Al-Nu'man I ibn Imru' al-Qays

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Al-Nu'man I ibn Imru' al-Qays (Arabic: النعمان بن امرؤ القيس‎‎), surnamed al-A'war (الأعور, "the one-eyed") and al-Sa'ih (السائح, "the wanderer/ascetic"), was the king of the Lakhmid Arabs (reigned ca. 390–418[1]).

Nu'man was the son of Imru' al-Qays II ibn 'Amr and followed his father on the throne. He is best known for his construction of two magnificent palaces, the Khawarnaq and Sadir, near his capital al-Hirah, which were accounted by contemporary Arab lore among the wonders of the world. The Khawarnaq was built as a resort for his overlord, the Sassanid Persian shah Yazdegerd I (r. 399–420) and his son Bahram V (r. 420–438), who spent his childhood years there.[2]

According to later Arab tradition, he renounced his throne and became an ascetic, after a reign of 29 years. He is also reputed to have visited the Christian hermit Symeon the Stylite between 413 and 420.[1][3][4] He was succeeded by his son al-Mundhir I (r. 418–452), who played an important role by assisting Bahram V in claiming his throne after Yazdegerd's death and by his actions in the Roman–Sassanid War of 421–422.[1][5]

References

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Sources

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    • 1.0 1.1 1.2 Shahîd (1986), p. 633
    • Bosworth (1999), p. 75
    • for details on Nu'man's visit to Symeon, see Shahîd (1989), pp. 161–164
    • Bosworth (1999), pp. 80–81
    • Bosworth (1999), p. 87