Risālat al-Ṣūfī fī al-kawākib

Risālat al-Ṣūfī fī al-kawākib (Arabic:رسالة الصوفي في الكواكب, "Epistle of al-Ṣūfī on the Stars"), is an 10-11th-century poem, probably composed in Rayy, Iran. It was authored by Ibn al-Ṣūfī, or most probably one of his sons. It is a poetic supplement to Ibn al-Ṣūfī's astronomical opus The Book of Fixed Stars, in the urjūza genre.

The text is known from a 13th century manuscript, possibly composed in Baghdad, now in Tehran, Reza Abbasi Museum (RAM M. 570), also called "RAM al'Sufi". It is stylistically dated to circa 1225. An inscription in the manuscript gives a date of AH 554 (1159 CE), but this is probably a later interpolation.

The manuscript has various depictions of the constellations, using various human and animal figures. Several of the figures are wearing Turkic clothing, such as Centaurus, who has a Turkic sharbush headgear.

Another Qajar copy exists, dated ̣to 1894 (Tehran, Majlis Library, no. 5099).