Kīmiyā-yi Saʻādat, [982, i.e. 1574]. كيميائ سعادت, [982ه, 1574م] | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

Kīmiyā-yi Saʻādat, [982, i.e. 1574]. كيميائ سعادت, [982ه, 1574م]
( كيميائ سعادت ه م)

İsim Kīmiyā-yi Saʻādat, [982, i.e. 1574]. كيميائ سعادت, [982ه, 1574م]
İsim Orijinal كيميائ سعادت ه م
Yazar Ghazzālī, 1058-1111. غزالي.
Yazar Orijinal غزالي
Basım Tarihi: 1574
Konu Sufism > Early works to 1800. Islamic ethics > Early works to 1800. Islam > Doctrines > Early works to 1800. Manuscripts, Persian > Michigan > Ann Arbor.
Tür Belge
Dil Farsça
Dijital Evet
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 1 v. ([912] p.) ; 26.25 cm.
Kütüphane: Columbia Üniversitesi Kütüphaneleri
Kayıt Numarası ht102911468
Lokasyon Online
Tarih 1574
Notlar Former shelfmark: From front flyleaf, "IL 309" (likely supplied by Yahuda, see acquisitions slip). Copy completed: Shaʻbān 982/ November 1574 in the hand of Qāsim b. Ḥājī Mīrzā. Text written in clear black naskh script with rubrication. Text bordered in blue and gold lines throughout. Initial page has medallion design with gold, including gold and red floral patterns on blue paint. The title of the work is no longer apparent in the center medallion. First page of the text has ʻunwān in similar colors and design. Title of work is also missing from this location. Volume has edge title, but spelled "kimiyā-yi saʻādat" instead of "kīmiyā-yi saʻādat". Leather bound codex with intricate tooling on upper and lower covers; some residue of gold paint in design. Doublures feature elaborate leather filigree on red leather with gold and paint which overlays a blue painted background. Both covers are detached.
Örnek Metin Translated as "The Alchemy of Bliss," this most famous work of al-Ghazālī, written in Persian, presents the religious and ethical obligations of the true Muslim from a mystical perspective. It is considered an abridgement of his extensive Arabic work, Iḥyā ʻulūm al-dīn.
Biyografik / Tarihsel Not Famous theologian and prolific Ṣufī writer, Abū Hāmid Muhammad b. Muhammad al-Ghazālī was born in Tūs in 450/1058, the early Saljuk period. Later, he studied in Nishāpūr, and was eventually appointed to a post in the Niẓāmiyyah madrasah in Baghdad by Niẓām al-Mulk himself in 484/1091-2. After some years he returned to Nishāpūr and then Tūs, where he died in 505/1111.
İçinde Yahuda Collection.
Kaynaklar Browne, v. ii, p.293-6. GAL, v. I, p.423, n. 29
Tekdüzen Başlık Kīmiyā-yi saʻādat. كيمياى سعادت
WorldCat https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1347384821
Kaynağa git Columbia Üniversitesi Kütüphaneleri Columbia University Libraries
Columbia University Libraries Columbia Üniversitesi Kütüphaneleri
Kaynağa git

Kīmiyā-yi Saʻādat, [982, i.e. 1574]. كيميائ سعادت, [982ه, 1574م]

( كيميائ سعادت ه م)
Yazar Ghazzālī, 1058-1111. غزالي.
Yazar Orijinal غزالي
Basım Tarihi 1574
Konu Sufism > Early works to 1800. Islamic ethics > Early works to 1800. Islam > Doctrines > Early works to 1800. Manuscripts, Persian > Michigan > Ann Arbor.
Tür Belge
Dil Farsça
Dijital Evet
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 1 v. ([912] p.) ; 26.25 cm.
Kütüphane Columbia Üniversitesi Kütüphaneleri
Kayıt Numarası ht102911468
Lokasyon Online
Tarih 1574
Notlar Former shelfmark: From front flyleaf, "IL 309" (likely supplied by Yahuda, see acquisitions slip). Copy completed: Shaʻbān 982/ November 1574 in the hand of Qāsim b. Ḥājī Mīrzā. Text written in clear black naskh script with rubrication. Text bordered in blue and gold lines throughout. Initial page has medallion design with gold, including gold and red floral patterns on blue paint. The title of the work is no longer apparent in the center medallion. First page of the text has ʻunwān in similar colors and design. Title of work is also missing from this location. Volume has edge title, but spelled "kimiyā-yi saʻādat" instead of "kīmiyā-yi saʻādat". Leather bound codex with intricate tooling on upper and lower covers; some residue of gold paint in design. Doublures feature elaborate leather filigree on red leather with gold and paint which overlays a blue painted background. Both covers are detached.
Örnek Metin Translated as "The Alchemy of Bliss," this most famous work of al-Ghazālī, written in Persian, presents the religious and ethical obligations of the true Muslim from a mystical perspective. It is considered an abridgement of his extensive Arabic work, Iḥyā ʻulūm al-dīn.
Biyografik / Tarihsel Not Famous theologian and prolific Ṣufī writer, Abū Hāmid Muhammad b. Muhammad al-Ghazālī was born in Tūs in 450/1058, the early Saljuk period. Later, he studied in Nishāpūr, and was eventually appointed to a post in the Niẓāmiyyah madrasah in Baghdad by Niẓām al-Mulk himself in 484/1091-2. After some years he returned to Nishāpūr and then Tūs, where he died in 505/1111.
İçinde Yahuda Collection.
Kaynaklar Browne, v. ii, p.293-6. GAL, v. I, p.423, n. 29
Tekdüzen Başlık Kīmiyā-yi saʻādat. كيمياى سعادت
WorldCat https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1347384821
Columbia University Libraries
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