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== Headword ==
== Headword ==
'''Arabic:''' الْخِبَاء اليماني
'''Arabic:''' الْخِبَاء اليماني<br>
'''Transliteration:''' ''al‑Ḫibāʾ al‑yamānī''
'''Transliteration:''' ''al‑Ḫibāʾ al‑yamānī''<br>
'''Romanization:''' ''al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī''
'''Romanization:''' ''al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī''<br>
'''IPA:''' /ʔal.xɪ.baːʔu l.ja.maːniː/
'''IPA:''' /ʔal.xɪ.baːʔul.ja.maːniː/


== Names ==
== Names ==

Latest revision as of 12:03, 3 June 2026


Authors: Khalid Al-Ajaji


This article is about the asterism Alkhiba in the constellation Corvus. For the similarly named asterism in the northern sky, see Alkhiba alshamai (Northern Tent). For the star with a similar name, see Alchiba (the Tent).

Alkhiba (Arabic: الخباء, “the small tent”; also transliterated as al‑Ḫibāʾ and referred to as الْخِبَاء اليماني “Southern Tent”) is an asterism of four stars forming a quadrilateral in the constellation Corvus.

Headword

Arabic: الْخِبَاء اليماني
Transliteration: al‑Ḫibāʾ al‑yamānī
Romanization: al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī
IPA: /ʔal.xɪ.baːʔul.ja.maːniː/

Names

The asterism is referred to in historical sources as al-Khibāʾ (Arabic: الخباء, “the Tent”) without a specifier, and as “Southern Tent” (Arabic: الخباء اليماني, al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī). To avoid confusion with the asterism in Hercules also known as al-Khibāʾ and with the star α Crv named Alchiba, this article uses the form “Southern Tent” (Arabic: الخباء اليماني, al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī), following Ibn Qutayba.

The asterism is also called عجز الأسد (romanized: ʿajuz al-asad, “the Lion’s Hindquarters”), عرش السماك (romanized: ʿarsh al‑Simāk, literally “the Throne of al‑Simāk”; al‑Simāk is a proper name connected with being high or elevated) in works by Ibn Qutayba, al-Marzūqī, and al-Ṣūfī, while the form الأجمال/الأحمال (romanized: al-Ajmāl/al-Ahmāl, “the camels/the loads on camels”) is reported only by al‑Ṣūfī.

Modern Authors

Danielle Adams

Khalid AlAjaji

Etymology

al-Khibāʾ (Arabic: الخباء, from the Arabic root خبي) denotes a small tent. Lisān al-ʿArab defines al-Khibāʾ as:[1]

الخِباءُ مِنَ الأَبنية: وَاحِدُ الأَخْبية، وَهُوَ مَا كَانَ مِنْ وَبَر أَو صُوفٍ وَلَا يَكُونُ مِنْ شَعَر، وَهُوَ عَلَى عَمُودَيْنِ أَو ثَلَاثَةٍ، وَمَا فوقَ ذَلِكَ فَهُوَ بَيْت.

Al-Khibāʾ (الخِبَاء) is a tent made of camel wool or sheep’s wool, never of goat hair. It usually stands on two or three poles; anything larger than that is called a bayt (large tent).

Concordance

al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī is an asterism of the quadrilateral γ, ε, β, δ Crv in the constellation Corvus, corresponding to the brightest stars 2nd, 4th, 5th, and 7th of the 7 star Ptolemaic Corvus.

History

Three primary sources describe the Arabic Southern Tent (الخِبَاء اليماني, al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī): Ibn Qutayba, al-Marzūqī, and al-Ṣūfī. Their accounts largely agree, allowing the stars to be identified with high confidence and clarifying how the Arabs envisioned al-Khibāʾ as a celestial figure.

