199 98 38MB
English Pages 1035 Year 1895
1895
1895 TIIE
JOURNAL OF THB
V
ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY OF
GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND
1895
.
PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY, 22,
ALBEMARLE STREET, LONDON, W. MDCCCXCV.
STEPHEN AUSTIN AND SONS,
PRINTERS, HERTFORD.
—
—
CONTENTS.
Art.
I.
— Description
the
about (Part
Art.
II.
—The
Art. IY.
Art. Y.
Mesopotamia and Baghdad, written year 900 a.d. by Ibn Serapion.
By Guy
1.)
Poem and its Author. By the Rev. Prof. Legge
— Ssuma
1
Part I
Ch'ien’s Historical Records.
:
The 77
Chapter II
:
The Hsia Dynasty. M.R.A.S
By Herbert
Kami Vocabularies. M.R.A.S
By Bernard Houghton,
—On
J.
Allen, 93
Ill
the Stress-Accent in the Modern Indo-Aryan
Vernaculars.
Art.
le Strange
Li Sao
Author.
Art. III.
PAGF.
of
YI. —Nejamesha,
By
G. A. Grierson, Ph.D., C.I.E.
Kaigamesha,
Kemeso.
By
Dr.
M.
Winternitz. Art. Art.
139
149
YII. — On the Khamtis. By P. R. Gukdon, M.R.A.S. By YIII. — Mythological Studies in the Rigveda.
A. A. Maclonell
157
165
The Tenth International Oriental
Congress.
Geneva, 1894
191
Correspondence. 1.
Relics found in Rangoon. St.
By
R. F. St.
Andrew
John
199
202
5.
By F. Max Muller. An Indo-Eranian Parallel. By L. C. Casartelli. Bud, Bad-a-r, and Badra. By J. G. R. Forlong. Ditto. By ditto
6.
The Author
211
2. 3. 4.
Sanskrit
MSS.
in China.
of the
Khalasat-at-Tawarlkh
.
.
202
203 204
— —K CONTENTS.
VI
PACK
Notes of the Quarter. 213
General Meetings of the Royal Asiatic Society
I.
Obituary Notices
II.
By R. K. Douglas 214 By Henri Cordier 216
1.
Dr. Terrien de Lacouperie.
2.
James Darmesteter.
III. Notices of
D.
S.
Books
Margoliouth.
Chrestomathin Baidawiana,
Commentary of El-Baidawi on Sura Reviewed by H. Hirschfeld the
Friedrich
Untersuchungen
Giese.
ueber
III.
222 die
’Addad auf Grund von Stellen in altarabischen Dichtern. By H. Hirschfeld C'apt. F. E. Johnson. The Seven Poems Suspended By H. Hirschfeld in the Temples at Mecca. Dr. H. Stumme. Tripolitanisch-TunisiscbeBeduinenlieder. By M. Gaster Elf Stiicke im Silha-Dialect von Dr. H. Stumme. Tazerwalt. By Th. G. de G d’Eskender, M. Jules Perruchon. Histoire d’‘Amda-Seyon II Na’od, Rois et de d’Ethiopie. By Tn. G. de G Rene Basset. Les Apocryphes ethiopiens. By
G
Th. G. de
Steindorff
—
optische Grammatik.
Socin and Dr.
By
Annamitischen Sprache.
H. Stumme.
Dialekt der Houwara By Tn. G. de G F. Kittel. L.
229 ;
Georg By Th.
A
des
Tir. G.
de G.
.
.
E. G.
230
Der Arabische
Wad Sus in
Marokko. 231
Kannada-English Dictionary.
R
T. Platts.
By
228
230
A.
By
227
Theoretisch-praktische Grammatik der
Dirr.
J.
227
Bou§iri.
G
A.
ltcv.
225
229
Rene Basset. La Bordah du Cheikh El By Th. G. de G Adolf Erman vEgyptische Grammatik G. de
223
232
A Grammar of
the Persian Language.
B
Gauiiishankar G. Ojua. Palaeography of India.
Pracin
Lipimala
By G. B
—The
235 2 16
—— CONTEXTS.
vii PAQK
A
Note on the Royal Asiatic Society’s . Ancient MS. of the Ganaratnamahodadhi.
