Sacred Books and Traditions of the Yezidiz, by Isya Joseph, [1919], at sacred-texts.com
In the Name of the Most Compassionate God!
With the help of the Most High God, and under his direction, we write the history of the Yezidis, their doctrines, and the mysteries of their religion, as contained in their books, which reached our hand with their own knowledge and consent
In the time of Al-Muḳtadir Billah, A. H. 295 1, there lived Manṣûr-al-Ḥallâj, 2 the wool-carder, and Šeiḫ Abd-al-Ḳâdir of Jîlân. 3 At that time, too, there appeared a man by the name of Šeiḫ Adî, from the mountain of Hakkari, 4 originally from the region of Aleppo or Baalbek. He came and dwelt in Mount Lališ, 5 near the city of Mosul, about nine hours distant from it Some say he was of the people of Ḥarrân, and related to Marwân ibn-al-Ḥakam. His full name is Šaraf ad-Dîn Abû-l-Fadâîl, Adî bn Musâfir bn Ismael bn Mousa bn Marwân bn Al-Ḥasan bn Marwân. He died A. H. 558 (A. D. 1162-63). His tomb is still visited; it is near Baadrei, one of the villages of Mosul, distant eleven hours. The Yezidis are the progeny of those who were the murids (disciples) of Šeiḫ Adî. Some trace their origin to Yezid, 6 others to Ḥasan-Al-Baṣrî 7.
29:1 p. 83 A. H. 295 (A. D. 807-8). This is the date of Al-Muḳtadir's accession, who reigned till A. H. 320 (A. D. 932); Cf. W. Muir, The Caliphate, p. 559.
29:2 The life of Manṣûr-al-Ḥallâj is given in Fihrist (ed. Flügel), p. 190.
29:3 The life of Abd-al-Ḳâdir of Jîlân is given in Jami's Nafaḥat (ed. Lee), p. 584.
29:4 The Hakkari country is a dependency of Mosul, and inhabited by Kurds and Nestorians; cf. p. 104. Ibn Ḥauḳal, Kitâb al-Masâlik wal-Mamâlik (ed. M. J. De Goeje). pp. 143 f.
29:5 Yaḳût, IV, 373, calls it Laileš and says that Šeiḫ Adî lived there.
29:6 Presumably Yezîd bn Muâwiya, the second caliph in the Omayyid dynasty, who reigned, A. D. 680-83; cf. W. Muir, The Caliphate, p. 327.
29:7 The life of Ḥasan al-Baṣrî is given in Ibn Ḫallikân. He is not to be identified with Ḥasan al-Baṣrî (died 100 A. H., who, according to Mohammedan tradition, first pointed the Koran text, with the assistance of Yaḥyâ bn Yamar.