Al Mutanabi Statue
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Al Mutanabi Statue

Al Mutanabi Street

About this stop

The Al Mutanabi statue was created in 2009 by the Iraqi sculptor Saad Al Rubaie as part of the project to rehabilitate Al Mutanabi Street after the terrorist bombing that targeted it in 2007. Today, the statue stands at the heart of the street as a symbol of Arab culture and a prominent landmark in the literary memory of Baghdad.

Abu Al Tayyib Al Mutanabi (303–354 AH / 915–965 CE)

He is considered one of the greatest Arab poets of all time so highly esteemed that he was called “The Poet of the Arabs” and “He Who Filled the World and Preoccupied the People,” due to the power, depth, and influence of his poetic talent.

He was born in 915 CE, and his poetic gift appeared early; he composed poetry at the age of nine. He was known for his intelligence, sharpness, and diligence.

Al Mutanabi was a wise, prolific, and innovative poet, known for his maxims, aphorisms, and original meanings. His poetic legacy amounts to around 326 poems that vividly depicted the political and social life of the fourth Islamic century.

His poetry is distinguished by its powerful expressions, eloquent language, and rich imagination. He left an exceptional impact on Arabic literature, and he is regarded as one of the greatest glories of Arabic poetry.

Al Mutanabi grew up during a turbulent era marked by the fragmentation of the Abbasid state and the rise of competing principalities and emirates amid conflicts, wars, and invasions.

Poets of that time often moved between the courts of princes, offering praise and participating in intellectual and political life. In this unstable world, Al Mutanabi’s talent matured and his ambition took shape, and he lived his most productive years in the court of Sayf Al Dawla Al Hamdani in Aleppo.

The turmoil of his era was reflected in his poetry; he wrote about battles, ambition, wisdom, the philosophy of life, human nature, and the qualities of the human soul.

His poetry expressed pride in the self and in Arab identity, mastery of style, and the power of imagination, to the extent that his work is considered a historical record of an entire era.

Al Mutanabi harshly satirized Dabba ibn Yazid Al Asadi, which caused Dabba’s clan to harbor hostility toward him.

On his way back to Kufa, he was intercepted by Fatak ibn Abi Jahl Al Asadi (Dabba’s maternal uncle) and his group near Al Numaniyah, close to Dayr Al ‘Aqool southwest of Baghdad. Fighting broke out, and Al-Mutanabbi, his son Muhammad, and his servant Muflih were all killed.

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Al Mutanabi Statue

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