'Amr ibn Hind, the son of Lahkmid …

Years: 556 - 567

'Amr ibn Hind, the son of Lahkmid king Al-Mundhir III, is a patron of the Arabic poetry of Tarafa and others associated with Al-Mu'allaqat (”The Suspended Odes”).

The Lakhmids protect the Sassanians from the attacks of Arabian nomads; al-Hirah serves as an important station on the caravan route between Persia and the Arabian Peninsula.

The Lakhmids adorn the town with palaces and castles in its heyday during the sixth century.

Tradition holds that the Arabic script was developed here, and al-Hirah's role in the development of Arabic poetry and Arab Christianity is especially significant.

As the seat of a bishopric for Nestorian Christians, al-Hirah exercises a strong influence over the religious life of the East, helping Christian monotheism to penetrate the Arabian Peninsula.

Some of the best-known poets in pre-Islamic Arabia (e.g., Tarafa and Al-Nabigha) gravitate toward the Lakhmid court.

Tarafa, after a wild and dissipated youth spent in Bahrain, had left his native land after peace had been established between the tribes of Bakr and Taghlib and had gone with his uncle Al-Mutalammis (also a poet) to the court of the king of Hira, 'Amr ibn-Hind, and here had become companion to the king's brother.

Al-Hirah is at this time a vassal of the Persian Sasanian Empire.

Having ridiculed the king in some verses, Tarafa is sent with a letter to Dadafruz Gushnasban, the Persian Governor of the Southern Shores of the Persian Gulf, but the two poets manage to escape during the journey.

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