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Proceedings of the Arabic and Islamic sections of the 35th international congress of Asian and North African studies (ICANAS), Part one. Edited by Kinga Dévényi and Tamás Iványi. (The Arabist, Budapest studies in Arabic, 19–20). pp. v, 272. Budapest, Eötvös Loránd University Chair for Arabic Studies & Csoma de Kőrös Society Section of Islamic Studies, 1998.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2009

Abstract

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Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 2000

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References

1 PSAS xvi (1986), p. 18Google Scholar. I would wish to qualify one of the statements in this passage: Although the (lost) history of Thābit b. Sinān aṣ-Ṣābi’ is clearly one of the principal sources used by Miskawayh and Ibn al-’Athīr for this period, I do not now believe that the work published as Thābīt's ’Akbāru l-qarāmiṭah has anything to do with him and have expressed in print the opinion that the latter is “a clumsy forgery knocked together out of extracts from Ibn al-’Athīr” see El 2, art. Ṣābi’. The El article has presumably been overlooked by Hajnal, who quotes repeatedly from pseudo-Thābit.