Al-Thaʿālibī has twenty-nine known works. ===
Kitāb Yatīmat al-dahr fī mahāsin ahl al-ʿaṣr=== This is al-Thaʿālibī's best known work and contains valuable extracts from the poetry of his own and earlier times; its title means 'The Matchless Pearl of the Age on the Fine Qualities of Contemporary Men'. In its surviving form — a second edition revised by al-Thaʿālibī — it quotes 470 poets in four volumes, organised geographically. The four volumes cover, in this order, Syria and the west (
Mawṣil,
Egypt,
Maghrib); Iraq; Western Iran (al-Jabal,
Fārs,
Jurjān, and
Ṭabaristān); and Eastern Iran (
Khurāsān and
Transoxania). Composition began in 384/994. The
Yatīmat and its sequel the
Tatimmat have been characterised as 'our main, if not the sole, source about literary activity' in al-Tha'ālibī's time. • ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Muḥammad Thaʿālibī,
Yatīmat al-dahr fī shuʿarāʼ ahl al-ʿaṣr (), 4 vols (Damascus: [al-Maṭbaʿah al-Ḥifnīyah] , 1302 AH [1885 CE]), vol. 1, vol. 2, vol. 3, vol. 4. The most widely used edition, with a Persian interlinear translation. • Muḥammad Muḥyī al-Dīn ‘Abd al-Ḥamīd (ed.), , 4 vols (Cairo 1956), vol. 1, vol. 2, vol. 3, vol. 4. Bilāl Urfahʹlī concludes that this is the most accurate edition, and 'offers a preliminary basis of studying the
Yātima, even if some points will have to be changed according to what a critical edition might reveal'. • Al-Thaʿālibī,
Aḥsan mā samiʿtu, ed. by Muḥammad Ṣādiq ʿAnbar (Cairo: al-Maktabah al-Maḥmūdiyyah, n.d. [1925]). •
Kitāb Fiqh ul-Lugha; lexicographical dictionary arranged by semantic subject. (
Paris, 1861), (
Cairo, 1867), (
Beirut, 1885 - incomplete). •
Zād safar al-mulūk •
Zād safar al-mulūk: A Handbook on Travel by Abū Manṣūr al-Thaʿālibī (d. 429/1038), ed. by Ramzi Baalbaki and Bilal Orfali, Bibliotheca Islamica, 52 (Beirut: Orient-Institut, 2011), . •
Al-Iqtibās min al-Qurʾān (, 'quoting from the generous Qurʾān', literally 'taking hot coals from the generous Qurʾān'), on the cultural and literary influence of the
Qurʾān. • Ed. by I. M. al-Ṣaffār (Baghdad: Dār al-Ḥurriyya li-l-Ṭibāʿa, 1975). • Ed. by I. M. al-Ṣaffār and M. M. Bahjat, 2 vols (al-Manṣūra: Dār al-Wafāʾ, 1992) [repr. Cairo: Dār al-Wafāʾ, 1998). • Ed. by I. M. al-Ṣaffār (ʿAmmān: Jidārā li-l-Kitāb al-ʿAlamī, 2008). •
Makārim al-akhlāq wa-maḥāsin al-ādāb wa-badāʾiʿ al-awṣāf wa-gharāʾib al-tashbīhāt •
The Book of Noble Character: Critical Edition of Makārim al-akhlāq wa-maḥāsin al-ādāb wa-badāʾiʿ al-awṣāf wa-gharāʾib al-tashbīhāt Attributed to Abū Manṣūr al-Thaʿālibī (d. 429/1039), ed. by Bilal Orfali and Ramzi Baalbaki, Islamic History and Civilisation: Studies and Texts, 120 (Leiden: Brill, 2015), . • ''Kitāb Lata'if al-ma'arif'' (tr. 'Book of curious and entertaining information'
Clifford Edmund Bosworth,
Edinburgh University Press, 1968). •
Kitāb al-Kināya wa-l-taʿrīd aw al-Nihāya fī fann al-kināya (ed. F. al-Ḥawwār, Baghdad & Köln: Manshūrāt al-Jamal, 2006). •
Ghurar akhbār mulūk al-Furs wa-siyarihim, an Arabic chronicle of pre-Islamic Iranian dynasties, dedicated to al-Nasr(brother of
Mahmud of Ghazni). •
Ādāb al-mulūk or
Sirāj al-mulūk, a
mirror for princes. ==Notes==