Ibn al-Dawādārī wrote several works in
Arabic, but few survive. The one for which he is most famous is the
Kanz al-durar wa-jāmiʿ al-ghurar ('Treasure of Pearls and the Collection of Shining Objects'), an abridgement in nine parts of a longer
universal history entitled
Durar al-tījān. An
autograph manuscript of the
Kanz is known. Ibn al-Dawādārī claims to have worked on the final draft between 1331 and 1335. The last recorded event in his histories is from 1335. The entirety of
Kanz has been published in nine separate volumes between the years 1960 and 1994 at Cairo as
Die Chronik des Ibn ad-Dawadari, part of the German series Quellen zur Geschichte des islamischen Ägyptens: • Part 1,
Kosmographie, ed. Bernd Radtke (1982) • Part 2,
Der Bericht über die alten Völker, ed. Edward Badeen (1994) • Part 3,
Der Bericht über den Propheten und die Rechtgeleiteten Chalifen, ed. Muḥammad as Saʿīd Ğamāl ad-Dīn (1981) • Part 4,
Der Bericht über die Umayyadan, ed. Gunhild Graf & Erika Glassen (1994) • Part 5,
Der Bericht über die ʿAbbasiden, ed. Dorothea Krawulsky • Part 6,
Der Bericht über die Fatimiden, ed. Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn al-Munağğid (1961) • Part 7,
Der Bericht über die Ayyubiden, ed. Saʿīd ʿAbd al-Fattāḥ ʿĀšūr (1972) • Part 8,
Der Bericht über die frühen Mamluken, ed. Ulrich Haarmann (1971) • Part 9,
Der Bericht über den Sultan al-Malik an-Nāṣir Muḥammad ibn Qalaʾun, ed. Hans Robert Roemer (1960) Ibn al-Dawādārī has valuable information on the
Fatimids and is "one of the most interesting historians" of the
Baḥrī dynasty. He frequently cites his father as a source for events in the last two parts of his history, but he seems to have exaggerated his father's importance by attributing to him information from other sources. Ibn al-Dawādārī may also have falsified his own genealogy. He breaks from traditional Arabic historiography in many ways. His writing style is more personal, "spiced with anecdotes" and, for the earlier periods, dependent in part on popular legends. ==Notes==