Ibn Qutayba (d. 276 H / 889)

The complete text describing the Southern Tent (al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī) reads:[2]

Original Arabic

قال ابن كناسة: وربما عدل القمر فنزل بعَجُزِ الأَسَدِ، وهي أربعة كواكب بين يدي السِّمَاكِ الأَعْزَلِ، منحدرة عنه في الجنوب، مربعة على صورة النَّعْشِ، يقال لها: عَرْشَ السِّمَاكِ، وتُسَمَّى: الخِبَاءَ.

English translation

Ibn Kunāsa [d. 207H/822AD] said: "Sometimes the moon deviates and alights at the Hindquarters of the Lion ('Ajuz al-Asad). These are four stars situated before the Unarmed Simāk (al-Simāk al-A'zal), sloping down from it toward the south, squared in the shape of the stars of (Na'sh) [the bowl of the Big Dipper α, β, γ, δ UMa]; they are called the Throne of al-Simāk('Arsh al-Simāk) and are also named the Tent (al-Khibā')."

Ibn Qutayba also named this asterism the Southern tent (Arabic: الخباء اليماني، al-Khibāʾ alyamānī) in his description of the Northern Tent. The complete text reads:[3]

Original Arabic

وأولاد الظباء كواكب صغار، فيما بين الظباء والنفزات، وعن يمين نفزات الظباء كواكب مستديرة غير متقارنة، تسمّى: الحوض. والخباء أسفل من الحوض، كواكب في مثل هيئة الخباء اليمانية.

English translation

The fawns, awlād al-Zibāʾ (أَوْلادُ الظِّبَاءِ), are small stars located between al-Zibāʾ (الظِّبَاءِ) and the Gazelle Leaps (النَّفَزَاتِ). To the right of the Gazelle Leaps (نَفَزَاتِ الظِّبَاءِ), there are round, non-aligned stars called al-Hawd (الحَوْضَ, "the Pool"). Below al-Hawd lies al-Khibāʾ (الخِبَاءُ, "the Tent"), a group of stars shaped like the Southern tent (الخِبَاءِ اليَمَانِيَّةِ, al-Khibāʾ alyamāniyah).

Al-Ṣūfī (d. 376 H / 986)

The complete text describing the Southern Tent (al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī) reads:[4]

Original Arabic

والعرب تُسَمِّي هذه الكواكب: عَجُزَ الأَسَدِ، وتزعم أن القمر ربما قصر فنزل بعجز الأسد، وتسمّيها أيضًا: عَرْشَ السِّمَاكِ الأَعْزَلِ، وتسميها أيضًا: الأَجْمَالَ، وتسميها أيضًا: الخِبَاءَ.

English translation

The Arabs call these stars [the seven stars of Ptolemaic Corvus]: the Hindquarters of the Lion (‘Ajuz al-Asad). They claim that the moon sometimes falls short and alights at the Hindquarters of the Lion. They also call them: the Throne of the Unarmed Simāk (‘Arsh al-Simāk al-A‘zal); they also call them: the Camels (al-Ajmāl); and they also call them: the Tent (al-Khibā’).

The name al-Ahmāl (Arabic الأحمال, “the Camel Loads”) appears in some manuscripts, but it seems to be a scribal error. The two forms الأجمال and الأحمال are graphically similar and differ by only a single dot, while al-Ajmal (“the Camels”) is preferable because it lies in the same area as the Arabian constellations al-Sharāsīf (Arabic الشراسيف, “the Tied Camels”) = Hydra and al-Maʿlaf (Arabic المَعْلَف, “the Camels’ feeding trough”) = Crater.

Al-Marzūqī (d. 421 H / 1030)

The complete text describing the Northern Tent (al-Ḫibāʾ ash-Šāmī) on the authority of Ibn al-Aʿrabī (d. 230 H / 845) reads:[5]

Original Arabic

"وقال [ابن الأعرابي]: فيما بين الفَرْدِ وبين زُبَانَى العَقْرَبِ الخِبَاءُ. قال أبو حنيفة: إن كان عنى بالخِبَاءِ عَرْشَ السِّمَاكِ، فذاك، وإلَّا فليس هناك خباء غيره، وقال: على أثر الخِبَاءِ كواكب يقال لها: الشَّرَاسِيفُ، وهي كواكب مستطيلة مثل الحبل. وقال: بين الشَّرَاسِيفِ والخِبَاءِ كواكبُ مستديرةٌ متبدّدةٌ على غير نظام يقال لها: المَعْلَفُ."

