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Abu Mansur Daqiqi

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Name
  
Abu-Mansur Daqiqi

Role
  
Poet

Died
  
Tous, Iran


Abu Mansur Muhammad Ibn Ahmad Daqiqi Tusi (935/942-976/980: Persian: ابو منصور محمد بن احمد دقیقی‎‎), sometimes referred to as Daqiqi (also Dakiki, Daghighi, Persian: دقیقی‎‎), was an early Persian poet who is said to have been born in Tus in Iran; or in Balkh, located in modern-day Afghanistan; as well as in Samarqand or Bukhara, both in today's Uzbekistan and Marv in today's Turkmenistan.

Daqiqi wrote an epic history of Iran which is begun by history of Zarathushtra and Gashtasb. Questions have been raised as to whether Daqiqi harbored some Zoroastrian beliefs, or was simply promoting Sassanian cultural trends in the wake of Samanid domination. Nevertheless, he is viewed to have been a Zoroastrian convert to Islam. A large number of couplets by him were included in the epic Shahname (Book of Kings) by the Persian epic poet Ferdowsi. Daqiqi was murdered by his favorite slave.

Some scholars speculate that Daqiqi wrote more, but the content was too controversial to be included in Shahname and later lost. Other poems by him have survived, published, among others, in Le premier poet Persan by G.Lazard.

References

Abu-Mansur Daqiqi Wikipedia