Bensalem Himmich - The Polymath

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This award-winning historical novel deals with the stormy life of the outstanding Arab philosopher Ibn Khaldun, using historical sources, and particularly material from the writer's works, to construct the personal and intellectual universe of a fourteenth-century genius. The dominant concern of the novel — the uneasy relationship between intellectuals and political power, between scholars and authority — addresses our times through the transparent veil of history. In the first part of the novel, we are introduced to the mind of Ibn Khaldun as he dictates his work to his scribe and interlocutor. The second part delves into the heart of the man and his retrieval of a measure of happiness and affection in a remarriage, after the drowning of his first wife and their children at sea. Finally we see Ibn Khaldun as a man of action, trying to minimize the imminent horrors of invading armies and averting the sack of Damascus by Tamerlane, only to spend his last years lonely and destitute, having been fired from his post as qadi, his wife having gone to Morocco, and his attempts at saving the political situation having come to nil.

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Barquq gestured to his interlocutor to approach. He patted him on the shoulder as a sign of his pleasure and approval and then urged him to proceed with his research as quickly as possible. With that he allowed him to leave.

In mid-795, word began to arrive about Timur’s activities; this time, the Tatar hurricane seemed much closer than before. Oral and written accounts harped on the fact that he had managed to gain absolute power after killing Qamar al-Din, the ruler who had opposed him. His raids had now added Isfahan, ‘Iraq, Persia, and Kirman to his dominions. But the news that hit Cairo hardest was that Timur had entered Baghdad where his armies had wreaked total havoc on the city’s people and cultural treasures. In spring of the following year, Ahmad ibn ‘Uways the Il-Khan, the former ruler of Baghdad, fled from the city to Barquq’s Egypt and begged him for help in expelling the Tatars from his kingdom. Barquq rushed to prepare an armed force to set out and confront the invaders. Meanwhile, cities like Tikrit, Diyarbakr, and Raha were all falling like ripe fruit to Timur’s army.

What is it, one wonders, that gives the Mongols their overwhelming ability to crush whole armies and take over countries with such devastating force?

The first idea to strike the master was that, from a theoretical point of view, their sense of group solidarity was by far the most vigorous and powerful in this era, but to that he added an additional factor, namely that Timur was an extraordinarily brilliant strategist. All the information he had collected about this warrior confirmed that the secret of his continuing series of victories almost certainly lay in the way he planned his campaigns and chose his battlegrounds on the basis of geographical know-how and political espionage. Furthermore, he was a past master at using scare tactics and psychological warfare, making sure that rumors were continually circulating about the overwhelming force he possessed. This phenomenon was responsible for the rampant paranoia about his destructive instincts among the weaker elements in each kingdom. Horror stories were continually being relayed to political centers by post and columns of fugitives and runaways. A stream of news now arrived to confirm Ibn Khaldun’s hunches and suppositions. Barquq reinforced his army with various contingents of mercenaries, but preferred to set up camp in Damascus rather than go out to meet the enemy. Timur decided to postpone the confrontation and to leave the Mamluks hanging around in a state of full alert; they would hear news about the terrible fate of people in Byzantium, Armenia, and the Kurdish fortresses. At the end of the war that never happened, the Mongols decided to leave Baghdad, and their commander returned to his bases in Qarabaq. Ibn ‘Uways entered his king’s capital with some Mamluk troops, and the sultan himself returned to Egypt neither victorious nor defeated. Only one year went by before yet more disturbing news circulated among government officials, to the effect that Timur had killed the most dangerous of his family rivals, Tughtumish. With that, everyone started arguing in secret and in the open about the possible reappearance of the Mongol menace.

