Masnawi Sacred Texts Of Islam - Book Three

Stok Kodu:
9786053242543
Boyut:
13.50x19.50
Sayfa Sayısı:
143
Basım Yeri:
İstanbul
Basım Tarihi:
2014
Kapak Türü:
Ciltsiz
Kağıt Türü:
2. Hamur
Dili:
İngilizce
%25 indirimli
31,85
23,89
9786053242543
675495
Masnawi Sacred Texts Of Islam - Book Three
Masnawi Sacred Texts Of Islam - Book Three
23.89

Book three of the Masnavi must be read in order to understand the other first two volumes. It also includes popular stories from the local bazaar to fables, tales from Rumi's time.

  • Story 1: The Travelers who Young Elephant
  • Story 2: The Villager who invited Townsman to visit him
  • Story 3: The Jackal who pretended to be a Peacock
  • Story 4: Moses and Pharaoh
  • Story 5: The Elephant in a Dark Room
  • Story 6: The Lover who read Sonnets to his Mistress
  • Story 7: The Man who prayed earnestly to be fed without work
  • Story 8: The Boys and their Teacher
  • Story 9: The Darvesh who Broke his Vow
  • Story 10:The Old Man who made no Lamentation at the Death of his Sons
  • Story 11:Bahlol and Darvesh
  • Story 12:The Visions seen by the Saint Daquqi
  • Story 13:The People of Saba
  • Story 14:Miracles performed by the Prophet Muhammad
  • Story 15:The Man who asked Moses to teach him language of animals
  • Story 16:The Woman who lost all her infants
  • Story 17:The Vakil of the Prince of Bokhara
  • Story 18:Deadly Mosque


The "Masnawi" is Rumi's greatest poetic work, composed during the last years of his life. He began it when he was between the ages of 54-57 [about 1258-1261] and continued composing its verses until he died in 1273 (with the last story remaining incomplete). It is a compendium of sufi stories, ethical teachings, and mystical teachings. It is deeply permeated with Qur'anic meanings and references. Rumi himself called the Masnavi "the roots of the roots of the roots of the (Islamic) Religion... and the explainer of the Qur'an (Masnavi, Book I, Preface).

Book three of the Masnavi must be read in order to understand the other first two volumes. It also includes popular stories from the local bazaar to fables, tales from Rumi's time.

  • Story 1: The Travelers who Young Elephant
  • Story 2: The Villager who invited Townsman to visit him
  • Story 3: The Jackal who pretended to be a Peacock
  • Story 4: Moses and Pharaoh
  • Story 5: The Elephant in a Dark Room
  • Story 6: The Lover who read Sonnets to his Mistress
  • Story 7: The Man who prayed earnestly to be fed without work
  • Story 8: The Boys and their Teacher
  • Story 9: The Darvesh who Broke his Vow
  • Story 10:The Old Man who made no Lamentation at the Death of his Sons
  • Story 11:Bahlol and Darvesh
  • Story 12:The Visions seen by the Saint Daquqi
  • Story 13:The People of Saba
  • Story 14:Miracles performed by the Prophet Muhammad
  • Story 15:The Man who asked Moses to teach him language of animals
  • Story 16:The Woman who lost all her infants
  • Story 17:The Vakil of the Prince of Bokhara
  • Story 18:Deadly Mosque


The "Masnawi" is Rumi's greatest poetic work, composed during the last years of his life. He began it when he was between the ages of 54-57 [about 1258-1261] and continued composing its verses until he died in 1273 (with the last story remaining incomplete). It is a compendium of sufi stories, ethical teachings, and mystical teachings. It is deeply permeated with Qur'anic meanings and references. Rumi himself called the Masnavi "the roots of the roots of the roots of the (Islamic) Religion... and the explainer of the Qur'an (Masnavi, Book I, Preface).

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