Major work of Persian literature (11th century AD)
Qabus-nama or Qabus-nameh (variations: Qabusnamah, Qabousnameh, Ghabousnameh, or Ghaboosnameh, in Persian: کاووسنامه or قابوسنامه, "Book of Kavus"), Mirror of Princes,[1] is a major work of Persian literature, from the eleventh century (c. 1080 AD).
One of the earliest remaining copies of this work is one dating from 1450, translated into Turkish by Mercimek Ahmed on the orders of the OttomanSultanMurad II. It is kept in the Fatih Library of Istanbul.
The British Museum keeps a copy of an early Turkish translation, dated 1456.
The text was translated directly from Persian into English by Reuben Levy with the title: A Mirror for Princes in 1951. French, Japanese, Russian, Arabic, and Georgian (1978) language translations also followed.[citation needed]
Cultural references
This work is mentioned several times in Louis L'Amour's The Walking Drum as well as in Tariq Ali's "The Stone Woman".