Double Locative Bynames in
Arabic
by Basil Dragonstrike
In Arabic names, there is an unusual, perhaps I
should say rare (or perhaps not), formation: the use of two
locative bynames. Indeed, not only are there enough of these to
say "It's documented", there's enough to spot certain patterns. (Please note that all the following names are of actual, historical people.)
What is perhaps the commonest form of double locative bynames is
that exemplified by Wathīma b. Mūsā b. al-Furāt al-Fārisī
al-Fasawī, or Shams al-Dīn Abū ʻAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn
Aḥmad Abī Bakr al-Bannāʼ al-Shāmī al-Muqaddasī. From the
first example: al-Fārisī is from the region Fars (in
southwestern modern Iran), and al-Fasawī is from the
town Fasā. In the second example, al-Shāmī is from
"greater Syria," an ancient region covering roughly modern
Syria, Jordan, Lebenon, and Israel; al-Muqaddasī comes
from Muqad, an old Arabic word for Jerusalem. In these names,
and in many, many others, the two locatives are a
region/kingdom/country, followed by a significant town or city
in that region.
Nearly as common, is a form exemplified by Abū Manṣūr
Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad ibn Maḥmūd al-Samarqandī al-Māturīdī;
al-Samarqandī comes, of course, from the city Samarqand.
al-Māturīdī comes from Māturīd, a district/section of
Samarqand. That is, the two locatives are, first, a major city,
and second, a part of that city. A varient uses the
name of a village or small town near a major city, instead of a
quarter of that city. The name Abū ʻAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn
Ghālib al-Balansī al-Ruṣāfī is based on Balansiya (a major
city, now called Valencia, in Spain) and al-Ruṣāfa, a minor
village cum pleasure-garden on the outskirts of Balansiya.
There are two other formations, both uncommon. One of these is
the use of two major cities some distance apart. Abū ‘Alī
al-Ḥasan b. al-Ḥasan (or Ḥusayn) b. al-Haytham al-Baṣrī
al-Miṣrī is one example: al-Baṣrī says he lived in
Baṣra and al-Miṣrī that he lived in Cairo.
The other uncommon formation is that of a district/region/etc.
followed by a city not in that region. Take for example Abū
ʻUbayd Allāh Muḥammad ibn ʻImrān ibn Mūsā ibn Saʻīd ibn ʻUbayd
Allāh al-Khurāsānī al-Baghdādī al-Kātib al-Marsubānī,
whose name includes a locative based on the region of Khurāsān
and a locative based on the city of Baghdād. There's also the
famous biographer/geographer Yāqūt ibn ʻAbd Allāh al-Rūmī
al-Ḥamawī (usually referred to simply as Yāqūt), a
freedman who was born in the Byzantine Empire (Rūm) who settled
in Ḥamāh, in Syria.
Then there's the curious situation of Shams al-Dīn Muḥammad
b. Jābir al-Ḳaysī al-Andalusī al-Tūnisī al-Wādīʼāshi,
whose locative al-Andalusī comes from al-Andalus
(Iberia), while al-Tūnisī comes from the city of Tūnis,
but al-Wādīʼāshi comes from the town of Wādī Āsh in
al-Andalus, situated on the river of the same name. Thus, he
combines the common name of region plus a town in that
region, with the name of a distant town. Note
also that this is a triple locative; I know of only one other, Abu
Hafs ʻUmar al-Ballūtī al-Bitrūjī al-Iqritshī. He was from
the town of Bitrūj, which was in the Fahs Al-Ballūt region,
north of Cordova in the Sierra Morena; al-Iqritshī is
from Iqritsh, Crete, which he lead the conquest of. Notice: this
name combines a region, a town in that region, and a distant
region.
Given the preponderance of the first two forms of double
locatives, I recommend using one or the other if you are
interested in an Arabic name with a double locative.
I have not (yet) run into any other formation using two (or
more!) locative bynames.