Encyclopædia Iranica
Table of Contents
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BADĪʿ-AL-ZAMĀN MĪRZĀ
R. D. McChesney
by most accounts the last of the Chaghatay/Timurid rulers of Badaḵšān (d. ca. 1603).
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BADĪʿ-AL-ZAMĀN NAṬANZĪ
Cross-Reference
See ADĪB NAṬANZĪ.
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BADĪHA-SARĀʾĪ
F. R. C. Bagley
composition and utterance of something improvised (badīh), usually in verse. Among the Arabs, poetic improvisation was practiced and admired from pre-Islamic times. Among the Iranians, it has been a mark of poetical talent and skill.
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BADĪLĪ, AḤMAD
H. Algar
, SHAIKH, a Sufi shaikh in 12th-century Sabzavār, renowned for his mastery of the exoteric as well as the esoteric science.
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BĀDKŪBA
Cross-Reference
See BAKU.
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BĀDPĀYĀN
Cross-Reference
See ARTHROPODS.
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BADR ČĀČĪ
M. Dabīrsīāqī
a Persian poet of the 14th century, born in the town or district of Čāč (also written Šāš) in Transoxiana.
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BADR JĀJARMĪ
M. Dabīrsīāqī
a 13th-century poet popular in his own time for his rhetorical skills.
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BADR KHAN
Cross-Reference
See BEDIR KHAN.
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BADR-AL-DĪN EBRĀHĪM
S. I. Baevskiĭ
author of the Persian dictionary Farhang-e zafāngūyā wa jahānpūyā (The eloquent and world-seeking dictionary) composed in India in the late 14th or early 15th century.


