Hojatt-ol Hagh Hakim Abolfath-e Omar ibn-e Ebrahim known as Khayyam or Khayyami, was a philosopher, mathematician, astrologer, and poet of late fifth-early sixth century A.D. For long he was famous for his scientific features, however, later on his stanzas, were introduced to the world, the west in particular, through the translations provided by the nineteenth century British poet Fitzgerald. These stanzas were later translated into different languages such as Italian, German, Russian. The objective of the present paper is to provide a biography of this poet, as well as introducing his philosophical viewpoints, his poetry, particularly his stanzas and their Arabic translations.
najafi asadollahi, S. (2006). Khayyam, his philosophy, and stanzas and their Translation. Literary Text Research, 9(29), 158-183. doi: 10.22054/ltr.2006.6380
MLA
saeed najafi asadollahi. "Khayyam, his philosophy, and stanzas and their Translation". Literary Text Research, 9, 29, 2006, 158-183. doi: 10.22054/ltr.2006.6380
HARVARD
najafi asadollahi, S. (2006). 'Khayyam, his philosophy, and stanzas and their Translation', Literary Text Research, 9(29), pp. 158-183. doi: 10.22054/ltr.2006.6380
VANCOUVER
najafi asadollahi, S. Khayyam, his philosophy, and stanzas and their Translation. Literary Text Research, 2006; 9(29): 158-183. doi: 10.22054/ltr.2006.6380