king
Yazdegerd III () flees to the mill in
Merv. From a manuscript of the , dated 1595 Mirkhvand's only known work is the , a history of the world since creation from a Muslim point of view, divided into a preface, seven volumes, and an epilogue. The final volume and the epilogue were incomplete at the time of Mirkhvand's death, and were later completed by Khvandamir. A discussion on the advantages of studying history is included in the , a tradition that goes back to at least the 12th century, when
Ibn Funduq (died 1169) did the same in his (1168). Mirkhvand's discussion on the advantages of studying history was copied and modified by three other distinguished historians; Qasim Beg Hayati Tabrizi's (1554); Hossein Nishapuri Vuqu'i's (1591/2); and
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi's (1596). Mirkhvand's work attracted much attention, as demonstrated by its numerous translations, such as the
Ottoman dedicated by Mustafa ibn Hasanshah to the Ottoman
grand vizier Rüstem Pasha (d. 1561) in 1550 and written by Mehmed Kemal Balatzade in 1555. The was one of the three works generally read by history students in
Mughal India. There exist hundreds of copies of , making it one of the most copied Persian history books. However, neither the current editions by Parviz (1959/60) and Kiyanfar (2001) nor the 19th-century
lithographs are based on the oldest version of the books. For example, Kiyanfar's edition is based on the (written in 1854–6) of the 19th-century Iranian writer
Reza-Qoli Khan Hedayat (died 1871), a continuation of the and based on a lithograph printed in
Bombay in 1849/50. The was frequently used by western
orientalists from the 17th to the 19th-century to understand the history of Iran. As a result, there are numerous incomplete translations of it in
European languages. According to the
German orientalist Bertold Spuler, the is the greatest universal history in Persian regarding the Islamic world. ==References==