"Fakhr al-Din Asad Gorgani" was born in Malayer in the final years of the first half of the fifth century AH. We are not aware of his childhood and adolescence and his education and family. But from his writings, one can discover that Fakhr al-Din was an admirer of Seljuk Talegh and wrote poems about the king's victories in various wars.
Fakhr al-Din Asad Gorgani was with the Shah during the invasion of Isfahan. But when Togharl leaves Isfahan to open Hamedan, the poet stays in Isfahan and co-hosts Isfahan's "Abolfazl Mozaffarben Mohammad".
The Weiss & Ramin love story comes to fruition and the dialogue between this poet and the ruler is over. The ruler tells the tale, and the poet rejoices and decides to rewrite it.
The story of Weiss and Ramin is one of the ancient Persian stories that date back to the Parthians and Sassanians. The Iranians were familiar with this story, and its Pahlavi writings existed in those years in Isfahan, as if the Isfahanians read the story in the same Pahlavi language.
Not much is known about Fakhroddin Asad Gorgani's fate after the completion of his "Weiss & Ramin" work. He is said to have died in the final years of the first half of the seventh century.
Fakhr al-Din Asad Gorgani was with the Shah during the invasion of Isfahan. But when Togharl leaves Isfahan to open Hamedan, the poet stays in Isfahan and co-hosts Isfahan's "Abolfazl Mozaffarben Mohammad".
The Weiss & Ramin love story comes to fruition and the dialogue between this poet and the ruler is over. The ruler tells the tale, and the poet rejoices and decides to rewrite it.
The story of Weiss and Ramin is one of the ancient Persian stories that date back to the Parthians and Sassanians. The Iranians were familiar with this story, and its Pahlavi writings existed in those years in Isfahan, as if the Isfahanians read the story in the same Pahlavi language.
Not much is known about Fakhroddin Asad Gorgani's fate after the completion of his "Weiss & Ramin" work. He is said to have died in the final years of the first half of the seventh century.
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