Ubayd Zakani | |
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Born | before 1319 Qazvin, Ilkhanate |
Died | 1369–1371 possibly Shiraz, Muzaffarid kingdom |
Occupation | Poet, satirist |
Notable works | Mush-o Gorbeh |
Khwajeh Nizam al-Din Ubayd Allah al-Zakani (Persian: خواجه نظام الدین عبید الله الزاکانی, romanized: Ḵwājeh Niẓām al-Dīn ʿUbayd Allāh al-Zākānī; d. 1370), better known as Ubayd Zakani (عبید زاکانی), was a Persian poet of the Mongol era, regarded as one of the best satirists in Persian literature. His most famous work is Mush-o Gorbeh ("Mouse and Cat"), a political satire which attacks religious hypocrisy. Although a highly popular figure in his own time, Ubayd's work received little attention from modern scholars until recently, due to provocative and bawdy texts in the majority of his works.[1] His style of satire has been compared to the French Enlightenment writer Voltaire (d. 1778).