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Show 4 recording it, and other." withdrawing ever I advanced the as 9 cAta' testimony of The native of Khurasan, its horrors. 10 almost half al-Tiqtaqa, writing story for the . 1n on and a of account a century after • same Id eta1·11,,11 the "Even reason. explained, "would be terrible . World-Conqueror) - Ibn Baghdad in 656/1258, showed the fall of at10n P1tu 1· of the the author of the also withheld his full narrative It the full al-JuwaynI, Malik Tirikh-i Jahan Gusha (the History he foot one reluctance to tell same a brief mention of it," to hear--how much worse its reca- - Untold events were tnen - lefto -the imagination of his readers. Nevertheless, Ibn al-Tiqtaqa's It remarks though comparatively few in number, showed were in the main laudatory. On on the Mongols, • one some degree of truth and occasion he stated that, The sciences of the rulers of Islam were the sciences of language, like grammar and lexicography, and poetry and 9C1zz aI-DIn Muhammad b. Muhammad b. cAbd aI-KarIm Ibn al al-Kamil fI al-TaIkh (Leiden; E. J. Brill, 1851-1876), XII, AthIr, 35410 lOCAla-ad-Din CAta-Malik Juvaini, The History of the World Conqueror, translated from the text of Mirza Muhammad _by John Andrew The Boyle. (Cambridge, Mass._ Harvard University Press, 1958). transliteration of Persian form and thus Juvaini is names and terms in text will be in Arabic al-Juwayni. llIbn al-Tiqaqa, al-Falthri a On the System of Government and of CAli son of Tabata Dynasties, composed by translated the C. E. J. Whitting. (Lon ba, by rapid talker, don. Luzac, 1943), p. 323. See also James Kritzeck, "Ibn-a1-Tiqaqa and the Fall of Baghdadlt in The World 9f Islam. Studies in Honour of and Krltzeck James Winder K. R. edt (London. Bayly Hitti, Philip MacMillan, 1959), P. 179. Muhammad the Moslem known as son |