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ELEMENTARY ARABIC a series planned by FREDERIC DU PRE THORNTON.
Lecturer in Persian in the University of Cambridge, and some time
Fellow of Trinity College Cambridge at the University Press 1909 .
PREFACE THIS Reading 7 Book is the second of three which were
planned by the late Mr Thornton for his Arabic Series. The first,
published in 1907, contains certain extracts from the Koran, a
portion pp. 13 64 of Wrights Arabic Reading-Book, a grammatical
analysis of the Koranic text, and a glossary the third, which I
hope to bring out next year, will comprise the remainder of Wrights
work, a glossary, and brief explanatory notes. The present volume
is marked by some novel features. 1. The selected passages are
taken from texts and many scripts which, so far as I know, have not
hitherto been edited by any European scholar. 2. They have been
chosen and arranged in chronological order with the purpose of
illustrating the literary, social, and religious history of the
Arabs. 3. Notes have been added at the foot of each page, partly to
explain grammatical and linguistic difficulties, and partly to
supply such literary and historical information as is
indispensable. I will now state the various sources from which I
have derived the nineteen extracts included in this book. I. The
manners, customs, and beliefs of the Pre-Islamic Arabs. This
passage is taken from the Mustatraf, an extensive anthology
compiled by Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Khatib al- Abshihi, who died
about 1450 A. D., and comprises the greater part of the fifty-ninth
chapter Bulaq edition, 1268 A. H., vol. ii. pp. 9599. VI PREFACE
II. The war of Dahis and al Ghabra. This account of one of the most
famous Pre-islamic wars occurs in the iqdal farid by Ibn abdi
rabbihi of Cordova, who died in 940 A. D. Cairo edition, 1293A. H.,
vol. iii. p. 67, 1. 21 to p. 68, 1. 27. III. Arab knights. Also
from the iqd vol. i, p. 44, 1. 11 to p. 45, last line. IV.
Concerning poetry and poets. This passage consists of extracts from
the forty-ninth section of the Muzhir ft uldm al lughaft, a
well-known treatise on philology, by Jalal al din al Suytiti, who
died in 1505 A. D. Bulaq edition, 1282 A. H., vol. ii. pp. 234245.
V. Specimens of Arabian eloquence, wit, and wisdom. These are
selected from the Kitdb al baydn wal tabai yun, a very interesting
work on rhetoric by amr ibn Bahr al Jahiz, who died in 869 A. D.
Cairo edition, 1313 A. H., vol. i. p. 175, 1. 5 to p. 192, 1. 14.
VI. Early Moslem asceticism. Extracts from the same work, vol. ii.
p. 86, 1. 9 to p. 91, 1. 22. VII. The meaning and derivation of
Sufi. Two extracts from the Risdltih, al Qushai riyafi an important
treatise on early Muharnmadan mysticism, by Abu 1 Qasim al Qushairi
of Nishapur, who died in 1072 A. D. Cairo edition, 1318 A. H., p.
9, 11. 310, and p. 149, 11. 2435. VIII. Stories of Moslem saints.
These are taken from the Leiden manuscript of the Hilytih al auliyd
Cod. 311 Warn. by Abu Nuaim al Isfahan, who died in 1038 A. D. See
the Leiden Catalogue, vol. v. p. 209. The anecdotes of Ibrahim ibn
Adham occur in vol. i. f. 182 b and foil., while the story of Dhu 1
Nun al Misri comes in vol. ii. f. 205 a and foil. PREFACE Vll IX.
The Shuubiyah and their opponents. Two extracts from the iqd al
arid of Tbn abdi rabbihi, vol. ii. p. 85, 1. 19 to p. 86, 1. 21 and
p. 90, 1. 11 to p. 91, 1. 17. X. The Mutaziliyah. Two extracts from
the KaMttl, a popular anthology com piled byBaha al din al Amili,
who died in 1621 A. D. Bulaq edition, 1288 A. H., p. 159, 11. 1421,
and p. 219, 1. 18 to p. 220, 1. 7. XI Some Arab orators. This
passage occurs in the Zahr al dddb by Abu Ishaq Ibrahim al Husri of
Qairawan in North Africa, who died in 1022 or 1061 A. D. His
anthology lias been printed on the margins of the iqd al farid
Cairo edition, 1293A. H.. The passage in question will be found in
vol. iii. p. 200, 1. 19 to p. 204, 1. 8...
