Publicado por W Bulmer for G. and W. Nicol, London, 1806
Librería: Jeremy Norman's historyofscience, Novato, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 524,91
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Añadir al carritoIbn Wahshiyya, Ahmed ibn Abu Bakr (fl. 9th 10th centuries). Ancient alphabets and hieroglyphic characters explained . . . in the Arabic language . . . and in English by Joseph Hammer. [2], xxi, [3], 54, [2], 136pp.; the last 136pp. numbered in reverse. Text illustrations. London: Printed by W. Bulmer; sold by G. and W. Nicol, 1806. 211 x 165 mm. Original quarter cloth, boards, paper spine label, front inner hinge broken, light edgewear. Minor foxing and toning but very good. First Edition in English of Kitab Shawq al-Mustaham, a ninth-century work on ancient writing systems by Arabic alchemist Ibn Wahshiyya. Ibn Wahshiyya claimed to have been able to decipher many ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic signs, identifying their phonetic values and meanings. Some modern scholars support Ibn Wahshiyya's claims, crediting him with anticipating Champollion and Young by 800 years; others are more skeptical, arguing that Ibn Wahshiyya's understanding of Egyptian hieroglyphics did not go beyond the general concept that hieroglyphic signs had phonetic as well as symbolic values. The present book includes both Arabic and English versions of Ibn Wahshiyya's text. Since Arabic is read from right to left, the Arabic section, which comes at the end of the book, is paginated in reverse. The English translation was the work of Joseph Hammer (later von Hammer-Purgstall), an Austrian scholar who was then serving as secretary to the imperial delegation in Constantinople. .