Gulistān. گلستان. | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

Gulistān. گلستان.
( گلستان)

İsim Gulistān. گلستان.
İsim Orijinal گلستان
Yazar Saʻdī. سعدي.
Yazar Orijinal سعدي
Basım Tarihi: 1556
Konu Islamic ethics. Sufi poetry > Early works to 1800. Manuscripts, Persian > Michigan > Ann Arbor.
Tür Belge
Dil Farsça
Dijital Evet
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 1 v. ([200]p. ) ; 23.5cm.
Kütüphane: Columbia Üniversitesi Kütüphaneleri
Kayıt Numarası ht005236762
Lokasyon Online
Tarih 1556
Notlar Gift of Stephen Spaulding. Colophon states that the copy was made by Ghulām Ghawth in the city of ʻAzīmābād (also known as Patna, capital of the Bihar province of India) in the year one of an unidentifiable Mughul ruler's reign. Although no name is provided for this ruler, an epithet is present, which contains the word "khalīfah"; since only Akbar, Jahangīr, and Shāh Jahan referred to themselves as khalīfahs, it is likely that the text is referring to one of these three emperors. If so, the date of production would be either 1556, 1605, or 1627, which are the dates of the accessions of each of these three kings. First page of manuscript contains a note in English written by one owner, which reads: "I bought this at the sale of General Carnac's Books: it is the copy which the general lent to Sir WIlliam Jones when employed in compiling his Persian Grammar. A very correct copy." There is also a printed note pasted onto this page with the same information. Seventh page features the title of the work and table of contents hand-written in Latin. Written in black nastaʻlīq script. Rubricated. Text is bordered with thin blue and red lines. Reddish-brown soft leather bound codex with simple tooling on upper and lower covers. Binding may not be original; some folios of different paper seem to have been added at the front and back, which have been left blank.
Örnek Metin Written in 656/1258, the Gulistān is Saʻdī's most famous work, composed in rhymed prose with many verses interspersed throughout. The work, which is usually divided into eight sections, constists of entertaining anecdotes that illustrate ethical points.
Biyografik / Tarihsel Not Famous Ṣufī poet, Shaykh Abū ʻAbd allāh Musharrifu' al-Dīn bin Muṣiḥ Saʻdī; born in Shīrāz at the end of the 12th century. Lived for a time in Baghdad where he was influenced by Suhravardī. Traveled extensively, but eventually returned to Shīrāz, where he wrote his most famous works, the Gulistān and the Bustān, and eventually died in 691/1292.
Kaynaklar Browne, v. ii, p.525-532; Rypka, p. 251-253.
Tekdüzen Başlık Gulistān گلستان.
WorldCat https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/156838387
Kaynağa git Columbia Üniversitesi Kütüphaneleri Columbia University Libraries
Columbia University Libraries Columbia Üniversitesi Kütüphaneleri
Kaynağa git

Gulistān. گلستان.

( گلستان)
Yazar Saʻdī. سعدي.
Yazar Orijinal سعدي
Basım Tarihi 1556
Konu Islamic ethics. Sufi poetry > Early works to 1800. Manuscripts, Persian > Michigan > Ann Arbor.
Tür Belge
Dil Farsça
Dijital Evet
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 1 v. ([200]p. ) ; 23.5cm.
Kütüphane Columbia Üniversitesi Kütüphaneleri
Kayıt Numarası ht005236762
Lokasyon Online
Tarih 1556
Notlar Gift of Stephen Spaulding. Colophon states that the copy was made by Ghulām Ghawth in the city of ʻAzīmābād (also known as Patna, capital of the Bihar province of India) in the year one of an unidentifiable Mughul ruler's reign. Although no name is provided for this ruler, an epithet is present, which contains the word "khalīfah"; since only Akbar, Jahangīr, and Shāh Jahan referred to themselves as khalīfahs, it is likely that the text is referring to one of these three emperors. If so, the date of production would be either 1556, 1605, or 1627, which are the dates of the accessions of each of these three kings. First page of manuscript contains a note in English written by one owner, which reads: "I bought this at the sale of General Carnac's Books: it is the copy which the general lent to Sir WIlliam Jones when employed in compiling his Persian Grammar. A very correct copy." There is also a printed note pasted onto this page with the same information. Seventh page features the title of the work and table of contents hand-written in Latin. Written in black nastaʻlīq script. Rubricated. Text is bordered with thin blue and red lines. Reddish-brown soft leather bound codex with simple tooling on upper and lower covers. Binding may not be original; some folios of different paper seem to have been added at the front and back, which have been left blank.
Örnek Metin Written in 656/1258, the Gulistān is Saʻdī's most famous work, composed in rhymed prose with many verses interspersed throughout. The work, which is usually divided into eight sections, constists of entertaining anecdotes that illustrate ethical points.
Biyografik / Tarihsel Not Famous Ṣufī poet, Shaykh Abū ʻAbd allāh Musharrifu' al-Dīn bin Muṣiḥ Saʻdī; born in Shīrāz at the end of the 12th century. Lived for a time in Baghdad where he was influenced by Suhravardī. Traveled extensively, but eventually returned to Shīrāz, where he wrote his most famous works, the Gulistān and the Bustān, and eventually died in 691/1292.
Kaynaklar Browne, v. ii, p.525-532; Rypka, p. 251-253.
Tekdüzen Başlık Gulistān گلستان.
WorldCat https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/156838387
Columbia University Libraries
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