawri, al-Awzaʿi, and others. Among these I read that grammar came from Abu al-Aswad [al-Duʾalī]. On four leaves, of what looked to be China paper, in the writing of Yahya ibn Ya'mar, of the Banu Layth was written "Remarks about the Subject and Object". Under these notes, written in ancient calligraphy "This is the handwriting of 'Allān the Grammarian", and under this "This is the handwriting of al-Naḍr ibn Shumayl." When the book collector died, the case and its contents were lost, except for the manuscript.[12]
The Wafayat al-Ayan (Obituaries of Eminent Men) by Ibn Khallikan contains a similar account with additional information: Great diversity of opinion exists about his name, surname and genealogy. He lived in Basra and was intelligent, sagacious, and one of the most eminent Tābīs (inhabitants of Basra). He fought at the Battle of Siffin under Ali ibn Abi Talib and he invented grammar. Ali laid down the principle of the three parts of speech; the noun, the verb and the particle and told him to write a treatise on it. He was said to be tutor to the children of the governor of Arabian and Persian Iraq, Ziyad ibn Abih.
When he noticed that native Arab speech was being influenced by foreign immigrants he asked Ziād to authorize the composition of a guide for correct use. At first the emir refused but, sometime later overhearing someone say “tuwaffa abāna wa tarak banūn” (which might be rendered in Latin *mortuus est patrem nostrum et reliquit filii, analogous in English to *him died and left they, mistakes due entirely to incorrect vowel choice) - Ziād changed his mind.
Another anecdote relates how when ad-Du'alī's daughter came to him saying “Baba, ma ahsanu ‘s-samāi?” (what is most beautiful in the sky?) – he answered: “Its stars;” but she replied: “I don't mean what is the most beautiful object in it; I mean how wonderful its beauty.” - to this he remarked “You must then say, "ma ahsan ‘samāa (how beautiful is the sky).” And so he invented the art of grammar. Ad-Du'alī's son, Abū Harb, relates that the first section of his father's composition (the art of grammar) was on the “verbs of admiration”.
Another account says that it was when he heard a man recite a passage from the Qur'an: Anna ‘llahu bariyon mina ‘l-mushrikina wa rasūluhu, pronounce this last word “rasulihi, that he decided to compose his grammar. He called his book the art of grammar ‘nawhu’ (in the same way) i.e. as Alī Ṭālib had done. Several accounts of his proverbial wit survive. One such goes as follows: When due to a problem neighbour, Abū ‘l-Aswad had moved house, someone said “So have you sold your house?” He replied “Rather, I have sold my neighbour.” When ibn al-Harith ibn Kalad ath-Thakafī remarked of a tattered cloak he wore – “not tired of that cloak?” He replied “some tiresome things are impossible to quit.” At this the other sent him 100 cloaks, to which Ad-Du'alī penned this verse:
Another verse attributed to him is this:
He died at Baṣra of the plague, or possibly of palsy before the outbreak, aged eighty-five years. Others say he died in the khalifate of Omar ibn ‘Abd ‘l-Azīz (717-720).[13]
A chapter in Wafayat al-Ayan on another grammarian of Baṣra, Abu Amr Isa ibn Omar ath-Thakafi, reports that al-Khalīl Ibn Aḥmad had heard from Sibawaih, an erstwhile student of ath-Thakafi, that ath-Thakafi had the authored over seventy works on grammar, all but two of which were lost by a collector in Fars. The two titles survived were Ikmāl (completion) that remained then in Fars, and 'al-Jāmī' (the collector), that Sibawaih was in possession of and studying in the course of composing his own treatise, the famous 'Kitab'. Al-Khalīl claim here is that:
Among the scholars who studied Abu al-Aswad were Yahya ibn Ya'mar, 'Anbasah ibn Ma'dan, 'Anbasah al-Fil ('Anbasah of the Elephant); Maymun ibn al-Aqran. Nasr ibn 'Asim was said to have studied with him.[12]
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