G. Buhler.
.
IV. Additions
(
251
1-28
Members
List of
I.
218
Library
to the
continued ).
— Description
Mesopotamia
of
Baghdad, -written about the year 900
Ibn Serapion. Art. IX.
— The
— An of
Art.
By Gcr
(Part 2.)
and
a.d.
by
le Strange.
255
Origin and Earlier History of the Chinese
By
Coinage.
Art. X.
247
By
Gathiis.
W. West
E.
Art.
The Five Zoroastrian
H. Mills.
L.
L. C. Hopkins
317
unpublished Valabhl Copper-plate Inscription
King Dhruvasena
XI. — The
History of Kihva.
MS. by
By
I.
Dr. Tn. Bloch.
.
.
Edited from an Arabic
Arthur Strong
S.
379
385
Correspondence.
By
1.
The Burmese Hitopadesa. St. John
2.
Setebhissara.
3.
The Yidyadharapitaka.
4.
Chinese Biographical Dictionary.
By
R. F. St.
Andrew 431
Y. Fausboll
By
432
Louis de la Yallee
Poussin
By
E. H. F...
433 437
Notes of the Quarter. General Meetings of the Royal Asiatic Society
I.
II.
439
Obituary Notices 1.
August Dillmann.
By Wolf Wilhelm Count
Baudissin
3.
448
By Arthur A. Macdonell. Heinrich Karl Brugsch. By M. L. McClure.
2. Dr. S. C.
III. Notes and
Mai.an.
. .
453
.
457
.
News
The Ruins
of
Anuradhapura
Oriental Studies in Ceylon
464 464
—
::
CONTEXTS.
via IV. Xotices of Books
Maspero. The Dawn of Civilization Egypt and Ckaldaea. Reviewed by R. If. Cost. G. P. Taylok. The Student’s Gujarati Grammar.
Professor
By A. R Rene Basset. Etudes sur les By Th. G. de Geiraudon
476 Dialectes Berberes.
482
Leo Reinisch. AVorterbuch der Bedauye Sprache. By Th. G. de Gijiratidon Dr. R. Bbunnow.
484
By H.
Bibliotheque Khediviale.
Hibschfeld
485 Diary
AV. AV. Rockhill.
Journey through
a
of
Mongolia and Tibet in 1891 and 1892.
487
H. Hcbschmann.
G oku Pbosad of
By
W
T.
An Introduction By R. AAr
Sen.
Hinduism.
Country.
By
Persische Studien.
Major-General M.
R.
By
F.
J.
E. D. R.
to the
—AVriting, By W.
Akt.
XIII.
492
The Indus Delta
Haig.
G
497 501
Printing, and the Alphabet in Corea.
G. Aston
— Ghatayala
505
Inscription
of
the
Pratihara
Kakkuka, of [Vikrama-JSamvat Mcnshi Debipbasad Akt.
XIA
r.
— Mahuan’s Account of By
(Bengal).
Art.
r
XA
.
—The
Edward
— The
By 513
Kingdom
of Bengala
Geo. Phillips, M.R.A.S
from
the
Persian by
C. Ross, C.S.I.,
LI Sdo Poem and
The Poem. Art. XVII.
the
918.
523
Story of Yusuf Shah Sarraj, the Saddler.
Translated
Art. XVI.
490
Study
Y. Additions to the Library
Aet. XII.
483
Chrestomathy of Arabic Prose-
By H. Hibschfeld
Pieces.
Ibn Doukjiak.
465
— Ssuma
By
Professor
its
Sir
Author.
537 Part II
Legge
Ch'ien’s Historical Records.
III: The Yin Dynasty.
M.R.A.S
Colonel
M.R.A.S
By Herbert
571
Chapter J. Ai.lf.n,
601
— CONTENTS. Art.
XYIII.
XIX.
PAOK
— Some
Buddhist
and
Bronzes,
Relics
of
By Robert Sewell, M.R.A.S
Buddha. Art.
IX
617
— Sinhalese
Copper-plate Grants in the British
Museum.
By
Don
Martino
de
Zilva
639
AVTcKREMASINGHE Art.
XX.
— Some
Notes on Fast and Future Archfeological
Explorations in India.
