ʿAḍud al-Dawlah (born 936—died 983) was a ruler (949–983) of the Iranian Buyid dynasty who oversaw the flourishing of Buyid cultural expression as well as the empire’s expansion to its greatest extent.
After becoming ruler of Fārs province in southern Iran in 944, ʿAḍud al-Dawlah did not actually reign on his own until almost a decade later. But by 979 his authority extended, through inheritance and conquest, over all of southern Iran and most of what is now Iraq. He became famous for his public works, which included a dam still standing near Shīrāz, and he also consolidated the internal security and administrative order of the dynasty and patronized arts and letters. See also Buyid dynasty.