Tarikh al-fattash | |
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Also known as | Tarikh ibn al-Mukhtar |
Place of origin | Timbuktu, Macina Empire |
Language(s) | Arabic |
Author(s) |
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Patron | Askiya Dawud b. Harun (Tarikh ibn al-Mukhtar), Ahmad Lobbo (Tarikh al-Fattash) |
The Tarikh al-fattash is a West African chronicle that provides an account of the Songhay Empire from the reign of Sonni Ali (ruled 1464-1492) up to 1599 with a few references to events in the following century. The chronicle also mentions the earlier Mali Empire. It and the Tarikh al-Sudan, a 17th century chronicle also giving a history of Songhay, are together known as the Timbuktu Chronicles.[1]
The French scholars Octave Houdas and Maurice Delafosse published a critical edition in 1913. Since then, however, other scholars have shown that this edition in fact conflates two separate manuscripts. The first, usually referred to as Tarikh ibn al-Mukhtar, was written in the 17th century in Timbuktu by Ibn al-Mukhtar, a grandson of Mahmud Kati. The second, which bears the title Tarikh al-fattash, is a re-written forgery produced early in the 19th century by Nūḥ b. al-Ṭāhir but which claims Kati as its author.