{{Short description|Fatimid historian, writer and administrative official}} {{Infobox historian | name = al-Musabbiḥī | image = <!-- Add image link here --> | caption = | birth_date = 4 March 977 | birth_place = Fustat, Fatimid Caliphate (now Egypt) | death_date = April/May 1030 | death_place = Fustat, Fatimid Caliphate (now Egypt) | occupation = Historian, Writer, Administrative official | notable_works = ''Akhbār Miṣr'' (Chronicle of Egyptian history) | era = Islamic Golden Age | main_interests = History, Psychology, Law, Grammar, Sexology, Cooking | notable_ideas = Detailed historical accounts of Egypt }}

'''Al-Amīr al-Mukhtār ʿIzz al-Mulk Abū ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn Abīʾl Qāsim ʿUbayd Allāh ibn Aḥmad ibn Ismāʿīl ibn ʿAbd al-Azīz al-Ḥarranī al-Musabbiḥī al-Kātib''', commonly known simply as '''al-Musabbihi''' ({{Langx|ar|المصبحي}}) (4 March 977 – April/May 1030), was a Sunni Fatimid historian, writer and administrative official. He is known to have authored some 40,000 pages of manuscripts dealing with an array of topics, including history, psychology, law, grammar, sexology and cooking. ''Akhbār Miṣr'', a contemporary chronicle of Egyptian history and news, was among al-Musabbihi's well-known works. However, like the vast majority of al-Musabbihi's works, only fragments of ''Akhbār Miṣr'' survived; most of his writings disappeared not long after his death.

Al-Musabbihi was a devout Sunni Muslim born in Fustat, where he lived most of his life and died. He was known to be loyal to the Fatimid government and he was a close friend of with Caliph al-Hakim (r. 996–1021). Early in his career, he served in the Fatimid military and was made a provincial governor in Upper Egypt before becoming a leading figure in the Fatimids' central administration in Cairo.

==Life== Al-Musabbihi was born a Sunni Muslim in Fustat, Egypt on 4 March 977.<ref name="Bianquis650">Bianquis 1993, p. 650.</ref> His family was originally from Harran in the Jazira (Upper Mesopotamia).<ref name="Bianquis650"/> Not common for a locally-born Sunni civilian, al-Musabbihi joined the Fatimid military. He was made governor of al-Qays and Bahnasa (both in Upper Egypt) and held the title of ''amir'' (commander).<ref name="Bianquis650"/> He was later appointed head of the ''dīwān al-tartīb'', a position equivalent to general secretary of the central administration.<ref name="Bianquis650-1">Bianquis 1993, p. 650–651.</ref> He traveled daily from al-Fustat to his government post in Cairo and on most evenings, he stopped by the historic Mosque of Amr ibn al-As and interacted with his and his father's friends, most of whom were Syrian Muslim traditionalists.<ref name="Bianquis651">Bianquis 1993, p. 651.</ref> Though he was a devout Sunni Muslim, al-Musabbihi was loyal to the Fatimids' Ismaili Shia state and maintained a particularly close relationship with the eccentric caliph al-Hakim (r. 996–1021).<ref name="Bianquis651"/> The latter was known to get along with the residents of Fustat.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> Al-Musabbihi died in Fustat in April/May 1030.<ref name="Bianquis651"/>

==Writings== Al-Musabbihi was a prolific writer, who authored numerous manuscripts on a variety of subjects, including history, practical psychology, sexology, law, grammar and cooking.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> The later medieval historians Ibn Khallikan and Ibn Sa'id al-Andalusi documented in detailed lists all of al-Musabbihi's works and the amount of pages for each work; al-Musabbihi's total work amounted to roughly 40,000 pages, with some works alone consisting of over a thousand pages.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> However, most of his work disappeared not long after he died.<ref name="Bianquis651"/>

===History of Egypt=== Among al-Musabbihi's main works was the roughly 13,000-page chronicle of Egypt's history, known as ''Akhbār Miṣr''.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> Like al-Musabbihi's other works, much of ''Akhbār Miṣr'' was lost early on, with exceptions including quotations of this work that were copied in other historians' compilations.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> The only known manuscript of ''Akhbār Miṣr'' that was preserved is chapter 40, which is located in the Escorial in Spain.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> This section of al-Musabbihi's work documented events occurring in the caliphate between 1023/24 and 1024/25 and also contained poems and letters by other writers who were well-acquainted with al-Musabbihi.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> According to Thierry Bianquis, this manuscript "provides an insight into the contemporary literary composition, in elegant prose and poetry, of Egypt and Iraq at the beginning of the 11th century".<ref name="Bianquis651"/> The modern Egyptian historian Ayman Fuad Sayyid claims the 15th-century Egyptian historian al-Maqrizi had in his possession chapter 34 of ''Akhbar Misr'', which recorded events for the year 1004/05.<ref name="Bianquis651"/>

''Akhbar Misr'' was a contemporary work in which al-Musabbihi recorded the day-to-day events in the Fatimid Caliphate and at the end of the year, recorded the obituaries of notable individuals.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> As an administrative official in Cairo, he also documented the often violent struggle for power in the aftermath of al-Hakim's death, centered around various military commanders and civil officials, who utilized informers and forged documents to discredit each other in front of al-Hakim's child successor, az-Zahir (r. 1021–1036).<ref name="Bianquis651"/> He held suspicions about the intrigues of Sitt al-Mulk's entourage with az-Zahir.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> According to Bianquis, "it is possible that ideological control [following al-Hakim's death] was imposed on official historiography and that a certain number of texts, including the writings of al-Musabbihi, were spontaneously destroyed".<ref name="Bianquis651"/> Al-Musabbihi also included news about the Bedouin uprising against the Fatimids in Syria in 1024/25 that placed the Mirdasids and Jarrahids in power there.<ref name="Bianquis651"/> Moreover, ''Akhbār Miṣr'' recorded regular aspects of life in Fustat, ranging from road accidents and crimes to wholesale and retail prices on goods amid a famine to hippopotami roaming in the Nile River.<ref>Bianquis 1993, pp. 651–652.</ref>

==References== {{Reflist|25em}}

==Bibliography== *{{EI2|title=Musabbiḥī|last=Bianquis|first=Thierry|authorlink=Thierry Bianquis|volume=7|pages=650–652}} {{Historians of Islam}} {{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Musabbihi}} Category:977 births Category:1030 deaths Category:10th-century historians from the Fatimid Caliphate Category:Egyptian Sunni Muslims Category:Governors of the Fatimid Caliphate Category:Officials of the Fatimid Caliphate Category:10th-century Arabic-language writers Category:11th-century Arabic-language writers Category:10th-century Egyptian historians Category:11th-century Egyptian historians