By
Hon.
Buhler,
G.
649
Mem. R.A.S Correspondence.
By John Beames
2.
Rajuka or Lajuka. Yidyadhara Pitaka
3.
Archaeological Research.
4.
The
1.
Jains.
—
661
(a correction)
By W.
F. Sinclair.
.
.
662 662 665
By Robert Chalmers
Notes of the Quarter. I.
General Meetings of the Royal Asiatic Society.
.
.
III.
667
680
II. Contents of Foreign Oriental Journals
Obituary Notice Sir
Henry Rawlinson,
IY. Notes and
Bart.
By
Dr. R. N. Cust.
News
681
691
—
Y. Notices of Books
G. E. Gerini. Chula Kanta Mangala Ramkrishna Gopal Bhandarkar. Early History of the Dekkan down to the Mahomedan Conquest. Reviewed by C. M. Duff Robert Chalmers. The Jataka. By J. E. C. R. S. Gundry. China, Present and Past. By T. AY. Henri Cordier. Les Etudes Chinoises. By T. AY. Henri Cordier. Notice sur Le Japon. By T. W. Darab Dastur Peshotan Sanjana. The Pahlavi Text Series Yol. I: Nlrangistan. By E. AY. .
.
692
693 699 702 706 708
—
AYest
M. A.
708
Stein, Ph.D.
in the
Catalogue of Sanskrit
Raghunatha Temple Library of Jammu and Kashmir
the Maharaja of
MSS. H.H. 711
—
:
CONTEXTS.
X
PAGE
C.
Van Vloten.
L.
A.
Liber Mafatlh al-Olum.
By
The Buddhism
By
H. Hibschfeld T.
Waddell.
W
716
Notes on African Philology.
By
R. X. Cost
....
719
Notes on Oceanic Philology.
By
R. N. Cusx
....
721
YI. Additions Aet.
712 Tibet.
of
XXI.
to the
— Southern
722
Library
Chin Yocabulary (Minbu
District).
By Beenaed Houghton, M.R.A.S Aet. XXII.
By Guy
the modern Arabkir.
Aet. XXIII.
—
The Nativity Chalmebs
Aet.
XXIY.
— Some
Aet.
XXV. — Arabic
Aet.
XXVI. — The
of
of Abrik,
le Steange
....
739
By Robeet
the Buddha.
751
Notes on the Poetry of the Persian
By
Dialects.
E. G.
Beowne, M.A., M.R.A.S.
Inscriptions in Egypt.
Li Sdo Poem and
The Chinese Text and Legge Aet.
727
—The Mediaeval Castle and Sanctuary
By H.
Author.
its
Translation.
C.
.
773
Kay.
827
.
Part III
By
Professor
839
XXVII. — Counter-marks on early By E. Rapson, M.A Coins.
Persian and Indian
865
Repoet of the Teanslitebation Committee
879
CoEEESPONDENCE. 1
.
The Aritthaka Stone.
By
T.
W. Rhys
Davids
.
.
Semitic Origin of the Old Indian Alphabet.
3.
Don Maetino de Zilva Wickbemasinghe .... Mahuan’s Account of Bengal. By Jonx Beames
4.
Epigraphic Discoveries in Mysore.
.
By
G.
893
By
2.
Buuleb
895 898 900
Notes of the Quabtee. I.
II.
Contents of Foreign Oriental Journals
905
Obituaey Notices Roin. By AnTncn A. Macdonkll .... Thomas Fbancis Wade. By Heniu Coediee..
Prof, von
906
Sir
911
— CONTEXTS.
xi PAGE
Books
III. Notices of
Graham
Tibetan.
Edith T.
Handbook of Colloquial Reviewed by W. W. Rockhill ....
Sandberg.
J.
Simcox.
H. Parker H. Thornton.
By
Primitive Civilizations.
926
-
Colonel Sir Robert Sandeman.
By W. Irvine N. Elias.
937
The Tarlkh-i Rashid!
hammad Haidar
Dughliit.
of
Mirza Mu-
By Reynold
A.
Nicholson
941
Bibliotheca Lindesiana.
By
T.
W
Die Religion Hermann Oldenberg. By Arthur A. Macdonell G. E. Morrison. T.
