Kalām al-mulūk, mulūk al-kalām : ḥasb al-farmān-i shahryār-i Afghānistān ḥaz̤rat z̤̤iyāʼ al-millah va al-dīn Amīr ʻAbd al-Raḥman Khān Ghāzī, khallada Allāhu mulkahu Kitāb-i muntakhabāt-i Anvār-i Suhaylī kih bih nafas-i nafīs-i mubārak-i khūd-i ḥaz̤rat-i pādshāh-i Islāmʹpanāh intikhāb farmūdah : musammá bih Āʼīnah-i jahānʹnamā, kih har nuktah-i ān z̲akhīrahʹīst kih musāfirān-i dunyā rā zād va tūshah-i dīn va dunyā ḥāṣil va bahrahʹvar mīgardānad | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

Kalām al-mulūk, mulūk al-kalām : ḥasb al-farmān-i shahryār-i Afghānistān ḥaz̤rat z̤̤iyāʼ al-millah va al-dīn Amīr ʻAbd al-Raḥman Khān Ghāzī, khallada Allāhu mulkahu Kitāb-i muntakhabāt-i Anvār-i Suhaylī kih bih nafas-i nafīs-i mubārak-i khūd-i ḥaz̤rat-i pādshāh-i Islāmʹpanāh intikhāb farmūdah : musammá bih Āʼīnah-i jahānʹnamā, kih har nuktah-i ān z̲akhīrahʹīst kih musāfirān-i dunyā rā zād va tūshah-i dīn va dunyā ḥāṣil va bahrahʹvar mīgardānad

İsim Kalām al-mulūk, mulūk al-kalām : ḥasb al-farmān-i shahryār-i Afghānistān ḥaz̤rat z̤̤iyāʼ al-millah va al-dīn Amīr ʻAbd al-Raḥman Khān Ghāzī, khallada Allāhu mulkahu Kitāb-i muntakhabāt-i Anvār-i Suhaylī kih bih nafas-i nafīs-i mubārak-i khūd-i ḥaz̤rat-i pādshāh-i Islāmʹpanāh intikhāb farmūdah : musammá bih Āʼīnah-i jahānʹnamā, kih har nuktah-i ān z̲akhīrahʹīst kih musāfirān-i dunyā rā zād va tūshah-i dīn va dunyā ḥāṣil va bahrahʹvar mīgardānad
Basım Tarihi: 1900-01-01
Basım Yeri - Library of Congress
Konu afghanistan | fables, persian | more | less
Tür Kitap
Dil Farsça
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar book
Kütüphane: Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Kayıt Numarası loc-74214952
Lokasyon Library of Congress
Tarih 1900-01-01
Notlar Āyinah-i jahān numā (The mirror of orrery) is a prose work of fables in Persian, which are relevant to both religious and worldly affairs. An orrery is a model representing the movements of heavenly bodies around the sun. The book was published in 1899 in Kabul by lithography. It is thought that it may derive in part from a work by Ḥusayn Vāʻiẓ Kāshifī, but the name of the author is unknown. This copy is arranged in several sections. It has a typically late-19th century Afghan-style leather cover embossed with flowers. The inside cover page also has a description affirming the approval for publication of ʻAbd al-Raḥmān Khān, then emir of Afghanistan, and the name of the scribe or the man responsible for the publication, Gul Mohammad Mohammadzai Durrani Afghan, who seems to have been an official in the Afghan administration. This information appears in more detail in the foreword and the epilogue, which mentions that the emir himself had read the book several times at night and approved its publication so that "people should read and benefit from its fables." The contents are arranged as 14 short and 12 long fables. These fables cover themes of ethics, religious piety, honesty, loyalty, friendship, obedience, respect, and the like. The fable on pages 17-18 is on the moral and professional responsibility of society's learned individuals in serving, advising, and correcting a (new) ruler or king. Page 28 has a fable on why it is wrong and potentially harmful if a person is not frank and truthful in addressing the king, a doctor, or friends. The 14 short fables that appear on pages 5-15 mostly start with the relative pronoun "That" or "Who." The 12 long fables usually start "Scholars have said that" or "The story of." Each title is in bold face and numbered. Well-known poems appear occasionally, as on page seven, often after a fable for the purposes of acclaiming its importance and value. The pages are numbered with Indo-Arabic numerals; pages 141, 173, 236, 270, 278, and 311 are missing. Pages 1-144 were by Gul Mohammad; after his death, his brother, Mohammad Zaman Khan Barakzai, completed the remaining pages. World Digital Library. | more | less
Kaynağa git Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi Digital Library of the Middle East
Digital Library of the Middle East Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Kaynağa git

