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The Islamic World 7 PDF

132 Pages·2017·6.41 MB·English
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The Islamic World 7 books, maps, photographs, drawings and manuscripts celebrating Islamic culture and the history and geography of the Arab world The Islamic World 7 books, maps, photographs, drawings and manuscripts celebrating Islamic culture and the history and geography of the Arab world ’t Goy-Houten, The Netherlands Vienna, Austria 2017 Jointly offered for sale by: Antiquariaat FORUM, ’t Goy – Houten (Utrecht), The Netherlands Antiquariat INLIBRIS, Vienna, Austria Extensive descriptions and images available on request All offers are without engagement and subject to prior sale. All items in this list are complete and in good condition unless stated otherwise. Any item not agreeing with the description may be returned within one week after receipt. Prices are EURO (€). Postage and insurance are not included. VAT is charged at the standard rate to all EU customers. EU customers: please quote your VAT number when placing orders. Preferred mode of payment: in advance, wire transfer or bankcheck. Arrangements can be made for MasterCard and VisaCard. Ownership of goods does not pass to the purchaser until the price has been paid in full. General conditions of sale are those laid down in the ILAB Code of Usages and Customs, which can be viewed at: https://www.ilab.org/eng/ilab/code.html. New customers can be requested to provide references when ordering. Antiquariat INLIBRIS Antiquariaat FORUM BV Gilhofer Nfg. GmbH Tuurdijk 16 Rathausstraße 19 3997 ms ‘t Goy – Houten 1010 Vienna The Netherlands Austria Phone: +31 (0)30 6011955 Phone: +43 (0)1 40961900 Fax: +31 (0)30 6011813 Fax: +43 (0)1 40961909 E-mail: [email protected] E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.forumrarebooks.com Web: www.inlibris.at www.forumislamicworld.com front cover: no. 200 on p. 91. endpapers: no. 153 on p. 70. p. 3: no. 188 on p. 86. back cover: no. 179 on p. 81. v 1.0 · 02 Oct 2017 Important mediaeval geography of the Middle East: first separate printing 1. ABU AL-FIDA Isma`il ibn `Ali (ABULFEDA). Albulfedae tabula Syriae cum excerpto geographico ex Ibn Ol Wardii geographia et historia naturali. Leipzig, Schönermarck, 1766. Large 4º. Contemporary half calf with giltstamped spine label. € 3500 First separate edition of this important mediaeval geography of the Middle East, concentrating on Syria. Printed in Latin and Arabic parallel text; edited with an extensive commentary by the versatile oriental scholar J. B. Köhler (1742–1802). Abu’l-Fida, born in Damascus in 1273, was a historian, geog- rapher, military leader, and sultan. The crater Abulfeda on the Moon is named after him. Insignificant browning throughout as common; contemp. ownership (1840) to front pastedown. GAL II, 46. Ebert 29. Hamberger/Meusel IV, 189. ADB XVI, 444. Translations of Aesop’s fables into Hindi, Braj Bhasha, Bengali, Sanskrit, Persian and Arabic 2. AESOP and John GILCHRIST (editor). The oriental fabulist or polyglot translations of Esop’s and other ancient fables from the English language into Hindoostanee, Persian, Arabic, Brij Bhakha, Bongla and Sunkrit in the Roman character, ... for the use of the college of Fort William. Calcutta, printed at the Hurkaru office, 1803. 8º. Later black half sheepskin, gold-tooled spine with the star and crescent symbol at the head. € 4750 First edition of Indian, Arabic and Persian translations of ancient fables, most of them ascribed to Aesop. The work contains a total of 54 fables, each first given in English, followed by a translation (in the Latin script) into Urdu, Braj Bhasha, Bengali, Sanskrit, Persian and Arabic. The fables were trans- lated from the English “by various hands” (title-page), but were supervised by the well-known Scottish surgeon and linguist John Borthwick Gilchrist (1759–1841). For many of the fables it was the first trans- lation into an Indian language. As stated on the title-page, the book was published for the use at the Fort William College at Calcutta, established in 1800 as an learning centre for oriental studies. Title-page restored at the gutter, and a piece at the lower margin cut out, perhaps a former owner’s inscription, restored. Some foxing and marginal water stains, mostly on the first and last few pages. Binding with a small wormhole, otherwise in good condition. B.S. Kesavan, History of printing and publishing in India, p. 148; K. Smith Durlow, Early Indian imprints, p. 96. Interpretation of Dreams 3. [AHMET IBN SIRIN]. [Kitab al-Jawami – French]. Apomazar des significations et evenemens des songes, selon la doctrine des Indiens, Perses et Egyptiens. Paris, Jean Houzé (de l’imprimerie de Denys du-Val), 1581. 