916
E.
An
W
IV. Additions to the Library
Index Alphabetical List of Authors.
943 des Veda.
Australian in China.
946
By 962 963 969
*
.
'
•
,
*
.
.
.
jA
—
JOURNAL THE ROYAL ASIATIC
Art.
Description
I.
SOCIETY.
of Mesopotamia and Baghdad, written a.d. by Ibn Serapion. The Arabic
about the year 900
MS.
Text edited from a
Museum
in the British
with Translation and Notes.
By Guy
Library,
le Strange.
Introduction.
The Geography
of Mesopotamia during the epoch of the
Baghdad Caliphate has
not, I think, received the attention
With the exception of the which the subject deserves. small maps found in the Spruner-Menke Atlas, I believe no detailed description or delineation of the country at this date has been attempted. Yet it must be admitted that the history of the Abbasids is almost incomprehensible without such an aid for the physical and political condition of the country was not then what it is now, as a glance at the accompanying map will show. ;
The rivers,
basis
of
this
Euphrates
map
and
is
the description
Tigris,
inter-communicating canals,
with
which
of
the two
and was written by Ibn their
affluents
Serapion at the beginning of the fourth century a.h., corre-
sponding with the tenth a.d. time
The
text
from the unique MS.
now published
for
the
first
his
work preserved in the British Museum Library (Add. 23,379). Of Ibn Serapion, personally, I believe
MS.
j.r.a.s.
1895.
is
of
one volume of
1
a
DESCRIPTION OF MESOPOTAMIA AND BAGHDAD.
2
nothing
is
known
the date of his work, however,
;
by the minute description
he
has
Various palaces are described, the
given
is
fixed
Baghdad.
of
being the cele-
latest
brated Kasr-at-Taj (the Palace of the Crown), completed
by the Caliph Al-MuktafI immediately after his accession That Ibn Serapion wrote not later in a.h. 289 (902). than the first part of the tenth century a.d. is proved by is made of the palaces which Baghdad by the Buwayhid princes, subsequent to the year 334 a.h. (945), when Mu‘izz-adDawla became master of both the capital and the person
the fact that no mention
were built in
of the Caliph.
In regard
the
to
Topography of ancient Baghdad
—
subject which I hope to take up again and elucidate more in
a
Serapion
is
fully
paper
future of
much
— the
information
importance, for
it
the minute description of the city which
work or
before
so
written
Ya'kiibl,
of
date
the
main-roads
;
a.h.
Ibn
of
Baghdad from the
describes
in
by Ibn
given
enables us to complete
we
278
possess in the a
(891),
Now
Serapion.
decade Ya'kiibl
centre outwards, going along the
while, on the other hand, Ibn Serapion follows
of the canals, beginning above and passing where each flows out into the Tigris. It will readily be understood that the canals and the high-roads, hence by for the most part, cross each other, and interlace plotting out the palaces and quarters described by these two independent authorities, a net - work of points is gained, which, with the main course of the Tigris for a back-bone, enables us to reconstitute the ground-plan of Baghdad of the times of the Caliphate. This is what I
the
course
down
to
;
have attempted in ray plan, but various buildings
full details
concerning the
Serapion,
and of others
given in Ibn
mentioned by Ya'kiibl must be reserved for a future paper. It
will
point
out
differed in
be convenient,
how
the
in
courses
this
of
Introduction,
the Tigris and
the 10th century a.d. from what
is
briefly
to
Euphrates at present
Ibn Serapion describes the Tigris as rising at a spring and flowing down past Amid, which is proof that found.
a
DESCRIPTION OF MESOPOTAMIA AND BAGHDAD.
3
the eastern branch of the Tigris (and not the Bitlis river) as the main-stream
was that regarded
Down
by the Arabs.
as far as Samarra, the towns given show that the course was then much what it is now. From this place, however,
Baghdad, the river followed more westerly channel than it does at the The line of this older river-bed which present day. still has the ruins of the towns named by Ibn Serapion After flowing lying on its bank is marked on our maps. through Baghdad and past Al-Madain (Ctesiphon), the to a point
a few miles above
a shorter and
—
—
Tigris
and
passed
down
the
to
of
latitude
here the great alterations iu
its
Kiit-al-Amarah,
course are to be noticed.
