ibn shahrshb 53 of the Arabic and Persian manuscripts in the Oriental Public Library at (Bankipore) Patna, 1940, 24:10–1, no. 2651). Bibliography Works of Ibn Shaddd Dalil al-akm, ed. Muammad al-Najm, 2 vols., Beirut 1991, ed. Muammad Shaykhn and Ziyd al-Dn al-Ayyb, Damascus 1992; al-Nawdir al-sulniyya wa-l-masin al-Ysufyya, ed. Jaml al-Dn al-Shayyl, Cairo 1964, trans. D. S. Richards, The rare and excellent history of Saladin, Alder- shot UK 2001, extracts ed. and trans. Recueil des historiens des croisades. Historiens orientaux, III (Paris 1884), 1–370, trans. Albert Schultens, Vita et res gestæ sultani, Almalichi Alnasiri, Sala- dini, Abi Modaffri Josephi f. Jobi, f. Sjadsi, Leiden 1732. Other sources Ab Shma, al-Dhayl al l-Rawatayn, ed. Muammad Zhid b. al-asan al-Kawthar, Tarjim rijl al-qarnayn al-sdis wa-l-sbi (Cairo 1947), 163; Ibn Khallikn, Kitb wafayt al-ayn wa-anb abn al-zamn, ed. Isn Abbs (Beirut 1968–72), 7:84–100, trans. William MacGuckin, Baron de Slane, Ibn Khallikan’s biographical dictionary, 4 vols., Paris and London 1843–71; Ibn Wil, Mufarrij al-kurb f akhbr Ban Ayyb, vol. 5, 629–645 H/1231–1248 M, ed. asanayn Muammad Rab and Sad Abd al-Fatt shr (Cairo 1977), 89–91; Abd al-Am al-Mundhir, al-Takmila li-wafayt al-naqala, ed. Bashshar Awwd Marf (Beirut 1981), 3:384–5; al-Subk, abaqt al-Shfiyya, ed. Abd al-Fatt Muammad al-ilw and Mamd Muammad al-an (Cairo 1964–76), 8:360–2. Studies (in addition to the introductions by Jaml al-Dn al-Shayyl and Richards to their edition and translation of the Nawdir al-sulniyya) Anne-Marie Eddé, La principauté ayyoubide d’Alep (579/1183–658/1260) (Stuttgart 1999), 351–3 and index; Anne-Marie Eddé, Saladin, Paris 2008, trans. Jane Marie Todd, Saladin (Cambridge MA 2011), index; M. C. Lyons and D. E. P. Jackson, Saladin. The politics of the holy war (Cambridge 1982), index; D. S. Richards, A consideration of two sources for the life of Saladin, JSS 25 (1980), 46–65; Gamal el-Din el-Shayyal ( Jaml al-Dn al-Shayyl), Ibn Shaddd, EI2; GAL; GALS. Anne-Marie Eddé Ibn Shahrshb Zayn al-Dn Ab Jafar (or Ab Abdallh) Muammad b. Al Ibn Shahrshb b. Ab Nar b. Ab l-Jaysh (d. 588/1192), from Sr in Mzandarn near the southern coast of the Caspian Sea, was a Twelver Sh biographer, his- torian, Qurn commentator, adth trans- mitter, jurist, poet, and preacher. He was one of the most infuential Sh scholars of the sixth/twelfth century. He travelled extensively and wrote at least seventeen books, most importantly a collection of biographies of the Imms titled Manqib l Ab lib (“Virtues of the descendants of Ab lib”). Ibn Shahrshb’s grandfather, Shaykh Shahrshb, moved his family to Mzan- darn from Baghdad after studying exten- sively with the famed Sh scholar Shaykh al-ifa Ab Jafar al-s (d. 460/1068). Ibn Shahrshb studied in Nshpr, a bustling city in Khursn province, where he also began teaching during the rule of the Saljq sultan Sanjar (r. in Khursn 490–552/1097–1157). Ibn Shahrshb left in about 545/1150—before the city was sacked by the Oghuz Turks in 548/ 1153—travelling west for several years. He studied and taught briefy in various cit- ies of the central Iranian plateau, such as Isfahan, Kshn, Rayy, and Hamadhn, before travelling to Baghdad in 552/1157. During his frst years in Baghdad, under the reign of the caliph al-Muqtaf (r. 530– 55/1136–60), Ibn Shahrshb made a