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  2. The Luzumiyat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Luzumiyat

    A depiction of Al-Maʿarri by Khalil Gibran. The Luzumiyat (Arabic: اللزوميات) is the second collection of poetry by al-Ma'arri, comprising nearly 1600 short poems [1] organised in alphabetical order and observing a novel double-consonant rhyme scheme devised by the poet himself.

  3. Nabati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nabati

    Nabati poetry arose in the 16th century as the Arabic dialect seeped its way into Bedouin speech in the Arabian desert. [5] Many poets that lived in the desert lacked opportunities for a formal education and did not learn the classical Arabic structure of poems and therefore did not apply these ideas of structure and form to their own poetry.

  4. Pre-Islamic Arabic poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-Islamic_Arabic_poetry

    Pre-Islamic Arabic poetry is a term used to refer to Arabic poetry composed in pre-Islamic Arabia roughly between 540 and 620 AD. In Arabic literature , pre-Islamic poetry went by the name al-shiʿr al-Jāhilī ("poetry from the Jahiliyyah " or "Jahili poetry").

  5. Arabic poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabic_poetry

    Online classical Arabic poetry, to read and to listen; Specimens of Arabian poetry, from the earliest time to the extinction of the Khaliphat, with some account of the authors (1796) Arabic Chrestomathy : selected passages from Arabic prose-writers, with an appendix containing some specimens of ancient Arabic poetry; with a complete glossary (1911)

  6. Mufaddaliyat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mufaddaliyat

    The Mufaddaliyyat (Arabic: المفضليات / ALA-LC: al-Mufaḍḍaliyāt), meaning "The Examination of al-Mufaḍḍal", is an anthology of pre-Islamic Arabic poems deriving its name from its author, Mufaḍḍal al-Ḍabbī, [1] [2] who compiled it between 762 and his death in 784 CE. [3] It contains 126 poems, some complete odes, others ...

  7. Lamiyyat al-'Arab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamiyyat_al-'Arab

    The Lāmiyyāt al-‘Arab (the L-song of the Arabs) is the pre-eminent poem in the surviving canon of the pre-Islamic 'brigand-poets' . The poem also gained a foremost position in Western views of the Orient from the 1820s onwards. [1] The poem takes its name from the last letter of each of its 68 lines, L (Arabic ل, lām).