The Lakhmid kingdom is a major center …
Years: 568 - 568
The Lakhmid kingdom is a major center of the Nestorian sect of Christianity, which is nurtured by the Sassanids, as it opposes the Orthodox sect of Constantinople.
The Lakhmid kingdom’s main rival is Ghassan, a kingdom of Arab Christians who are vassals of the Sassanids’ arch enemy, the Eastern Roman Empire.
Tarafah, the author of the longest of the seven odes in the celebrated collection of pre-Islamic poetry al-Mu'allaqat, is judged by some critics to be the greatest of the pre-Islamic poets, if not the greatest Arab poet.
After a wild youth spent in Bahrain, and after fighting in the war between his tribe of Bakr and the Taghlib, he had gone with his uncle Mutalammis, who was also a poet, to the court of 'Amr ibn Hind, the Lakhmid king of al-Hirah, and there became companion to the king's brother; Tarafah's association with the court of al-Hirah is the only certainly known fact of his life.
Arab poet 'Amr ibn Kulthum, whose qasidah (“ode”) is another of the seven that comprise al-Mu'allaqat, had become chief of the tribe of Taghlib in Mesopotamia at an early age and, according to tradition, kills 'Amr ibn Hind, the Arab king of al-Hirah, around 568.
('Amr ibn Kulthum will live to a very advanced age, highly respected for his noble character, for a poem, allegedly his, praising a Taghlib victory over the Bakr tribe, and for his successfully independent stance against the Lakhmid kings of al-Hirah. 'Amr's qasidah, as it appears in al-Mu'allaqat, is probably altered by a later poet. It violently attacks 'Amr ibn Hind for an insult addressed to the poet's mother.)
Locations
People
Groups
- Arab people
- Persian people
- Persian Empire, Sassanid, or Sasanid
- Lakhmid kingdom of al-Hira
- Christians, Eastern (Diophysite, or “Nestorian”) (Church of the East)
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Ghassan, Kingdom of
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Justinian dynasty
- Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
