Al-Farazdaq
Hammam ibn Ghalib Abu Firas, (Arabic: همام بن
غالب ، ابو فراس) commonly known as al-Farazdaq
(Arabic: الفرزدق) (Arabicized form of Persian
Parāzda پرازده: "lump of dough")
(ca. 641 - ca. 728-730) was an Arab poet.
He was born in Najd
and lived at Basra. He was a member of Darim, one of
the most respected divisions of the Bani Tamim, and
his mother was of the tribe of Dabba. His
grandfather Sa'sa' was a Bedouin of great repute,
his father Ghalib followed the same manner of life
until Basra was founded, and was famous for his
generosity and hospitality.
At the age of 15,
Farazdaq was known as a poet, and though checked for
a short time by the advice of the caliph Ali to
devote his attention to the study of the Qur'an, he
soon returned to making verse. In the true Bedouin
spirit he devoted his talent largely to satire and
attacked the Bani Nahshal and the Bani Fuqaim. When
Ziyad, a member of the latter tribe, became governor
of Basra in 669, the poet was compelled to flee,
first to Kufa, and then, as he was still too near
Ziyad, to Medina, where he was well received by the
city's emir, Said ibn al-As. Here he remained about
ten years, writing satires on Bedouin tribes, but
avoiding city politics.
But he lived a
prodigal life, and his amorous verses led to his
expulsion by the caliph Marwan I. Just at that time
he learned of the death of Ziyad and returned to
Basra, where he secured the favor of Ziyad's
successor Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad. Much of his poetry
was now devoted to his matrimonial affairs. He had
taken advantage of his position as guardian and
married his cousin Nawar against her will. She
sought help in vain from the court of Basra and from
various tribes. All feared the poet's satires. At
last she fled to Mecca and appealed to the political
contender to the Ummayids Abdallah ibn Zubayr, who,
however, succeeded in inducing her to consent to a
confirmation of the marriage.
Quarrels soon arose
again. Farazdaq took a second wife, and after her
death a third, to annoy Nawar. Finally he consented
to a divorce pronounced by Hasan al-Basri. Another
subject occasioned a long series of verses, namely
his feud with his rival Jarir and his tribe the Bani
Kulaib. These poems are published as the Nakaid of
Jarir and al-Farazdaq.
Al-Farazdaq became
official poet to the Umayyad caliph Al-Walid I
(reigned 705–715), to whom he dedicated a number of
panegyrics.
He is most famous
for the poem that he gave in Makkah when Ali bin
Hussain bin Ali bin Abu Talib (Zayn al-Abidin)
entered the Haram of the Kaba angering the emir. The
poem is extremely powerful. It is because of this
poem that he was imprisoned.