Ibn ʿAbd Rabbih was a friend of many Umayyad princes and was employed as an official panegyrist at the Umayyad court. No complete collection of his poems is extant, but many selections are given in the
Yatima al-Dahr More widely known than his poetry is his great anthology, the
al-ʿIqd al-Farīd (The Unique Necklace), a work divided into 25 sections. The 13th section is named the middle jewel of the necklace, and the chapters on either side are named after other jewels. It is an
adab book resembling
Ibn Qutaybah's
`Uyun al-akhbar (The Fountains of Story) and the writings of
al-Jahiz from which it borrows largely. Although he spent all his life in al-Andalus and did not travel to the East like some other Andalusian scholars, most of his book's material is drawn from the East Islamic world. Also, Ibn Abd Rabbih quoted no Andalusian compositions other than his own. He included in his book his 445-line
Urjuza, a poem in the meter of the
rajaz in which he narrates the warlike exploits of
Abd al-Rahman al-Nasir, along with some of his eulogies of the Umayyads of al-Andalus. ==Books==