Kalām al-mulūk, mulūk al-kalām : ḥasb al-farmān-i shahryār-i Afghānistān ḥaz̤rat z̤̤iyāʼ al-millah va al-dīn Amīr ʻAbd al-Raḥman Khān Ghāzī, khallada Allāhu mulkahu Kitāb-i muntakhabāt-i Anvār-i Suhaylī kih bih nafas-i nafīs-i mubārak-i khūd-i ḥaz̤rat-i pādshāh-i Islāmʹpanāh intikhāb farmūdah : musammá bih Āʼīnah-i jahānʹnamā, kih har nuktah-i ān z̲akhīrahʹīst kih musāfirān-i dunyā rā zād va tūshah-i dīn va dunyā ḥāṣil va bahrahʹvar mīgardānad

Basım Tarihi 1900-01-01
Basım Yeri - Library of Congress
Konu afghanistan | fables, persian | more | less
Tür Kitap
Dil Farsça
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar book
Kütüphane Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi
Kayıt Numarası loc-74214952
Lokasyon Library of Congress
Tarih 1900-01-01
Notlar Āyinah-i jahān numā (The mirror of orrery) is a prose work of fables in Persian, which are relevant to both religious and worldly affairs. An orrery is a model representing the movements of heavenly bodies around the sun. The book was published in 1899 in Kabul by lithography. It is thought that it may derive in part from a work by Ḥusayn Vāʻiẓ Kāshifī, but the name of the author is unknown. This copy is arranged in several sections. It has a typically late-19th century Afghan-style leather cover embossed with flowers. The inside cover page also has a description affirming the approval for publication of ʻAbd al-Raḥmān Khān, then emir of Afghanistan, and the name of the scribe or the man responsible for the publication, Gul Mohammad Mohammadzai Durrani Afghan, who seems to have been an official in the Afghan administration. This information appears in more detail in the foreword and the epilogue, which mentions that the emir himself had read the book several times at night and approved its publication so that "people should read and benefit from its fables." The contents are arranged as 14 short and 12 long fables. These fables cover themes of ethics, religious piety, honesty, loyalty, friendship, obedience, respect, and the like. The fable on pages 17-18 is on the moral and professional responsibility of society's learned individuals in serving, advising, and correcting a (new) ruler or king. Page 28 has a fable on why it is wrong and potentially harmful if a person is not frank and truthful in addressing the king, a doctor, or friends. The 14 short fables that appear on pages 5-15 mostly start with the relative pronoun "That" or "Who." The 12 long fables usually start "Scholars have said that" or "The story of." Each title is in bold face and numbered. Well-known poems appear occasionally, as on page seven, often after a fable for the purposes of acclaiming its importance and value. The pages are numbered with Indo-Arabic numerals; pages 141, 173, 236, 270, 278, and 311 are missing. Pages 1-144 were by Gul Mohammad; after his death, his brother, Mohammad Zaman Khan Barakzai, completed the remaining pages. World Digital Library. | more | less
Digital Library of the Middle East
Ortadoğu Dijital Kütüphanesi yönlendiriliyorsunuz...

Lütfen bekleyiniz.