Hikayat Iskandar Zulkarnain (
Arabic: حكاية إسكندر ذو القرنين,
lit.'The Story/Exploits of Alexander') is a
Malay epic in the tradition of the
Alexander Romance describing fictional exploits of
Alexander the Great (Iskandar), identified with
Dhu al-Qarnayn (Zulkarnain), a king briefly mentioned in the
Quran. The oldest existing manuscript is dated 1713, but is in a poor state. Another manuscript was copied by Muhammad Cing Sa'idullah about 1830.[1]
There are two versions of the text: a recension from the Malayan peninsula and a Sumatran recension. The Sumatran version begins with a
doxology not found in the Peninsular, whereas the ending of the Peninsular is extended past that of the Sumatran to include up to the point when Alexander died.
Influence of the Alexander legends on Malaysian tradition was significant. Court chronicles were produced to claim genealogical descent from Alexander. Some claimed this descent from Alexander occurred through the lineage of Raja
Rajendra Chola, an emperor from the eleventh century described in the
Malay Annals.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8] Influence also poured into Buginese and Javanese literature.[9]
Synopsis
Iskandar Zulkarnain is claimed to be a direct antecedent of the
Minangkabau kingdoms of
Sumatra by their rulers. The best known Minangkabau ruler,
Adityavarman, who ruled over Sumatra between 1347 and 1374 AD claimed for himself the name Maharajadiraja, 'a great lord of kings.' It was William Marsten who first publicized this link at the end of the 18th century.[10]
Sources and historical context
The hikayat genre was first introduced to
Pasai in the mid-fourteenth century. The text has no ultimate source but is a composite of various origins, including the
ArabicSīrat al-Iskandar, the
Shahnameh of the Persian poet
Ferdowsi, and the Malay Hikayat Muhammad Hanifiyyah.[9][11]
Related texts
Two related Malaysian texts include the Hikayat Raja Iskandar ("Story of King Alexander")[12] and Hikayat Ya’juj wa-Ma’juj ("Story of Gog and Magog").[13]
^
abNg, Su Fang (2016). "The Alexander Romance in Southeast Asia: Wonder, Islam, and Knowledge of the World". In Stock, Markus (ed.). Alexander the Great in the Middle Ages: transcultural perspectives. Toronto Buffalo London: University of Toronto Press. pp. 105–106.
ISBN978-1-4426-4466-3.
^Zuwiyya, Z. David (2011). "The Alexander Romance in the Arabic Tradition". In Z. David Zuwiyya (ed.). A Companion to Alexander Literature in the Middle Ages. Brill. pp. 73–112.
^Daneshgar, Majid (2019). "Dhu l-Qarnayn in Modern Malay Qurʾānic Commentaries and Other Literature on Qurʾānic Themes". In Daneshgar, Majid; Riddell, Peter G.; Rippin, Andrew (eds.). The Qurʼan in the Malay-Indonesian world: context and interpretation. Routledge studies in the Quran (First issued in paperback ed.). London New York: Routledge. pp. 212–228.
ISBN978-0-367-28109-0.