For a while, news of Timur disappeared, but his gruesome image still managed to cast a dark shadow over minds and councils. Whether occasions were public or official, the talk was always of his atrocities, his diabolical cleverness, and his cruelty. In the al-Muqattam Citadel, the Sarghitmishiya College, the Hammam al-Sufiya, and other places, ‘Abd al-Rahman would listen to the talk with a critical ear. Even though he attributed a lot of the sentiments to ignorance and lively imagination, he still came to the conclusion that Timur was indeed the clearest possible case of a powerful tyrant, not only because he managed to keep his reputation firmly in place but also because he was extremely successful at keeping everyone so scared out of their wits that they thought about nothing else. With these conclusions in mind, ‘Abd al-Rahman came to believe deep down that Barquq had actually been very happy that his encounter with Timur had not taken place. He was even more grateful that the tyrant had not put in an appearance while he — Barquq — was up to his neck putting out the fires of rebellion started by al-Nasiri and Mintash.

At this particular moment everything that was happening served as a prompt, goading the master historian to blow the dust off the parlous discipline of historiography and sharpen his wits in order to better understand the present and contemplate the future. He decided that, as long as he possessed sufficient bodily health and patience, he should accept the challenge. The decision coincided with the completion of a project whereby he had reread the last part of The Beginning and Ending of Ibn al-Kathir, part five of Goal of Desire by al-Nuwayri, and the third part of the History of Abu al Fida’, along with certain biographies and the Mamluk chronicles of Baybars, al-Mansuri, Ibn ‘Abd al-Zahir, Ibn Sayyid al-Nas, Ibn Daqman al-Misri, and others. As a result, he felt able to devote his entire attention to histories of the Tatars and Mongols, a subject where he felt his knowledge was particularly lacking. But man does not always get what he wants. In the process of trying to focus entirely on the major topic of the hour and the fin de siècle catastrophe, ‘Abd al-Rahman found himself facing all kinds of difficulties in obtaining the necessary materials and finding the time to read them. This was particularly the case with letters and documents from the sultan which Sudun, his viceroy and a dogged foe of ‘Abd al-Rahman, did everything he could to prevent him from reading. This lack of access to documents became much worse when Bata the dawadar was appointed viceroy in Damascus and then died there. There were also problems with languages: the most important sources on Tatar history were in Turkish, Mongolian, and Persian. Had ‘Abd al-Rahman not been of such an advanced age, most of these difficulties could have been dealt with fairly easily. As it was, he managed through various convoluted methods to get hold of copies of the letters of both Bayazid and Timur to Barquq and of two works in Persian, Yazadi’s biography of Timur, the Book of Victories, and the history of Ghazan Khan by the Il-Khan historian, Sharaf al-Din ‘Ali al-Azdi. Beyond that, he commissioned his bookseller in Khan al-Khalili, his students, and his distinguished Turkish colleagues to get him the major source-works on the subject. As days and nights passed, ‘Abd al-Rahman began to realize that the process of gaining any kind of mastery of Mongol history was like plunging into an endless swamp. There were countless tribes and peoples, their lineages were a complete jumble, and their lands were remote and impenetrable. The whole thing made him dizzy and gave him a bad headache. In his spare moments he would draw diagrams to illustrate this or that family tree; he would also use scraps of papers to make lists of famous names, places, countries, dynasties, and tribes. As all this became almost a habit, he realized he was involved in a world where names and things were utterly strange from every point of view. This was a world where the only way of getting to the bottom of things was to devote oneself entirely to detailed research. All of which demanded of ‘Abd al-Rahman something he no longer had at his disposal, namely energy, passion, and enthusiasm. For that reason, the pages he wrote on the Mongols were bound to be at the very least modest, and on occasion weak and confused.

Barquq summoned ‘Abd al-Rahman for a visit late at night at the end of Safar in 799 When ‘Abd al-Rahman laid eyes on the sultan, he realized that the ruler’s usual nickname, al-Zahir, ‘the manifest’, no longer suited him. His eyes looked dim, sunken in their sockets beneath his bushy eyebrows and straggly unkempt beard. Elsewhere on his body, signs of early aging told people in the know that he was so preoccupied with the Mongol threat that he could no longer relax or get any sleep; nights would consist of endless bouts of insomnia.

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