- خرداذبه; 820/825–913),
commonly known as Ibn
Khordadbeh (also
spelled Ibn
Khurradadhbih; ابن خرددة), was a high-ranking
bureaucrat and
geographer of Persian...
- the
bowed lira was in the 9th
century by the
Persian geographer Ibn
Khurradadhbih (d. 911); in his
lexicographical discussion of
instruments he cited...
- (six to
twelve miles);
according to the 9th-century
geographer Ibn
Khurradadhbih,
there were a
total of 930
stations throughout the empire. This relay...
-
fiddles in
Europe was in the 9th
century by the
Persian geographer Ibn
Khurradadhbih (d. 911)
describing the lira (lūrā) as a
typical instrument within the...
-
century in
Eastern Europe. The
Persian geographer of the 9th
century Ibn
Khurradadhbih cited the
bowed Byzantine lira (or lūrā) as a
typical bowed instrument...
-
settlement of the Yamama, al-Kharj,
which an
earlier geographer, Ibn
Khurradadhbih,
called a way-station. The 11th-century
geographer Nasir Khusraw also...
- and
Frontiers in
Medieval Muslim Geography, Philadelphia, 1995 Ibn
Khurradādhbih.
Almasalik wal Mamalik, E. J. Brill, Leiden, 1967 Le Strange, Guy (1905)...
- to a
bowed lyra is from the 9th century, by
Persian geographer Ibn
Khurradadhbih (d. 911); in his
lexicographical discussion of instruments, he cites...
-
produces an
enjoyable sound. The 9th
century Persian geographer Ibn
Khurradadhbih (d. 913), in his
lexicographical discussion of instruments,
cited the...
- with
tensioned hair over
tensioned strings. The
Persian geographer Ibn
Khurradadhbih of the 9th
century (d. 911)
cited the
Byzantine lyra, in his lexicographical...