Imru’ al-Qais Handaj ibn Hujr ibn al-Harith al-Kindi (500–540 AD) is a pre-Islamic Arab poet of high status. He is considered the most prominent and prominent of Arab poets in history and was described as the most poetic of people. He is the author of the most famous of the Mu’allaqat. He was known and famous by his nickname, and historians differed about his name. It was said that Jundah, Handaj, Malika, and Adi, and he was from the Kinda tribe. He is known in Arab heritage books by several nicknames, including “the misguided king” and “the one with sores”, and he was nicknamed Abu Wahb, Abu Zaid, and Abu al-Harith. Ibn Qutaybah narrated that Imru’ al-Qais was from Najd, and that the lands he described in his poetry were all the lands of Banu Asad. The poet traveled to many places in the Arabian Peninsula and the Levant and reached Constantinople, the capital of the Romans.