Main background
Abu Mansour Al-Thaalabi

Abu Mansour Al-Thaalabi

(0)

Books number: 1

Abd al-Malik bin Muhammad bin Ismail (350 AH - 429 AH / 961 1038 AD), who is known as Abu Mansur al-Tha'alabi al-Nisaburi, was an articulate Arabic writer who lived in Nishapur and was a master of grammar and literature and was distinguished in his restriction and clarification of the meanings of words and terms. The origin of his surname Abu Mansour was called al-Thaalabi because his father was a furrier who sewed fox skins and worked them, and if we knew that he used to discipline boys in kuttabs, we can say definitively that leather work was not an industry in which he lived and lives for it, but was one of the works that the educators treat in the schools while they discipline and teach Each of them pulled the strings of wool to their neck with the spindle in their hand. His friendship with Al-Bakhrizi Al-Tha'alabi lived in Nisapur, and he and Al-Bakhrizi’s father were close to the house and two neighbors, between which the books of the Muslim Brotherhood revolved, and they contradicted the poems of the responses. Al-Bakhrizi grew up in Hijr al-Tha'alabi, was polite and guided by his guidance, and he had a second father, who was very kind, compassionate and compassionate towards him. Al-Bakhrizi mentioned that connection. Al-Tha'alabi quoted in his book “The Dummy of the Palace” poems that his father narrated about him, but he did not mention anything to us about what happened between the two friendly sheikhs.