Fr. 492.00

Eastern Wisedome and Learning - The Study of Arabic in Seventeenth-Century England

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext The author is to be congratulated on an extremely thoroughly researched! systematic and detailed account of Arabic studies in seventeenth-century England. The present work is based on a very wide range of printed primary and secondary sources! and on unpublished materials! hitherto largely unexplored! in the Bodleian and British Libraries and the Public Record Office. Klappentext This book narrates the extraordinary growth in the study of Arabic in England from the late sixteenth century, when it was almost non-existent, to the end of the seventeenth. By its high point around 1666, England was preeminent among European countries in the study of Arabic. Permanent chairs of Arabic had been established at Oxford and Cambridge, and specialized presses in Oxford and London had produced important Arabic works. In this masterly and original study, Professor Toomer gives the first detailed account of this process, set against the religious and political background in England and in Europe. He shows how trade with the Ottoman Empire and mistrust of Islam influenced the study of Arabic. Finally, he traces the course and causes of the drastic decline in Arabic studies towards the end of the century. Zusammenfassung This book narrates the extraordinary growth in the study of Arabic in England from the late sixteenth century, when it was almost non-existent, to the end of the seventeenth. By its high point around 1666, England was pre-eminent among European countries in the study of Arabic. Permanent Chairs of Arabic had been established at Oxford and Cambridge, and specialized presses in Oxford and London had produced Arabic works. The Professor at Oxford, Edward Pococke, was recognized as the foremost scholar in the field in Europe, and a great collection of Arabic manuscripts, begun by Archbishop Laud, was being built up at Oxford.In this masterly and original study, Professor Toomer gives the first detailed account of this process, set against the religious and political background in England and Europe. He shows how trade with the Ottoman Empire and mistrust of Islam influenced the study of Arabic. Finally, he traces the course and causes of the drastic decline in Arabic studies towards the end of the century....

Product details

Authors G J Toomer, G. J. Toomer, G. J. (Professor Emeritus of the History o Toomer
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 28.03.1996
 
EAN 9780198202912
ISBN 978-0-19-820291-2
No. of pages 396
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > Other languages / Other literatures
Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > General, dictionaries

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