8º. With woodcut device to title page. Contemporary limp vellum. € 6500 Extremely rare French edition of the “Kitab al-Jawami”, an Arabic work on the interpretation of dreams by an “Achmet, son of Seirim” – almost certainly identical with the 8th century Muslim mystic Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Sirin. The work survived in a Greek translation prepared in the 12th century. This is the French translation of Leunclavius’s Latin edition, published by Wechel at Frankfurt in 1577: Leunclavius had erroneously attributed the work to “Apomazar” (Albumasar, i.e. Ga`far Abu Ma`sar al-Balhi), which mistake he later acknowledged, though it is repeated by the present edition. Some waterstains and edge flaws, especially to the first and last leaves. 17th c. handwritten ownership of the Discalced Carmelites of Bordeaux on title page; a few old annotations in ink. Several small defects to the vellum binding have been repaired. While the 1577 Latin edition (which Caillet calls “rarissime”) has been auctioned three times since 1950, no copy of the present French edition is known in auction records internationally. Caillet I, 153 (note). Graesse, Bibl. mag. et pneum. 97 (“1580” in error). OCLC 1218171. Not in Adams or BM-STC French. Cf. GAL I, 66. Schöll, Geschichte der griechischen Literatur III, 487. 5 Air services between UK and UAE 4. [AIR SERVICES – UNITED ARAB EMIRATES]. Treaty Series No. 94 (1972). Agreement between the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government of the United Arab Emirates for Air Services between and beyond their respective Territories. London, Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1972. 8º. Original wrapperless covers. € 850 Agreement between the UK and the Government of the United Arab Emirates regarding the operation of airlines between the two countries. Such an agreement had become necessary following the Emirates’ inde- pendence in 1971, when the British-Trucial Sheikhdoms treaty expired. The earliest Syrian and Armenian grammar printed 5. ALBONESI, Teseo Ambrogio degli. Introductio in Chaldaicam lingua[m], Syriaca[m], atq[ue] Armenica[m], & dece[m] alias linguas. [Pavia, G. M. Simonetta], 1539. 4º. Title printed in red and black. With woodcut title border and two nearly full-page woodcuts in the text. Contemporary limp vellum with ms. spine title. Traces of ties. € 15 000 First edition. “The earliest Syrian and Armenian grammar printed” (IA). Extremely rare and early work of oriental studies, also important for the history of music due to the first illustrated description of the bassoon, which the author’s uncle, Afranio degli Albonesi, had invented early in the century and had first demonstrated in 1532. The canon regular Teseo Ambrogio degli Albonesi (often simply referred to as Ambrogio or Ambrosius; 1469–1540) taught the Syriac language. This introduction to the oriental languages – his only publication – is a mixture of lingustic treatise and a collection of exotic alphabets. If Albonesi’s results are not in every case correct, they remain of great importance to the history of linguistic scholarship: the “Introductio” constitutes one of those works which inspired the budding discipline of comparative philology to undertake further research. “His work offers a detailed survey of the Syriac and Armenian languages from various points of view, and a short notice about the other exotic languages (Samaritan, Arabic, Coptic, Cyrillic, Ethiopic) – these languages are all discussed with examples written by hand in the earlier chapters, and through- out the work we find blank spaces where such words had still to be filled in” (Smitskamp). In this copy, these blank spaces have been filled in in ink by a contemporary hand. Near-contemporary ownership, in Hebrew cursive, to title page. Minor edge tear to fol. 191. Binding loosened; lacks four pages in the final quire (including the colophon). Edit 16, CNCE 816. Adams A 957. Mortimer 20. BM-STC Italian 16. Eitner I, 91. MGG