The first Grammarians of Baṣra lived during the seventh century in Al-Baṣrah. The town, which developed out of a military encampment, with buildings being constructed circa 638 AD, became the intellectual hub for grammarians, linguists, poets, philologists, genealogists, traditionists, zoologists, meteorologists, and above all exegetes of Qur’ānictafsir and Ḥadīth, from across the Islamic world. These scholars of the Islamic Golden Age were pioneers of literary style and the sciences of Arabic grammar in the broadest sense. Their teachings and writings became the canon of the Arabic language. Shortly after the Basran school's foundation, a rival school was established at al-Kūfah circa 670, by philologists known as the Grammarians of Kūfah. Intense competition arose between the two schools, and public disputations and adjudications between scholars were often held at the behest of the caliphal courts. Later many scholars moved to the court at Baghdad, where a third school developed which blended many ideological and theological characteristics of the two. Many language scholars carried great influence and political power as court companions, tutors, etc, to the caliphs, and many were retained on substantial pensions. Ishāq al-Nadīm, the tenth-century author of Kitab al-Fihrist, provides a trove of biographical accounts of the leading figures of the two schools and would seem to be the earliest source. However greatly augmented biographical detail can be found in a number of later encyclopedic dictionaries, by authors such as Ibn Khallikan, Suyuti, and others. Basra, Kufa, and subsequently Baghdad, represent the main schools of innovation and development of Arabic grammar and punctuation, linguistics, philology, Quranic exegesis and recital, Hadith, poetry and literature.
Major Philologists
'Amr ibn al-'Alā, or Zabbān, born at Mecca and died at Kūfah; an eminent scholar and one of the seven readers of the Qur’ān. He burned his collections of old poetry, &c., to devote himself to religion.
Aṣma’ī ‘Abd al-Mālik ibn Qurayb great humanist who flourished under Hārūn al-Rashid
Du’alī, Abū al-Aswad Ẓālim ibn Amr ibn Sufyān originator of Arabic grammar and founder of Baṣrah school.
Durayd, Abū BakrMuḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan, a distinguished philologist, genealogist, and poet, awarded a pension by caliphAl-Muqtadir for his contribution to science; principal works, his famous ode “The Maqṣūra,” a voluminous lexicon and a treatise on the genealogies of the Arab tribes.
Khalīl ibn Aḥmad, ‘Abd al-Raḥmān inventor of the Arabic prosody who wrote the first Arabic dictionary 'Kitab al-Ayn;
Mubarrad, Abū al-‘Abbās Muḥammad ibn Yazīd, philologist author of the book Al-Kāmil
Quṭrub the Grammarian, a Baṣrah native, leading philologist of his age, muhaddith and natural scientist.
Sībawayh Abū Bishr ‘Amr ibn ‘Uthman, the Persian whose voluminous and seminal book of grammar, ‘‘Al-Kitab'’, is universally celebrated.
Sukkarī, Abū Sa’īd al-Ḥasan ibn al-Husayn, a collector and critic of old Arabian poetry and ancient tradition.
Thaqafī, 'Īsā ibn 'Umar a noted early grammarian who taught Sībawayh and Al-Khalīl ibn Aḥmad. He was a Qur’ān reciter and was blind. His two known books The Compilation and The Perfected were lost at an early period.
'Ubayda Ma’mar ibn al-Muthannā
Yūnus ibn Ḥabīb, Abū ‘Abd al-Raḥmān Persian, expert on gram. inflection, lived to be 88 years old; - Meaning of the Quran; Languages ; The Large Book of Rare Forms ; Similes ; The Small Book of Rare Forms''