English translation

“[Ibn al-Aʿrabī] (d. 230 H / 845) said: Between al‑Fard (Alphard α Hya) and al-Zubānā (α2, β Lib, the claws of the Scorpion) is al‑Khibāʾ. Abū Ḥanīfa (d. 282 H / ~895) said: If by al‑Khibāʾ he meant the throne of al‑Simāk, then that is correct; otherwise, there is no other Khibāʾ there. And he said: Following al‑Khibāʾ are stars that are called al-Sharāsīf (Arabic الشراسيف, the Tied camels); they are elongated stars like a rope [stars of Hydra]. And he said: Between al‑Sharāsīf and al‑Khibāʾ are round, scattered stars, without order, that are called al‑Maʿlaf (Arabic المَعْلَف, the Camels feeding trough) [stars of the constellation Crater].”

Stars Identification

As discussed al-Khibāʾ, also named al-Khibāʾ al-yamānī, ʿajuz al-asad,ʿarsh al‑Simāk, and al-Ajmāl is an asterism of the quadrilateral γ, ε, β, δ Crv.

Stars of the asterism Proper names of the stars
γ Crv Gienah
ε Crv
β Crv Kraz
δ Crv Algorab


Roland Laffitte

Reference

  1. Lisān al-ʿarab, لسان العرب، باب الواو والياء المعتل فصل الخاء المعجمة
  2. أبو محمد عبد الله بن مسلم ابن قتيبة الدينوري (توفي 276 هـ)، كتاب الأنواء في مواسم العرب، دائرة المعارف العثمانية، حيدر أباد، الهند، 1375 هـ، ص 62.
    Ibn Qutayba al-Dīnawarī, Abū Muḥammad ʿAbdallah b. Muslim. 1956. Kitāb al-anwāʾ (fī mawāsim al-ʿArab). Hyderabad: Maṭbaʿat Majlis Dāʾirat al-Maʿārif al-ʿUthmāniyya, pg 62.
  3. أبو محمد عبد الله بن مسلم ابن قتيبة الدينوري (توفي 276 هـ)، كتاب الأنواء في مواسم العرب، دائرة المعارف العثمانية، حيدر أباد، الهند، 1375 هـ، ص 67.
    Ibn Qutayba al-Dīnawarī, Abū Muḥammad ʿAbdallah b. Muslim. 1956. Kitāb al-anwāʾ (fī mawāsim al-ʿArab). Hyderabad: Maṭbaʿat Majlis Dāʾirat al-Maʿārif al-ʿUthmāniyya, pg 67.
  4. كتاب الكواكب لأبي الحسين عبد الرحمن بن عمر الرازي المعروف بالصوفي (291-376)، تحقيق خالد بن عبد الله العجاجي، ص 840.
    Book of the stars by al-Ṣūfī (died 986): Critical edition with commentary by Khalid al-Ajaji, digital edition, 2021, pg 840.
  5. الإمام أبو علي أحمد بن محمد بن الحسن المرزوقي (توفي سنة 421 هـ)، الأزمنة والأمكنة، تحقيق د. محمد نايف الدليمي، عالم الكتب، بيروت، لبنان، 1422 هـ، الجزء الثاني، ص 349.
    Al-Marzūqī, Abū ʿAli Aḥmad b. Muḥammad b. al-Ḥassan (died 1030), Al-Azminah wa al-amkinah (Times and Places), Edition by Dr. Mohammad Nayef al-Dulaymi, (Arabic print of the original book in 2002, World of Books, Beirut, Lebanon), vol 2, pg 345.