Talkhis Al Miftah Ki Sharah «2025»

The Hermeneutical Expansion of Rhetoric: A Study of the Sharūḥ (Commentaries) on Talkhīṣ al-Miftāḥ

| Feature | Al-Qazwīnī ( Talkhīṣ ) | Al-Taftāzānī ( sharḥ ) | Al-Jurjānī ( ḥāshiyah ) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Core rules | Expanded proofs | Conceptual refinement | | Logic | Implicit | Explicit syllogisms | Meta-logical critiques | | Example load | Minimal | Extensive (new poetry) | Reanalysis of old examples | | Pedagogical role | Primer | Intermediate/Advanced | Advanced research | 5. Case Study: The Musnād Ilayhi (Predicate Subject) Consider al-Qazwīnī’s statement in Talkhīṣ (Chapter on al-maʿānī ): “The omission ( dhikr ) of the musnād ilayhi is permissible only when the listener already knows it.” Without further elaboration, this seems trivial. talkhis al miftah ki sharah

[Generated for Academic Purposes] Course: Classical Islamic Literary Theory Date: April 18, 2026 Abstract The Talkhīṣ al-Miftāḥ (Summary of the Key) by Khaṭīb al-Qazwīnī (d. 739 AH/1338 CE) stands as the axial text of classical Arabic rhetoric (ʿilm al-balāgha). It is not an original work but a précis of the third part of Miftāḥ al-ʿUlūm (Key of the Sciences) by al-Sakkākī (d. 626 AH/1229 CE). However, Talkhīṣ al-Miftāḥ ’s clarity, organization, and pedagogical rigor generated a robust tradition of supercommentaries ( shurūḥ , singular sharḥ ). This paper examines the nature of sharḥ as a genre, the specific exegetical problems within al-Qazwīnī’s text, and how major commentators—notably al-Saʿd al-Taftāzānī (d. 793 AH/1390 CE) and al-Sayyid al-Sharīf al-Jurjānī (d. 816 AH/1413 CE)—transformed a summary into the definitive canon of post-classical balāgha. It argues that the sharḥ on Talkhīṣ al-Miftāḥ represents not passive repetition but a creative expansion of rhetorical theory. 1. Introduction In the history of Islamic intellectual sciences, few texts have achieved the canonical status of Talkhīṣ al-Miftāḥ . Written by the Persian-Shafiʿi scholar Khaṭīb al-Qazwīnī, the book systematically divides Arabic rhetoric into three core branches: al-maʿānī (semantics/syntax of meaning), al-bayān (figurative speech/tropes), and al-badīʿ (embellishment/wordplay). For over six centuries, it served as the standard textbook in madrasas from Cairo to Istanbul. The Hermeneutical Expansion of Rhetoric: A Study of

Yet, the Talkhīṣ is famously difficult. Its brevity—true to its title as a “summary”—often obscures logical transitions and presupposes familiarity with al-Sakkākī’s original logic-infused framework. Consequently, a vast corpus of shurūḥ emerged. This paper focuses on the classic commentary period (14th–15th centuries), analyzing how the sharḥ genre operates as a tool for both conservation and innovation. To understand the sharḥ on Talkhīṣ , one must grasp its relationship to its predecessor. Al-Sakkākī’s Miftāḥ al-ʿUlūm was revolutionary, integrating Aristotelian logic into rhetorical analysis. However, its sheer size and digressive style made it impractical for beginners. 739 AH/1338 CE) stands as the axial text