At the present day the Tigris follows an easterly channel down to Korna this also, as we shall show (see Note 1 to
—
Section xiv.), was its
its
course in Sassauian times
— and
here
waters join the Euphrates to form the Shatt-al-‘Arab
or Tidal Estuary of the combined streams.
In the days of
the Caliphate, however, the Tigris flowed due south from
Kut-al-Amarah, running down the channel now known as the Shatt-al-Hay, and passing through the city of Wasit,
below which, by various canals and mouths, the stream spread out and became lost in the great
Swamp, which
is
so
important a feature in the geography, political and physical,
From
of that epoch.
we
shall see later, the
canal
flowed
out
direct
thus served to drain off the Euphrates.
Swamp — into
the great
Euphrates
also
poured
waters
—
which the waters of both the Tigris and into
Tidal
the
Estuary,
came
to
the
open sea at ‘Abbadiln,
a town which, on account of the recession of
now
which, as
This Estuary, after passing to the eastward
of Al-Basra, finally
Gulf,
its
lies
present shore-line.
the Persian
twenty miles distant from the In the account which Ibn Serapion gives
nearly
of the Estuary of the Dujayl, as he calls the river Karun,
there are some matters of importance which will be dis-
cussed in the notes appended to
The
my
translation.
description of the Euphrates presents
many
points
In the first place the Orientals then, as now, considered what we call the Western Euphrates, which
of interest.
— DESCRIPTION OF MESOPOTAMIA AND BAGHDAD.
4
mountains
in the
rises
main arm
now
the
of
to
Erzeroum,
the north of
the
as
The Eastern Euphrates, the Murad-Su, a name given to it
great river.
generally called
by the Turks, Ibn Serapion and other mediaeval geographers speak of evidently
the
as
apparently,
with
identical
the
curious
is
but
Arsanias
classical
apparently,
in use in the tenth century a.d., although, as in the
still
case, this also has now been long forgotten for Nahr Lukiya, no longer to be found on our modern
former the
is
it
Flutnen,
century after Christ.
first
another classical name,
find
to
desuetude,
into
which Pliny describes in the It
This latter name has,
Arsanas.
river
long since fallen
maps,
is
;
doubtless the river Lycus of the
Roman
Ibn Serapion, many of
In the time of
geographer. other
the
great
tributaries of the Euphrates, as also their secondary affluents,
As
bore names which are evidently not. Arabic. I
may mention
instances
the rivers Salkit, Jarjarlya, and Karakis
possibly there are
some others
—
all
under Turkish names, but which,
of which are
in the tenth
now known
century
a.d.,
kept the nomenclature of pre-Islamic times,
evidently
still
and thus,
in a modified form, preserved the original
Greek
or native denomination for these streams.
The main-stream
the
of
Euphrates,
after
passing
out
from the mountains, received various affluents in the plain of northern Mesopotamia, and flowing south-east, followed its
present course
of
Al-Kiifa.
to
the right
— considered
to a point a short
bifurcated.
past Al-Kfif'a,
distance north
The branch
then as the main-stream of the
—
now known
Euphrates, but
down
down
Here the stream
as the Hindiyya Canal ran and a short distance below this city
became lost in the western part of the great Swamp, which has already been spoken of as swallowing up the waters of the Tigris. called the
the
line
Sfira
of
Canal
The stream
—which,
in
to the left or eastward, its
upper reach, follows
—
modern Euphrates ran a short course up into numerous canals whose waters, for
the
and then split the most part, flowed out into the Tigris above AVasit.. Those canals which did not join the Tigris above that
DESCRIPTION OF MESOPOTAMIA AND BAGHDAD. joined
city,
its
waters lower down, for they
all
drained into
the northern part of the great Swaiups.
The Arabs had
inherited from the Persians, their pre-
which
decessors in Mesopotamia, the system of canalization
joined the lower courses of the Euphrates and the Tigris,
—
making the Sawad Takrlt and Al-Anbar
A
East.
Alluvial
or
— one
the
to
south
of the richest countries of
map
glance at the
plain
of the
show that the system
will
adopted was to carry off the surplus waters of the Euphrates into the Tigris, for the purpose of irrigating the lands between the
two
rivers.