First published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
First published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
A re-issue in paperback of Nicholson's classic survey of the field
of Islamic mysticism. Intended as reading for students of sufism,
philosophy and literature, it also provides an introduction to the
translations of both R.A. Nicholson and A.J. Arberry.
Selection of the lyrical poetry of Jalaluddin Rumi.
This book offers a classic general introduction to Arabic literary
history, aiming to cover, in Nicholson's words, "what the Arabs
thought, and to indicate as far as possible the influences which
moulded their thought". The pages of almost every Arabic book
abound in allusions to their names, events, movements and ideas
which puzzle the Western reader. This work answers that need now as
much as when it was first published.
This selection of the lyrical verse of the great mystical poet
Jalal'uddin Rumi, first published in 1898, provides an introduction
to the enigmatic and ambiguous style characteristic of Sufi
doctrine. Nicholson gives both original text and translation,
together with a lengthy introduction, extensive notes, appendices
and indices.
First published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Originally published in 1922, this book presents translations from
about fifty authors of Arabic and Persian works. The selection is
chiefly comprised of poetry and prose literature, but extracts are
also included from biographers and historians. The extracts, which
are mostly short and seldom run for longer than five pages, cover
the period from the beginning of the sixth to the end of the
fifteenth century AD. Illustrative figures and textual notes are
also included. This book will be of value to anyone with an
interest in Arabic and Persian literature.
Reynold A. Nicholson (1868-1945) was a prominent English
Orientalist who wrote extensively on both Islamic literature and
Islamic mysticism. Originally published in 1923, this volume is
based on a series of three lectures delivered by Nicholson at the
School of Oriental Studies during the summer of 1922. The chief
purpose of the text is to show that Sufism is not necessarily
pantheistic, but often bears the marks of a genuine personal
religion inspired by a personal God. This book will be of value to
anyone interested in the development of Orientalism and
interpretations of Islamic thought.
Edward Granville Browne (1862-1926), was a British Orientalist who
produced numerous works of academic value, mainly relating to the
areas of Persian history and literature. Originally published in
1932, this volume is based on the list of Browne's writings at the
end of his Materials for the Study of the Babi Religion (1918), but
differs from it in some respects. It comprises all his own books,
editions, and translations; the articles which he contributed to
the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society; his political pamphlets
and his papers read to and published by the Persia Society. This is
a well-organised and informative text that will provide a valuable
resource for anyone interested Browne, and Persian culture in
general.
Mysticism is such a vital element in Islam that without some
understanding of its ideas and of the particular forms which they
assume it is hard to penetrate below the surface of Muslim
religious life. In this book, which was first published in 1921,
Professor Nicholson examines the life, work and teaching of three
of the most important of the early Sufis - the Persians Abu Sa'id
(937-1049) and Al-Jili (1365-1406), and the Cairene Arab Ibnu
l-Farid (1182-1235). These great mystics were almost legendary
figures; possessors of occult and mysterious powers, whose tombs
became holy shrines. They were regarded in effect as saints, but
saints canonised by the people while still living, not posthumously
by the church. Sufism, as Professor Nicholson suggests, lies at the
heart both of the religious philosophy and the popular religion of
Islam.
The Arabs during a thousand years or more produced one of the
richest and most extensive literatures of the world, embracing fine
poetry (of the fierce desert life equally with the sophistication
of royal courts), belles lettres (learned essays, satires, de arte
amoris), religious, mystical and philosophical writings, and huge
compendia of history, biography and geography. For sixty years, the
best account in English of this vast output has been, by universal
consent, R. A. Nicholson's Literary History of the Arabs; its
supremacy will long remain unchallenged. That it is a book full of
erudition and high critical judgement goes without saying; its
author is also a poet-translator of rare excellence.
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