III, 1721. Smitskamp 240. IA 104.625. Brunet I, 229. Graesse I, 59. A love story from the Arabian Nights in Portuguese, extremely rare second edition 6. [ALF LAYLA WA-LAYLA]. Historia de Ganem, filho de Abou Aibou, denominado o escravo de amor. Traduzida do Arabio em Francez, e ultimamente no idioma Portuguez, por B.A.E. (Colophon: Lisbon, Francisco Borges de Sousa, 1792). Small 4º (21 × 15 cm). Disbound, spine lined with a strip of black paper. € 4950 Extremely rare second edition of a rare Portuguese translation of the History of Ganem, the slave of love, a story from the Arabian Nights. The story tells of Ganem, a son of a merchant from Damascus, who upon his father’s death travels to Baghdad to sell his father’s leftover stock. Once in Baghdad the young Ganem falls in love with the favourite concubine of the caliph. The story is translated into Portuguese from the French translation of Jean Antoine Galland from the beginning of the 18th-century. With spots on the first and last leaves, a stain on leaf B1 and a couple tiny holes in the outer margin of the last leaf. In good condition. Porbase (1 copy); WorldCat (1 copy); cf. Rodrigues, Novelística estrangeira 268. 6 The Arabian Nights, illustrated 7. [ALF LAYLAH WA-LAYLAH]. The Arabian Nights. London, W. Bulmer & Co. for William Miller, 1802. 8º. 5 vols. With 24 engr. plates after Robert Smirke. Contemp. full straight-grained blue morocco, Greek key patterned boards, spine gilt in compartments, all edges gilt. € 3500 First edition of this early translation by Edward Forster (1769–1828), based on the French version of Antoine Galland, which had first appeared between 1704 and 1717. “Galland’s translation [...] was quickly translated into English and German. It enjoyed a most remarkable success throughout Europe, perceptible even in children’s literature, and contributed significantly to the new image which enlightened Europeans entertained of the Islamic East: after Galland, this was no longer the home of the Antichrist and of accursed heresy, but rather the ever-constant Orient beneath an eternally fair sky, boasting splendid colours and unheard-of wealth, Caliphs, Viziers, and Kadis, harems, fairy-tale princes, fairies and genies, sorcerers and sages, a world of fantastic adventure and outrageous incidents” (cf. Fück, p. 101). After having studied law and medicine at Balliol and St Mary Hall, Oxford, Forster decided to enter the clergy. His “Arabian Nights” were frequently reprinted, seeing five editions by 1854. The present set is distinguished by the beautiful illustrations after Smirke, “whom every person of correct taste will acknowledge to be second to none in this range of art” (I, vii), as well as by the elegantly gilt navy blue morocco bindings. Some occasional spotting due to paper, some slight wear and scuffing, but a beautiful set altogether. Chauvin IV, 239. Brunet III, 1716. Graesse IV, 524. Lowndes/Bohn I, 59. DNB VII, 453. OCLC 5782874. Thieme/B. XXXI, 164 (illustrations). First book in Arabic type printed in Norway 8. AL-ZAMAKHSHARI and Jens Peter BROCH. Al-Mufassal, opus de re grammatica Arabicum. Oslo, W.C. Fabritius, 1859. 8º. Near contemporary cloth with title in gold on spine, covered with protective plastic. € 4500 First edition of Jens Peter Broch’s dissertation on al-Zamakhshari’s Al-Mufassal (Arabic grammar), and the first book with Arabic type printed in Norway. The Persian scholar Al-Zamakhshari (1075– 1144) was one of the most important commentators on the Arabic languages. His major work, the Al-Mufassal is “celebrated for its concise but exhaustive exposition” (Encyclopaedia Britannica). The text in the present publication was based on various Arabic manuscripts collected by Broch himself, and is here printed together with Broch’s commentary on the text, which gained him international fame. Broch (1819–1886) was an orientalist and linguist from Norway, who promoted at the University of Oslo under Christopher Andreas Holmboe (d. 1882). Title-page slightly smudged and restored at the gutter, otherwise in very good condition. I. Goldziher, On the history of grammar among the Arabs, p. 136. On coins from all over the world, including the Middle East, China, Japan and coins from ancient Greece and Rome 9. AMBUEREN, Dirk. Valuatie van de meeste en voornaamste munten, die volgens de cours in geheel Europa bekent zyn. Als mede de cours, pary en