Mahmoud Schabestari
Mahmoud Schabestari ( persisch محمود شبستری, [mæhmud ɛ ʃæbɛstæɾi]; * 1288 in Schabestar; † 1340) auch als Scheich Mahmoud Schabestari bekannt, war ein iranischer Mystiker und Dichter im 14. Jahrhundert.[1][2][3] Das bekannteste Werk von Schabestari ist das Golschan-e-Ras.[4]
Einzelnachweise
- Leonard Lewisohn, C. Shackle: ʻAṭṭār and the Persian Sufi tradition: the art of spiritual flight. I.B. Tauris, 2006. p. 40
- Jon Robertson: Fire and light: an off-road search for the spirit of God. Celestial Arts, 2006. p. 206: The great thirteenth-century Persian Sufi poet Mahmud Shabistari.
- Gai Eaton: Islam and the destiny of man. SUNY Press, 1985. p. 53: According to the Persian poet Mahmud Shabistari: „The Absolute is so nakedly apparent to man's sight that it is not visible.“
- Lewisohn (1995) p. 8
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