Fadl al-Sha'irah

Fadl al-Qaysi or Faḍl al-Shāʻirah (Arabic: فضل الشاعرة; "Faḍl the Poet"; d. 871) was one of "three early ʻAbbasid singing girls, particularly famous for their poetry" and is one of the pre-eminent medieval Arabic female poets whose work survives.

[2] Born in al-Yamama (now in Saudi Arabia), Fadl was brought up in Abbasid Basra, (now in Iraq).

According to Ibn Annadim, a bibliographer (died 1047), Fadl's diwan extended to twenty pages.

A Caliphate entrusted to al-Mutawakkil, when he was seven and twenty Let's us hope, Rightly guided Ruler that your rule goes on for eighty.

On all who do not say Amen" — The curse of AlmightyAbu al-Ayna said that the Caliph liked the poem and gave her fifty thousand dirhams.