usantie der wissels: gelyk ook de munten van Asia en Oost-Indiën. … Benevens de munten, maten, ellen en gewigten, waar van in de heylige bladeren word gesprooken. Nog is hier bygevoegt de munten der oude Grieken en Romeynen. Amsterdam, Johannes Loots, 1716. Small 8º (14 × 9.5 cm). Contemporary marbled paper wrappers. € 1950 Rare first edition of a concise work on the monetary system and coins of numerous countries, compiled by the Dutch bookkeeper Dirk Ambueren (b. ca. 1685). He gives the 7 names of the country’s coins and their value, sometimes mentioning their exchange rate compared to Dutch currency. The first part is devoted to the money circulating in Europe, including Holland, Belgium, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Poland, Bohemia, Scandinavia, the Baltics, England, Portugal and Spain. Following are some coins from North Africa (Morocco, Egypt, Tunis, Constantinople), Persia, Arabia, Ormus, Japan, Mughal Empire (India), China, Malacca, Siam, Ethiopia, the Dutch East Indies, and many more. The book closes with a chapter on Biblical coins and ancient Greek and Roman coins. With a faint water stain on some of the first leaves, otherwise in very good condition. Marbled paper wrappers worn, lacking spine. STCN 20282750X (2 copies); WorldCat (6 other copies). On the British interests in the Persian Gulf during the 18th century 10. AMIN, Abdul Amir. British interests in the Persian Gulf. Leiden, E.J. Brill, 1967. 8º (24 × 15.5 cm). With a folding map of the Persian Gulf. Original publisher’s pink cloth, with title in gold on spine and front board. € 600 First edition of a work on the British interests in the Persian Gulf, written by the Iraqi historian Abdul Amir Amin (born 1925). It starts with a history of Britain in the Persian Gulf and further discusses the British trade and commercial interests in the area during the 18th century. Other chapters deal with the decline of the British interest and the British East India Company. The main text is followed by appendices and a bibliography. With some library stamps. Some discolouration on the binding due to former shelf marks. Otherwise in very good condition. Al-Muntafiq 11. [ARAB BUREAU, Basrah Branch]. The Muntafik. Al Sa’dun. Bani Malik. Ajwad. Bani Sa’id. Bani Huchaim. (Confidential). Calcutta, Superintendent Government Printing, 1917. 2º. With numerous genealogical tables and a folding map lithographed in red and black. Later cloth with chipped original printer wrappers mounted on covers. € 8500 Confidential British government handbook on “Al-Muntafiq”, a large Arab tribal league in southern and central Iraq, with an account of their history and their then-current struggles against British occupation. Some edge chipping, but generally well-preserved. Smudged pencil ownership in Arabic on title page, stating that the book is from the library of the Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al-Said Pasha (dated 1943). Extremely rare; OCLC locates only three copies (Oxford; Hartford Seminary; Portland State University); none in the British Library. OCLC 18401396. Arabian Oil for the Western World 12. ARAMCO. Arabian Oil and its relation to World Oil Needs. [No place or printer, 1948]. Large 4º. With illustrations and colour maps. Plastic spiral bound. € 1500 Rare promotional brochure issued by the Arabian American Oil Co. (Aramco) only four years after the company name had been adopted. The publication spells out the company’s vision for the future in the light of an ever-growing international demand for oil. While in 1947 U.S. oil consumption had for the first time exceeded production and America anticipated the need to have to import increasing quan- tities of its oil, the planned postwar order in Western Europe would necessitate “the restoration and improvement of the productivity of the war-torn economy”. The increased oil production necessary for the global industry, this brochure argues, would have to come from Arabia, where Aramco already was 8

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The story tells of Ganem, a son of a merchant from Damascus, who harems, fairy-tale princes, fairies and genies, sorcerers and sages, a world of fantastic adventure Laccadives, Maldives and west coast of India, the Andamans, Java and Burma. ad-Din al-Isfahani, Ibn al-Adim and many more.
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.