萨拉丁的“旋转医生”

Q2 Arts and Humanities
C. Hillenbrand
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要我们可能会自鸣得意地说,旋转医生的想法相当现代,但我想知道。很明显,强大的统治者总是有他们的亲密顾问。但在中世纪的穆斯林世界里,还有一个杰出的例子:萨拉丁组建了一个由三名顾问组成的团队,几十年来,他们以不懈的奉献精神关注着他的利益,至关重要的是,关注着他的声誉。无论以何种标准衡量,他们中的两人都是知识分子明星,他们本可以将自己的各种才能转向多个方向,但他们宁愿将自己的才能奉献给一个他们不仅钦佩而且爱戴的人。其中一位是诗人“Imad al-Din al-Isfahani”,他是一位波斯人,对阿拉伯语的掌握非常出色,他很高兴在淡季展出这件礼物。他的烟火表演充满了隐喻,充满了双关语、文字游戏、头韵、副歌和语言杂技,令人难以理解,几代西方东方主义者——实际上也是阿拉伯学者——都对编辑他的某些作品望而却步。有时,在他的作品中,他的方式掩盖了事实,但他也能够达到庄严雄辩的高度,比如他在夺回耶路撒冷时的胜利赞歌,或者他对萨拉丁之死的威胁。另一位是Qadi al-Fadil,他的头衔意思是“杰出的法官”,尽管他只是一位平淡无奇的诗人,但他是公认的书信体散文大师,这是伊斯兰大臣的礼节,几个世纪以来,他的信件一直被视为其风格的典范。他的外表,驼背和骨瘦如柴,使他成为宫廷讽刺诗人的靶子,但他的政治技巧无可非议,事实上,在他的主人不在的时候,他统治了埃及一段时间。有人说,传记给死亡增加了额外的恐怖,但在这方面,萨拉丁不必担心。伊本·沙达德(Ibn Shaddad)是这个杰出的三巨头中的第三位成员,他在耶路撒冷沦陷后加入了球队,但此后从未离开萨拉丁的身边,因此在顺境和逆境中都看到了他,他是一个风格平淡的普通人。但他应付自如,为他的英雄萨拉丁撰写了一本传记,让事实不言自明。他没有时间讲陈词滥调;相反,他对萨拉丁的钦佩在他的叙述中处处流露,正是他为大师死后的名人奠定了基础。讲座将探讨这三人对萨拉丁传说的影响,萨拉丁传说将一个库尔德小军阀转变为骑士精神、虔诚和军事荣耀的象征,在未来几个世纪里吸引了穆斯林的心和想象力,现在仍然如此。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
SALADIN'S ‘SPIN DOCTORS’
ABSTRACT We might flatter ourselves that the idea of a spin doctor is rather a modern one, but I wonder. Obviously enough, powerful rulers have always had their coterie of close advisers. But in the medieval Muslim world there is one outstanding example of something rather more than this: the team of three counsellors that Saladin assembled who watched over his interests and, crucially, his reputation, with unflagging devotion for decades. Two of them were, by any standard, intellectual stars who could have turned their multifarious talents in many directions but who chose rather to dedicate them to a man whom they not only admired but also loved. One of them, the poet ‘Imad al-Din al-Isfahani, was a Persian with a truly awesome command of Arabic, a gift which he delighted to exhibit in and out of season. His pyrotechnic performances, solid with metaphor, saturated with puns, wordplay, alliteration, assonance and verbal acrobatics, are such a nightmare to understand that generations of Western Orientalists – and indeed Arab scholars too, for that matter – have recoiled from the task of editing certain of his works. Sometimes in his writings manner eclipses matter, but he is also capable of reaching heights of solemn eloquence, as in his paean of triumph at the recapture of Jerusalem, or his threnody on the death of Saladin. The other, the Qadi al-Fadil – his title means ‘The Excellent Judge’ – though only a somewhat pedestrian poet, was an acknowledged master of the epistolary prose that was de rigueur in Islamic chanceries, and for centuries his letters were regarded as models of their genre. His appearance, hunchbacked and skeletal, made him the butt of the court's satirical poets, but his political skills were beyond reproach, and indeed in his master's absence he governed Egypt for a time. It has been said that biography adds an extra terror to death, but in that respect Saladin need not have worried. For Ibn Shaddad, the third member of this distinguished triumvirate, who joined the team after the fall of Jerusalem but thereafter never left Saladin's side and therefore saw him in good times and bad, was a plain man with a plain style. But he rose to the occasion and crafted a biography of his hero Saladin that lets the facts speak for themselves. He has no time for stale panegyric; instead, his admiration for Saladin shines through his account at every turn, and it is he who laid the foundations for his master's posthumous celebrity. The lecture will explore the impact of these three men on the Saladin legend, which transformed a minor Kurdish warlord into an emblem of chivalry, piety and military glory which captured the hearts and the imaginations of Muslims for centuries to come – and still does.
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来源期刊
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: The Royal Historical Society has published the highest quality scholarship in history for over 150 years. A subscription includes a substantial annual volume of the Society’s Transactions, which presents wide-ranging reports from the front lines of historical research by both senior and younger scholars, and two volumes from the Camden Fifth Series, which makes available to a wider audience valuable primary sources that have hitherto been available only in manuscript form.
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