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Auction archive: Lot number 1023

[Quran - Arabic] Al-Coranus s. Lex

Auction 13.12.2019
13 Dec 2019
Estimate
€4,000 - €5,000
ca. US$4,440 - US$5,551
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 1023

[Quran - Arabic] Al-Coranus s. Lex

Auction 13.12.2019
13 Dec 2019
Estimate
€4,000 - €5,000
ca. US$4,440 - US$5,551
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

[Quran - Arabic] Al-Coranus s. Lex Islamitica Muhammedis, filii Abdallae Pseudoprophetae, ad optimorum codicum fidem edita ex Museo Abrahami Hinckelmann, D. Hamburg, Schultz-Schiller [= Wid. G. Schultz & B. Schiller], [1 bl., 1 bl., 1 bl., 1 bl., 1 bl., 80]-560-[pp. ("Sententia Muhammedis" bound after Latin title; sl. toned, occasional minor dampstaining or spotting). Contemp. half vellum, marbled paper on covers, flat spine, red edges (rubbed, loosening at end, corners def., sm. def. at head). Very good copy. “First and only ed. of Hinckelmann’s Arabic text of the Qur’an, the 2nd ed. of the Arabic Qur’an, with a 36-page Latin introduction by the editor making extensive reference to the earlier literature. The first complete Arabic ed. of the Qur’an was printed at Venice ca. 1537/intended for distribution in the Middle East, but the entire ed. was thought to have been destroyed until one copy turned up in the 1980s. Hinckelmann’s ed. was therefore the 1st ed. available to European scholars, missionaries or Islamic readers. It was followed by Ludovico Marracci’s Arabic and Latin ed. published at Padua in whose two folio volumes and extensive (anti-Islamic) commentary made it both expensive and inconvenient to use. The editions published at St Petersburg (from and Kazan (from for the use of Islamic groups in the Russian Empire were almost unknown in Europe, so the present ed. remained the primary source for European knowledge of the Qur’an for years, until Flügel’s Leipzig ed. VDhas four different entries for this work, with different fingerprints, but they are all the same edition.” (Forum) Abraham Hinckelmann (1652-1695), a Hamburg theologian, studied at Wittenberg and collected many Oriental manuscripts. He compiled a Quranic lexicon in manuscript and planned a Latin translation of the Koran, but this was never realised. Arabic title. Latin title in red and black. Arabic (woodcut) and Latin half-titles. Latin introduction. Text in vocalized Arabic throughout. Ref. Cp. VD-3:& 7:& 32:& 39:139712T, all with or prelim. ff. - our copy has prelim. ff. (the only other complete copy known is in the Russian State Library). - Hamilton (Europe and the Arab world) - Smitskamp (Philologia orientalis) - Schnurrer (Bibl. Arabica) Prov. Contemp. marginal Latin annotations on pp. 493-- Some interlinear annotations. - Monastic library stamp and tickets.

Auction archive: Lot number 1023
Auction:
Datum:
13 Dec 2019
Auction house:
ARENBERG AUCTIONS
Wolstraat 19/2
1000 Brüssel
Belgium
info@arenbergauctions.com
+32 (0)2 544 1055
+32 (0)2 544 1057
Beschreibung:

[Quran - Arabic] Al-Coranus s. Lex Islamitica Muhammedis, filii Abdallae Pseudoprophetae, ad optimorum codicum fidem edita ex Museo Abrahami Hinckelmann, D. Hamburg, Schultz-Schiller [= Wid. G. Schultz & B. Schiller], [1 bl., 1 bl., 1 bl., 1 bl., 1 bl., 80]-560-[pp. ("Sententia Muhammedis" bound after Latin title; sl. toned, occasional minor dampstaining or spotting). Contemp. half vellum, marbled paper on covers, flat spine, red edges (rubbed, loosening at end, corners def., sm. def. at head). Very good copy. “First and only ed. of Hinckelmann’s Arabic text of the Qur’an, the 2nd ed. of the Arabic Qur’an, with a 36-page Latin introduction by the editor making extensive reference to the earlier literature. The first complete Arabic ed. of the Qur’an was printed at Venice ca. 1537/intended for distribution in the Middle East, but the entire ed. was thought to have been destroyed until one copy turned up in the 1980s. Hinckelmann’s ed. was therefore the 1st ed. available to European scholars, missionaries or Islamic readers. It was followed by Ludovico Marracci’s Arabic and Latin ed. published at Padua in whose two folio volumes and extensive (anti-Islamic) commentary made it both expensive and inconvenient to use. The editions published at St Petersburg (from and Kazan (from for the use of Islamic groups in the Russian Empire were almost unknown in Europe, so the present ed. remained the primary source for European knowledge of the Qur’an for years, until Flügel’s Leipzig ed. VDhas four different entries for this work, with different fingerprints, but they are all the same edition.” (Forum) Abraham Hinckelmann (1652-1695), a Hamburg theologian, studied at Wittenberg and collected many Oriental manuscripts. He compiled a Quranic lexicon in manuscript and planned a Latin translation of the Koran, but this was never realised. Arabic title. Latin title in red and black. Arabic (woodcut) and Latin half-titles. Latin introduction. Text in vocalized Arabic throughout. Ref. Cp. VD-3:& 7:& 32:& 39:139712T, all with or prelim. ff. - our copy has prelim. ff. (the only other complete copy known is in the Russian State Library). - Hamilton (Europe and the Arab world) - Smitskamp (Philologia orientalis) - Schnurrer (Bibl. Arabica) Prov. Contemp. marginal Latin annotations on pp. 493-- Some interlinear annotations. - Monastic library stamp and tickets.

Auction archive: Lot number 1023
Auction:
Datum:
13 Dec 2019
Auction house:
ARENBERG AUCTIONS
Wolstraat 19/2
1000 Brüssel
Belgium
info@arenbergauctions.com
+32 (0)2 544 1055
+32 (0)2 544 1057
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