An Introduction to One Thousand and One Nights (1001 Nights)
One Thousand and One Nights (Arabic: أَلْفُ لَيْلَةٍ وَلَيْلَةٌ, ʾAlf Laylah wa-Laylah) is a collection of Middle Eastern folk tales compiled in Arabic during the Islamic Golden Age. It is often known in English as the Arabian Nights, from the first English-language edition (c. 1706–1721), which rendered the title as The Arabian Nights' Entertainment.
The work was collected over many centuries
by various authors, translators, and scholars across West, Central and South
Asia, and North Africa. Some tales themselves trace their roots back to ancient
and medieval Arabic, Persian, Indian, Greek, Jewish and Turkish folklore and literature. In
particular, many tales were originally folk stories from the Abbasid and Mamluk eras, while others, especially the
frame story, are most probably drawn from the Pahlavi Persian work Hezār Afsān (Persian: هزار افسان, lit. A Thousand Tales),
which in turn relied partly on Indian elements.
What is common throughout all the editions
of the Nights is the initial frame story of
the ruler Shahryār and his wife Scheherazade and
the framing device incorporated throughout the
tales themselves. The stories proceed from this original tale; some are framed
within other tales, while others are self-contained. Some editions contain only
a few hundred nights, while others include 1,001 or more. The bulk of the text
is in prose,
although verse is occasionally used for songs and riddles and to express
heightened emotion. Most of the poems are single couplets or quatrains,
although some are longer.
Some of the stories commonly associated
with The Nights, in particular "Aladdin's
Wonderful Lamp", "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves",
and "The Seven Voyages of Sinbad the Sailor",
were not part of The Nights in its original Arabic versions
but were added to the collection by Antoine
Galland after he heard them from the Christian Maronite storyteller Hanna Diab on
Diab's visit to Paris.
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What an amazing story
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