Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition
Ghālib b. Ṣaʿṣaʿa
Article languages: English
GhalibEI.pdf GhÄlib b. á¹¢aÊ¿á¹£aÊ¿a b. NÄdjiya b. Ê¿IḳÄl b. Muḥammad b. SufyÄn b. MudjÄshiÊ¿ b. DÄrim, an eminent TamÄ«mÄ«, famous for his generosity, the father of the poet alFarazdaḳ. The tradition that GhÄlib was a contemporary of the Prophet (lahu idrÄk) seems to be valid; the tradition that he visited the Prophet and asked him about the reward of the deeds of his father in the time of the DjÄhiliyya (AghÄnÄ«, xix, 4) seems however to be spurious. GhÄlib belonged to the generation after the Prophet; his name is connected with the names of Ṭalba b. Ḳays b. ÉÄá¹£im and ÉUmayr b. al-Sulayl al-ShaybÄnÄ«, tribal leaders in the time of MuÉÄwiya, in the story of the men of Kalb who tried to find the most generous man (AghÄnÄ«, xix, 5; in Ibn Abi Él-ḤadÄ«d's Sharḥ, iii, 426, ed. 1329 A.H., GhÄlib is mentioned with Aktham b. á¹¢ayfÄ« and ÉUtayba b. al-ḤÄrith, which is an obvious anachronism). The most generous man among the three sayyids was indeed GhÄlib. (GhÄlib was a neighbour of Ṭalba in al-SÄ«dÄn, in the vicinity of KÄáºima). He is said to have visited ÉAlÄ« b. AbÄ« ṬÄlib and introduced to him his son al-Farazdaḳ; ÉAlÄ« recommended him to teach his son the ḲurÉÄn. (According to the tradition of AghÄnÄ«, xix, 6 he visited him in Baá¹£ra after the battle of the Camel. According to the story quoted in BaghdÄdÄ«'s KhizÄna, i, 108, GhÄlib was then an old man; al-Farazdaḳ was in his early youth). GhÄlib earned his fame by his generosity. Muḥammad b. ḤabÄ«b counts him in his list of the generous men of the DjÄhiliyya (al-Muḥabbar, 142); al-DjÄḥiẠstresses that he was one of the generous men of the Islamic period, not inferior to the generous men of the DjÄhiliyya, although public opinion prefers the latter (al-ḤayawÄn, ii, 108, ed. ÉAbd alSalÄm HÄrÅ«n). GhÄlib is said to have granted bounteous gifts to people, not asking them even about their names. The story of his contest with Suḥaym b. WathÄ«l al-RiyÄḥī in slaughtering camels in the time of ÉUthmÄn is quoted in many versions. Al-Farazdaḳ
mentions this deed of his father boastfully in his poems; DjarÄ«r refers to it disdainfully; the competition was censured in Islam as a custom of the DjÄhiliyya (Goldziher, Muh. St., i, 60). A peculiar story in NaḳÄʾiḠ417 tells how he threw to the populace in Mecca (anhaba) 40,000 dirhams. GhÄlib was assaulted by DhakwÄn b. ÉAmr al-FuḳaymÄ« in consequence of a quarrel between FuḳaymÄ« men and a servant of GhÄlib who tried to prevent them from drinking water from a reservoir belonging to GhÄlib in al-ḲubaybÄt. MudjÄshiÉÄ« tradition denies the FuḳaymÄ« claim that GhÄlib died in consequence of this assault. He died in the early years of the reign of MuÉÄwiya and was buried at KÄáºima. Al-Farazdaḳ mourned his father in a number of elegies (cf. DÄ«wÄn al-Farazdaḳ, 163, 210, 611, 676, ed. al-á¹¢ÄwÄ«). His tomb became a refuge for the needy and the oppressed who asked help, which had indeed always been granted to them by al-Farazdaḳ (cf. DÄ«wÄn al-Farazdaḳ, 94, 191, 757, 893 and NaḳÄʾiḠ380). Al-Farazdaḳ often mentions him in his poems as âDhu Él-Ḳabrâ or âá¹¢Äḥib al-Djadathâ (Goldziher, Muh. St., i, 237). (M.J. Kister) Bibliography In addition to the sources quoted in the article: BalÄdhurÄ«, AnsÄb, Ms. 971a-b, 972a, 974a, 978b, 992a, 1043b al-MarzubÄnÄ«, MuÊ¿djam, 486 al-Mubarrad, al-KÄmil, 129, 280 Ibn Ḳutayba, K. al-Ê¿Arab (RasÄʾil al-BulaghÄʾ), 350 idem, ShiÊ¿r, ed. de Goeje, index
Ibn Durayd, IshtiḳÄḳ, ed. HÄrÅ«n, 239-40 Al-DjÄḥiáº, al-BayÄn, ed. al-SandÅ«bÄ«, ii, 187, 225, iii, 139, 195 AghÄnÄ« , index NaḳÄʾiá¸, ed. Bevan, index al-Djumaḥī, ṬabaḳÄt, ed. S̲h̲Äkir, 261 al-ḲÄlÄ«, AmÄlÄ«, ii, 120 idem, Dhayl al-AmÄlÄ«, 52, 77 YÄḳūt s.v. á¹¢awÉar, Miḳarr Ibn Ḥadjar, al-Iá¹£Äba, s.v. GhÄlib (N. 6925), Suḥaym (N. 3660), al-Farazdaḳ (N. 7029), Hunayda (N. 1115-women) BaghdÄdÄ«, KhizÄna, i, 462 al-ÉAynÄ«, al-MaḳÄá¹£id, i, 112 [on margin of KhizÄna] al-Farazdaḳ, DÄ«wÄn, ed. al-á¹¢ÄwÄ« ṬabarÄ«, ed. Cairo 1939, iv, 179. [Print Version: Volume II, page 998, column 1] Citation: Kister, M. J. "GhÄlib b. á¹¢aÉá¹£aÉa b. NÄdjiya b. ÉIḳÄl b. Muḥammad b. SufyÄn b. MudjÄshiÉ b. DÄrim." Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Edited by: P. Bearman; Th. Bianquis; C.E. Bosworth; E. van Donzel; and W. P. Heinrichs.
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