Badr Shirvani


Badr Shirvani was a Persian poet. He spent most of his career at the court of the Shirvanshahs, but received patronage from other rulers as well.

Early life

Badr was born to a certain Hajji Shams al-Din, an "apparently wealthy" figure. Badr's father paid little attention to him after his mother died. Little is known about his education; according to his own writings, Badr "was precocious and began writing poetry at the age of ten or eleven". Most information about Badr's life stems from his own works.

Work

The majority of Badr's divan consists of "panegyric odes". Most of these "odes" are dedicated to the ruling Shirvanshah dynasty and the court, in particular Ibrahim I and Khalil I. Badr however, did not devote himself exclusively to writing about the Shirvanshahs and the elite of Shirvan. He also received patronage from the Paduspanid ruler Kayumarth I, the Kara Koyunlu ruler Jahan Shah, and the Timurid ruler Shah Rukh, and thus wrote poems for all three as well.
Though Badr may have travelled in order to present these poems to Kayumarth, Jahan Shah and Shah Rukh in person, he continued to live most of his life in Shirvan. According to Dawlatshāh Samarqandī, Badr met Katibi Nishapuri "when the latter visited Shirvan". Throughout his work, Badr compared himself on more than one occasion to Khaqani, who worked at the Shirvanshah court some two centuries earlier, and like him, wrote many works filled with panegyric text. The works of Khaqani and Badr Shirvani differ quite significantly however. Khaqani's poetry is characterized by "learned complexity and allusiveness", whereas that of Badr primarily contains "direct and flowing diction".
Other than his "panegyric odes", his divan consists of many other poetic forms which were significant at the time, in particular "occasional, monthematic qit'a and the lyric ghazal". "Badr's works contain verses and poems in Arabic, Azeri Turkish and various Caspian Sea dialects of Persian". According to Paul E. Losensky, this reflects "the multilingual environment" in which Badr lived. In 1985, Badr's works were "recovered, edited and published". According to Losensky, this was made possible thanks to a "unique manuscript" which had "apparently" been prepared shortly after Badr's death.

Death

Badr died in 1450. The location of his grave remains unknown.