[59]. A well-known divine, who died in 110 A.H. See Ibn Khallikán, No. 576. An extant work on the interpretation of dreams is attributed to him (Brockelmann, i, 66).
[60]. The text has jáma-i ḥashíshí ú díbaqí. Apparently the former word should be written “khashíshí”. It is described in Vullers’s Persian Dictionary as “a kind of garment”.
[61]. Bilál b. Rabáḥ, the Prophet’s Muezzin, was buried at Damascus.
[62]. Here the author relates two anecdotes illustrating the devotion of Muḥammad.
[63]. He died in 211 A.H. See Ibn Khallikán, No. 409.
[64]. Died in 168 A.H. See Ibn Khallikán, No. 266.
[65]. According to a marginal gloss in I, `ukkáza is a tripod on which a leathern water-bottle is suspended.
[66]. See Nafaḥát, No. 347, where he is called Abu ´l-Ḥusayn Sáliba.
[67]. Its full title is Ri`áyat li-ḥuqúq Allah[Allah], “The observance of what is due to God.”
[68]. This reading is given in the Ṭabaqát al-Ṣúfiyya of Abú `Abd al-Raḥmán al-Sulamí (British Museum MS., Add. 18,520, f. 13a).