Risālat al-Ṣūfī fī al-kawākib (Arabic:رسالة الصوفي في الكواكب, "Epistle of al-Ṣūfī on the Stars"), is an 10-11th-century poem, probably composed in
Rayy,
Iran. It was authored by
Ibn al-Ṣūfī, or most probably one of his sons.[1][2] It is a poetic supplement to Ibn al-Ṣūfī's astronomical opus The Book of Fixed Stars, in the urjūza genre.[3]
The text is known from a 13th century manuscript, possibly composed in
Baghdad, now in Tehran, Reza Abbasi Museum (RAM M. 570), also called "RAM al'Sufi". It is stylistically dated to circa 1225.[1] An inscription in the manuscript gives a date of AH 554 (1159 CE), but this is probably a later interpolation.[4]
The manuscript has various depictions of the constellations, using various human and animal figures.[5] Several of the figures are wearing Turkic clothing, such as Centaurus, who has a Turkic sharbush headgear.[6]
Another
Qajar copy exists, dated ̣to 1894 (Tehran, Majlis Library, no. 5099).[7]
^Contadini 2006, p. 47: "Given the close relationship of the urjuza miniatures to those in other early-thirteenth-century manuscripts, we would expect the RAM Risalat al-Sufi fi al-kawakib to be datable to ca. 1220-25. It is therefore suprising that on page 4 we find an inscription giving a date of 554 (1159); were this the actual date of the manuscript, it would require a drastic reappraisal of currently accepted views on the chronology of stylistic evolution. There are, however, good reasons for thinking it a later interpolation."