Nasir-i Khusraw, 1004-approximately 1088

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Nasir-i Khusraw, 1004-approximately 1088
Name (Arabic)
ناصر خسرو
Name (Cyrilic)
Насир-И Хусрав, 1004-ок. 1088
Other forms of name
Nasir-i Khusraw, 1004-ca. 1088 a
Qobadiyani, Naser-e Khosrow al-Marvazi
Nassiri Khosrau
Nasir-Ibn Khusrau
Qubadiyani Marvazi, Nasir-Ibn Khusrau
Khusrau, Nasir
Marvazi, Nasir-Ibn Khusrau Qubadiyani
Nasir e Hosraw, 1004-ca. 1088
Nasir-i Husrau, 1004-ca. 1088
Abu Mu'in Nasir-ibn Khusrau
Balkhi, Nasir Khusrau
Насир-И Хосров, 1004-ок.1088
Марвази, Насир Ибн Хосров Кубадиани, 1004-ca1088
Насир Хосров
ناصر خسرو، 1004-1088
ناصر خسرو، 1004-نحو 1088
ناصر بن خسرو
قباديانى، ناصر بن خسرو
خسرو، ناصر
مروزى، ناصر بن خسرو
Date of birth
1004
Date of death
1088~
Associated Language
per
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 65282887
Wikidata: Q328796
Library of congress: n 79074512
Sources of Information
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Wikipedia description:

Nasir Khusraw (Persian: ناصرخسرو; 1004 – between 1072–1088) was an Isma'ili poet, philosopher, traveler, and missionary (da'i) for the Isma'ili Fatimid Caliphate. Despite being one of the most prominent Isma'ili philosophers and theologians of the Fatimids and the writer of many philosophical works intended for only the inner circle of the Isma'ili community, Nasir is best known to the general public as a poet and writer who ardently supported his native Persian tongue as an artistic and scientific language. All of Nasir's philosophical Isma'ili works are in Persian, a rarity in the Isma'ili literature of the Fatimids, which primarily used Arabic. Nasir was a key figure in the spread of Isma'ilism in Central Asia. He is with great reverence called "Pir" or "Shah Sayyid Nasir" by the Isma'ili community of Badakhshan (split between Afghanistan and Tajikistan) and their branches in northern Pakistan, who all consider him to be their founder.

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