1000 resultados para Persian literature


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jamaʻahā ʻAlī Ḥilmī al-Dāghistānī.

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Written in two columns, 14 lines per page, in a divani script in black ink, framed within double golden and blue lines. With catchwords on the verso of each leaf.

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Title supplied by cataloger.

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Written in a professional taʻlīq script in black ink, rubricated in red, 20 lines per page in 4 gold-ruled columns. Contains 115 miniatures portraying various scenes from the poem.

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Title from colophon (f. 233r).

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Title-pages of v. 3-4 read "A history of Persian literature".

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"Ueber die Legende von den sieben Schläfern, von C. J. L. Iken."; p. 288-311.

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Selections in Persian with Latin translation.

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This article discusses a series of texts by or about travellers to Safavid Persia in the early seventeenth century, and in particular the literature surrounding the Sherley brothers. It looks at the ways in which, in order to encourage support for the voyages they described, English travel writers emphasised the potential for closer Anglo-Persian relations. In doing so, such narratives took advantage of a developing awareness of sectarian division within Islam in order to differentiate Persia from the Ottoman Empire. The article then examines how The Travailes of the Three English Brothers (1607) by Day, Rowley and Wilkins, built on the possibilities suggested by the travel writings, and specifically their recognition of Islamic sectarian division, to develop an idealised model of how relations between Persia and England might function. More broadly, these texts demonstrate travellers’ interest in looking for potential correlation between Christian and Muslim identities during this period.