Persian Sindbadnama
The Persian Sindbadnama traditions are all thought to derive from a Middle Persian (Pahlavi) original. Older scholarship presumed an Indian source for this, but no Sanskrit texts have been found as evidence of this (Krönung (2016). Scholars assume that there were several adaptations into early New Persian, by Rudaki (Dabir Siyaqi 1955) and Daqayeqi (Zakeri 2023). The only version that has survived is by Zahiri al-Samarqandi in c. 1160 CE/555 AH.
The Sindbadnama was later inserted, in abridged form, into Nakhshabi’s Tutinama. Later, in 1374, the Shirazi belletrist and courtier Azod Yazdi versified Zahiri's version for the govenor of Shiraz, Tamerlane's son Shah Rukh. Of these different surviving versions, Zahiri's version seems to have been by far the most popular and sought after, particularly in the Ottoman Empire.
Tradition & Lineage
Recorded Secondary Versions
Connected Manuscripts
Language & Composition
Modern Scholarship & Editions
Notes & Commentary
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