On
hand,
other
the
the waters of the Tigris were, for the most part, tapped
by canals on
its
bank, in order more which lay on the Persian
further or eastern
thoroughly to irrigate the lands border of
its
The
stream.
the Euphrates were the these
the
four with
bifurcation
part of
four great irrigation canals of
‘Isa, Sarsar,
Sura Canal
the
Al-Kufa)
above
Malik, and Kiitha, and
eastward
(flowing carried
the
off
the waters of the Euphrates to the Tigris.
separating
distances
these
canals
Ibn
which
from
greater
The
Serapion
mentions are of great importance, since they enable us fix
their
to
The main canal of the left bank of was the great Katul-Nahrawan channel, dating
positions.
the Tigris
from the days of the Chosroes existed on
but a shorter line also
;
the right bank of the
formed by the
Tigris,
Ishakiyya and the Dujayl Canals, and this irrigated the lands immediately to the north of Baghdad.
With only
a single
MS.
of the
work
of
consult, the reconstitution of the text has
of some difficulty.
occur
again
either
Most in
of
the
Ibn Serapion to been a matter
the place-names,
works of
it
is
true,
contemporary
the
geographers of the third and fourth centuries a.h., or in the later compilations of
Yakut and Bakri
;
but in some
instances places are mentioned once only in Ibn Serapion
and by no other geographer, and often the reading of our MS. is corrupt or uncertain. For plotting out the names on my map, I have in most cases been able to fix the position of
the towns along the various
streams by
a reference
DESCRIPTION OF MESOPOTAMIA AND BAGHDAD.
G
the distances given in the Road-books of Kudama and other authorities, taking as fixed points the places therein mentioned which still exist. In the three sections describing the city of Baghdad, great help has been derived from the work written by Al-Khatib on the “ History of Baghdad,” of which the British Museum possesses three fairly correct MSS. Al-Khatib has often copied Ibn Serapion verbatim and some portions of the work of Al-Khatib have been incorporated by Yakut, who thus quotes Ibn
to
;
Serapion
second-hand
at
Abu-l-Fida in his geography,
;
on the other hand, appears to have copied some of the text of Ibn Serapion at first-hand.
With all these aids, however, a few corrupt passages remain over, which I have emended as best I could, and these, with minor verbal additions, have been marked by enclosure in square brackets
made
as
literal
as
[
The
].
translation has been
but to avoid ambiguity the
possible,
antecedent proper-name has constantly been of
place
pronoun
the
marked by enclosure
such additions,
;
parentheses
in
given in years of the Hijra; figures
ad.
(in
I
).
in
have
I
All dates are
the succeeding, and higher,
parentheses) represent the corresponding dates
have translated
with which measure roads,
(
repeated
however,
term
the
Farsakh
by “league,”
practically corresponds
it
;
for
along
and counting the winding course of the rivers, three
miles as the crow
above, rather than below, the fair
flies is
The Arab mile
estimate of the Farsakh.
used by Ibn Serapion,
—that
is
(mil),
the one
equivalent to our nautical mile
about one English statute mile and must be remembered, however, that distances those early days were not measured, but only estimated
or knot
a quarter.
in
is to say,
It
as so many Farsakhs (the League, many Marhalas (the Day’s march) hence
by time, being counted or Hour), or so
the
;
Arab mile may,
as
equivalent of our mile. or fifty-seven I
Arab
miles,
a
rule,
On
be
the
taken as roughly the
Map
nineteen Farsakhs,
go to the degree of
latitude.
have divided up the text (and the translation) into
sections, for convenience in
adding the notes.
These
lust
— DESCRIPTION OF MESOPOTAMIA AND BAGHDAD.
7
have been made as succinct as was compatible with giving of short passages from contemporary geo-
translations
graphers, whose descriptions enable us to fix distances and positions.
