Shams al-Dīn Muhammad b. ‘Alī (or possibly Mas‘ūd) (Persian: شمسالدین محمد بن علی) (d. 1166) was a Persian poet born in Samarqand or its vicinity. He is more often known by his name, Suzani (سوزنی, meaning "needle maker"), or Suzani Samarqandi (سوزنی سمرقندی). According to one theory, the name is said to have arisen because of his violent passion for a needle-maker's apprentice under whose influence he supposedly took up the twin crafts of needle making and poetry. According to his own claim, he was a scion of the family of Salman the Persian,[1] a famous companion of the Islamic prophet, Muhammad.
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Details of his life (he died in 562/1166) are lacking, apart from what we can gather from his works. Obviously he was a very cultured writer:[1] he took a knowledge of Arabic for granted. He was also remarkably well read, and that his knowledge of Christianity and Manichaeism was exceptional, while his frequent use of Turkic words shows how widely known that language was.[1] To make his livelihood, he addressed eulogistic verses to greater and lesser rulers, though he stayed in Samarqand.[1] He did not hesitate to include lewd and insulting remarks in his satire, for which he had many a down-to-earth metaphor and turn of phrase. Suzani was a genuinely realistic poet with an unmistakable poetic talent.[1]
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Contemporary Persian and Classical Persian are the same language, but writers since 1900 are classified as contemporary. At one time, Persian was a common cultural language of much of the non-Arabic Islamic world. Today it is the official language of Iran, Tajikistan and one of the two official languages of Afghanistan. |