This volume is the first comprehensive study of one of the most important collections of oriental manuscripts in early modern Europe which belonged to Thomas Erpenius (d. 1624), the renowned Dutch Arabist, orientalist and the first Chair of Arabic Studies at Leiden University.
It reconstructs his personal library which was the center of scholarly debates for centuries, full of rare and sometimes unique materials.
Widely known as a rich source of Muslim literature and Asian languages, the collection was purchased by George Villiers, the 1st Duke of Buckingham (d. 1628) and ultimately donated by his widow, Katherine Villiers, to Cambridge University Library in June 1632.
This volume provides detail on Erpenius’ life and career, his manuscript collections and their reception and preservation in Cambridge. Furthermore, the author challenges the idea of European orientalism by redefining the role of Erpenius in in shaping academic study of the Orient and ‘organic’ orientalism in the West.
MAJID DANESHGAR , Ph.D. (2013), is Associate Professor of Area Studies at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University, Japan and was formerly Munby Fellow at Cambridge University Library in association with St John’s College, Cambridge, and also Marie Curie Fellow at Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies, University of Freiburg, Germany. Among his publications are
Studying the Qur'an in the Muslim Academy (OUP 2020),
I Want to Become an Orientalist Not a Colonizer or a “De-Colonizer” (MTSR, 2020).
This book will be a helpful source for those who are interested in the history of oriental studies, Islamic studies, Semitic and Asian langauges in Europe. The theme and focus of the book on Erpenius and his invaluable legacy and Eastern manuscript collection will attract the attention of historians of the book and those interested in cultural history, colonial history and Dutch and British intellectual history, Muslim literature as well as professional librarians and curators of oriental manuscripts.