- Meter".
Title omitted in
Beatty MS. Ṭiwāl i.e. “long”. Pellat, Charles. "
DĪNAVARĪ, ABŪ ḤANĪFA AḤMAD". ENCYCLOPÆDIA IRANICA.
Retrieved 27
April 2016. Clarke...
- Iran az aghz ta
saqut saltnat Pahlvi" pp. 195 Abū Ḥanīfah Aḥmad ibn Dāvud
Dīnavarī; Mahdavī Dāmghānī, Maḥmūd (2002). Akhbār al-ṭivāl (5th ed.). Tihrān: Nashr-i...
- Schacht, Leiden:
Brill (1954–2005) vol. 2, p. 300; Pellat, Charles, “
DĪNAVARĪ, ABŪ ḤANĪFA AḤMAD,”
Encyclopaedia Iranica [7] Sabra, A. I., “AL-FARGHĀNĪ...
-
before his
revolt imprisoned in
Gundeshapur by his father.
According to
Dinavari and Ferdowsi, it was
because he had
converted to Christianity. However...
-
Archived from the
original on 2019-11-27.
Retrieved 2019-11-28.
Hirad Dinavari. "More
alike than different". The Iranian.
Archived from the
original on...
- him". The
Muslim historians –
including Tabari, Bal’ami, Tha’alebi, and
Dinavari – give the same story, in essence, as the
Shahnameh of Fereydoun's (Afaridhoun's)...
- (Shahnameh);
Arikhsis (al-Mas'udi);
Arhasis (Gardezi);
Yazdan Jushnas (
Dinavari); and
Yazdan Bakhsh (Bal'ami). Azen
Gushnasp was a
native of Khuzestan...
-
Rezakhani 2017, p. 178. Kia 2016, p. 241.
Greatrex & Lieu 2002, p. 172.
Dinavari, al-Akhbar al-tiwal, pp. 91-92
Greatrex & Lieu 2002, p. 173. Martindale...
- name is
given as
Astad Kushnash by Ali ibn al-Athir;
Yazdan Jushnas by
Dinavari, who
states that he was "chief of secretaries";
Asfad Jushnas by Bal'ami...