Arabic Version A (The Seven Viziers): Difference between revisions
From The Seven Sages of Rome
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{{Version | {{Version | ||
|Has Description=The version of the ''Sindbad'' narrative titled ''The Seven Viziers'' is referenced in Arabic literature dating from the 9th and 10th centuries; allusions to the narrative may be found in Ibn al-Nadīm’s ''al-Fihrist'', al-Masʿūdī’s ''Murūj al-Dhahab'', and al-Shābushtī’s ''al-Diyārāt'' (according to [[Ateş (1948)|Ateş 1948]]). | |||
|Has Branch Of Tradition=East | |Has Branch Of Tradition=East | ||
|Has Original Language Of Version=Arabic | |Has Original Language Of Version=Arabic | ||
|Has Modern Research Literature=Ateş (1948) | |||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 11:48, 6 June 2025
The version of the Sindbad narrative titled The Seven Viziers is referenced in Arabic literature dating from the 9th and 10th centuries; allusions to the narrative may be found in Ibn al-Nadīm’s al-Fihrist, al-Masʿūdī’s Murūj al-Dhahab, and al-Shābushtī’s al-Diyārāt (according to Ateş 1948).
Tradition & Lineage
Branch of the tradition
Recorded Secondary Versions
Connected Manuscripts
Modern Scholarship & Editions
Modern research literature
Pattern of Embedded Stories in This Version
| Has Short Title | Has Sequence Number | Has Narrator | Has Name Variation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leo | 1 | ||
| Avis – The Bird | 2 | ||
| Lavator | 3 | ||
| Panes | 4 | ||
| Gladius – The Drawn Sword | 5 | ||
| Striga – The Prince and the Ogress | 6 | ||
| Mel | 7 | ||
| Zuchara | 8 | ||
| Fons | 9 | ||
| Balneator | 10 | ||
| Canicula – The Weeping Dog | 11 | ||
| Aper – The Boar and the Fruit | 12 | ||
| Canis – The Faithful Dog | 13 | ||
| Pallium | 14 | ||
| Simia | 15 | ||
| Turtures | 16 | ||
| Elephantinus | 17 | ||
| Ingenia 1 – The Trick: The Wiles of Women Collection | 18 | ||
| Puer 3 annorum | 19 | ||
| Puer 5 annorum | 20 |