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・ Ahmad I (Kalat)
・ Ahmad I ibn Abi Bakr
・ Ahmad I ibn Mustafa
・ Ahmad ibn 'Imad al-Din
・ Ahmad ibn A'tham
・ Ahmad ibn Abi Diyaf
・ Ahmad ibn Abu Bakr al-Zuhri
・ Ahmad ibn Ajiba
・ Ahmad ibn al-Amin al-Shinqiti
・ Ahmad ibn al-Khasib al-Jarjara'i
・ Ahmad Ibn al-Qadi
・ Ahmad ibn al-Tayyib al-Sarakhsi
・ Ahmad ibn Ali
・ Ahmad ibn Arabshah
・ Ahmad ibn Asad
Ahmad ibn Fadlan
・ Ahmad ibn Farighun
・ Ahmad ibn Farrokh
・ Ahmad ibn Hamdun ibn al-Hajj
・ Ahmad ibn Hanbal
・ Ahmad ibn Harb
・ Ahmad ibn Ibrahim (disambiguation)
・ Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi
・ Ahmad ibn Idris al-Fasi
・ Ahmad ibn Isa al-Shaybani
・ Ahmad ibn Isra'il al-Anbari
・ Ahmad ibn Kayghalagh
・ Ahmad ibn Khalid al-Nasiri
・ Ahmad ibn Muhammad
・ Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Tha'labi


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Ahmad ibn Fadlan : ウィキペディア英語版
Ahmad ibn Fadlan

Ahmad ibn Fadlān ibn al-Abbās ibn Rāšid ibn Hammād ((アラビア語:أحمد بن فضلان بن العباس بن راشد بن حماد)) was a 10th-century Arab traveler, famous for his account of his travels as a member of an embassy of the Abbasid Caliph of Baghdad to the king of the Volga Bulgars. His account is most known for providing a description of the Volga Vikings, including an eyewitness account of a ship burial. He provided descriptions for various other peoples, most notably Turkic peoples such as the Oghuzes, Pechenegs, Bashkirs, and Khazars.
==Manuscript tradition==
For a long time, only an incomplete version of the account was known, as transmitted in the geographical dictionary of Yāqūt (under the headings Atil, Bashgird, Bulghār, Khazar, Khwārizm, Rūs), published in 1823 by Christian Martin Frähn.
Only in 1923 was a manuscript discovered by the Turkic scholar of Bashkir origin Zeki Validi Togan in the Astane Quds Museum, Mashhad, Iran.〔Hermes, Nizar F. "Utter Alterity or Pure Humanity: Barbarian Turks, Bulghars, and Rus (Vikings) in the Remarkable Risala of Ibn Fadlan." in The () Other in Medieval Arabic Literature and Culture Ninth-Twelfth Century AD (The New Middle Ages). New York: Palgrave, 2012: 80-82〕 The manuscript, Razawi Library MS 5229, dates from the 13th century (7th century Hijra) and consists of 420 pages (210 folia). Besides other geographical treatises, it contains a fuller version of Ibn Fadlan's text (pp. 390–420). Additional passages not preserved in MS 5229 are quoted in the work of the 16th century Persian geographer Amīn Rāzī called ''Haft Iqlīm'' ("Seven Climes").

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