The a
text of
Ibn Serapion, which
I
now
over eleven leaves (22 pages)
little
contains in
publish, occupies
of the MS., which
68 leaves of a folio-sized volume, written
all
The and dated a.h. 709 (1309). volume contains a description of the various seas, islands, lakes, and mountains of the world, after which come the rivers. Following on the notice of the Euphrates and Tigris (now published) is a page devoted to a minute description of the course of the Nile, and this contains some curious information. The volume closes with an enumeration of various springs and minor streams. The whole of this volume by Ibn Serapion would, I believe, be well worth translating and editing. Apa
in
band,
clear
beginning
of
the
MS. we only
parently, however, in our present
possess a
portion of the entire work, for Ibn Serapion refers to a
chapter
which British
the Roads and Ways” (see Section XIV.), nowhere to be found in the volume in the
“On is
Museum.
In conclusion
my
notes,
with
add a
I
a
readers to identify
my
the authorities quoted in
of
list
bibliography to enable
sufficient
the editions of
the
texts from
my
which
translations have been made. Ibn Kutayba, wrote about a.h. 250 (8G4). Edited by tViistenfeld, 1850. Ibn Khurdadbih, a.h. 250 (864). Edited by De Goeje. Bibliotheca Geographorum Arabicorum, vol. vi. Biladhuri, a.h. 255 (869).
Kudama, a.h. 266
(880).
Ta‘kubi, a.h. 278 (891).
Edited by
De
Goeje, 1866.
Bibl. Geogr. Arab. vol. vi.
Idem. vol.
vii.
Ibn Rusta, a.h. 290 (903).
Idem
Mas'udI, a.h. 332 (943).
Edited by Barbier de Meynard.
Paris, 1877.
.
vol. vii.
Nine
vols.
Tanbih, by the same Author, in Bibl. Geogr. Arab,
vol. viii.
Istakhrl, wrote about a.h. 340 (951).
Bibl. Geogr. Arab. vol.
i.
Ibn Hawkal, a.h. 367 (978). Idem. vol. ii. Mukaddasi, a.h. 375 (985). Idem. vol. iii. Nasir-i-Kkusraw, a.h. 438 (1047).
Edited in Persian by C. Schefer, 1881.
DESCRIPTION OF MESOPOTAMIA AND BAGHDAD. Three MSS. Museum under
Al-Khatib, wrote about a.h. 450 (1058).
Baghdad
exist in the
British
1507, 1508, and Ad. 23,319. copies that
MS.
my
of bis History of
the numbers
Or.
It is to the folios of the first of these
references are made.
There
at the Bibliotheque Rationale in Paris,
is also an excellent No. 2128 of the new
Catalogue, and this I have collated. Bakri, wrote in a.h. 585 (1189).
Edited by Wiistenfeld, 1876.
Yakut, wrote in a.h. 623 (1225).
Epitome
Edited by Wiistenfeld.
Six vols. 1873.
of the same, called the Marasid, written about a.h. 700 (1300).
Edited by Juynboll.
Six vols. 1859.
Edited by Mehren, 1866.
Dimashki, wrote about a.h. 700 (1300). Fakhri, of about the same date.
Edited by Ahlwardt, 1860.
Abu-l-Fida, wrote a.h. 721 (1321). Ibn-al-Atlnr.
Edited by Reinaud, 1840.
Edited by C. J.
Chronicle.
Tomberg.
Fourteen
vols.
1876. Z. D.
M. G.
refers to the Journal of the
German
Jones (Commander J. F. Jones, R.N.). the Ritter.
Bombay Government. No. The volumes
xliii.
Die Erdkunde. second edition.
The Maps
I
New
relating to
Series, 1857.
Western Asia of the
Berlin, 1844.
have used are those of Kiepert, namely Provinces Asiatiques de
V Empire Ottoman. der
Oriental Society.
Various papers in the Records of
Six
feuilles,
Umgegend von Babylon.
fur Erdkunde.
An anonymous
Arabic
Berlin.
—And
the Ruinenfclder
Published in the Zeitsehr. der Ges.
Vol. xviii.
MS.
in the
Bibliotheque Nationale of a work on
Geography, written for the Hamdanid prince Sayf-ad-Dawla, who died in a.h. 356 (967), gives occasionally been of
This
MS.
bears the
use to
some curious native maps, which have
me
number 2214
in fixing the position of towns. in the
new Catalogue.
DESCRIPTION OF MESOPOTAMIA AND BAGHDAD.
9
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