The earliest historical record of an instrument named
rabab dates back to 10th-century Arabic texts, as identified by
Henry George Farmer. This instrument, along with its variations like
rubab,
rebab, and
rabob, subsequently gained popularity in various regions of West, Central, South, and Southeast Asia. It is mentioned in old
Persian books, and many
Sufi poets mention it in their poems. It is the traditional instrument of
Khorasan present Afghanistan and is widely used in countries such as
Pakistan,
Azerbaijan,
Iran,
Turkey,
Iraq,
Tajikistan, and
Uzbekistan, as well as in the
Xinjiang province of northwest China and the
Jammu and Kashmir and
Punjab regions of
northwest India. The
rubab is known as "the lion of instruments" and is one of the two national instruments of Afghanistan (with the
zerbaghali). It is the ancestor of the north Indian
sarod, although unlike the sarod, it is
fretted. The rubab was the first instrument used in
Sikhism; it was used by
Bhai Mardana, companion of the first guru,
Guru Nanak. Whenever a
shabad was revealed to Guru Nanak he would sing and Bhai Mardana would play on his rubab; he was known as a rababi. The rubab playing tradition is carried on by Sikhs such as
Namdharis. In 2024,
UNESCO recognised the art of creating the rubab as an
Intangible cultural heritage in Afghanistan, Iran,
Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan. File:Beaker fragment with musicians - Iran - late 12th or early 13th century - Gulbenkian museum - Inv. 999.jpg|Late 12th-early 13th century, Iran. Musicians with ney, rubab and daf. File:Rubab late 12th or early 13th century AD.jpg|Late 12th-early 13th century A.D., Iran. Musician playing rubab. File:A Youthful Musician, Persia, Safavid, Isfahan or Khurasan, late 16th century.jpg|Young man with Iranian rubab, 16th century,
Safavid Empire. 8-shaped body resembles a
tar, but tars have both sides of the 8 covered with hide. Rubabs had a lower section covered with hide, and an upper hollow section covered with wood. File:Musician with rabab, photo by Maurice Pezard from the book Ceramique Archaique de L'Islam, page 138, cropped.jpg|Iraq or Egypt.
Abbasid era rubab, painted on the inside of a bowl, 10th century CE. Appears to be spike lute (the neck inserted into the body, beneath the soundboard. The instrument has two strings. ==Variants==