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Relation De l'Égypte Par Abd-Allatif, Médecin Arabe De Bagdad: Suivie De Divers Extraits D'écrivains Orientaux, Et D'un État Des Provinces Et Des Villages De l'Égypte Dans Le XIVe Siècle

Sacy, Antoine Isaac Silvestre de(Edited and translated by)
Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Perspectives from the Royal Asiatic Society series
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A native of Baghdad, Abd-Allatif (1162-1231) was a versatile scholar and scientist of vast erudition.

This prolific author travelled widely throughout the Muslim world and wrote an account of Egypt at a time when the country was rarely visited by Europeans.

The book covers matters ranging from natural history and medicine to culture and domestic economy.

It also includes a vivid description of the terrible famine that Abd-Allatif witnessed in 1200 and 1201 when the Nile failed to flood.

The text was widely known in Europe at the end of the eighteenth century thanks to Latin and German translations. Orientalist Antoine Isaac Silvestre de Sacy (1758-1838) translated and edited this version, first published in French in 1810.

Complementing this invaluable account are excerpts from several other Arab writers, a detailed biography of Abd-Allatif, and a general overview of the provinces and villages of Egypt in the fourteenth century.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1139507648 / 9781139507646
Ebook
05/09/2014
French
782 pages