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The Persian Alexander: The First Complete English Translation of the Iskandarnama

Traducere de Evangelos Venetis
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 oct 2017
Alexander the Great (356-333 BC) was to capture the imagination of his contemporaries and future generations. His image abounds in various cultures and literatures - Eastern and Western - and spread around the globe through oral and literary media at an astonishing rate during late antiquity and the early Islamic period. The first Iskandarnama, or 'The Book of Alexander', now held in a private collection in Tehran, is the oldest prose version of the Alexander romance in the Persian tradition. Thought to have been written at some point between the eleventh and fourteenth centuries by an unknown author, the lively narrative recasts Alexander as Iskandar, a Muslim champion - a king and prophet, albeit flawed but heroic, and remarkably appropriated to Islam, though the historic Alexander lived and died some 1,000 years before the birth of the faith. This new English translation of the under-studied text is the first to be presented unabridged and sheds fresh light onto the shape and structure of this vital document.In so doing it invites a reconsideration of the transformation of a Western historical figure - and one-time mortal enemy of Persia - into a legendary hero adopted by Iranian historiographic myth-making.Evangelos Venetis, the translator, also offers a textual analysis, providing much-needed context and explanations on both content and subsequent reception. This landmark publication will be invaluable to students and scholars of classical Persian literature, ancient and medieval history and Middle East studies, as well as to anyone studying the Alexander tradition.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781784538798
ISBN-10: 1784538795
Pagini: 400
Ilustrații: 3 colour in 4pp plates
Dimensiuni: 189 x 246 x 39 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Notă biografică

Evangelos Venetis is the director of the Society for Hellenic-Iranian Studies in Athens and the coordinator of the Middle East Research Project of the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy. He wrote his doctoral thesis on the Iskandarnama at the University of Edinburgh.

Cuprins

TRANSLATIONIntroductory Part 11The Expedition of Alexander the Double-Horned One to Iran toFight Darius, the Son of Darius 12Alexander's Arrival at 'Uman and the Story Between Him and theKing of 'Uman 15How Alexander Went to Porus Disguised as a Messenger and the StoryBetween Them 16Alexander's Journey to Kashmir and What Happened Between Him andA¯ za¯dbakht, the King of Kashmir, and his Daughter, Ma¯ha¯far?¯n 20The Story of A¯ za¯dbakht, the King of Kashmir, and Porus' Daughter,Who Was Alexander's Wife 25Alexander's Journey to Ceylon and What Happened Between Him and Kayd,the King of India 35The Pilgrimage of Alexander to Adam's Tomb and his Journey to theLand of Gold 48Alexander, the Creatures with the Hairy Feet and the War Between Them 52Alexander's Arrival at Mecca and the House of the Prophet, and the StoryBetween Him and the People of Mecca 54Alexander's Arrival in Yemen and the Story Between Him and theKing of Yemen 56Alexander's Journey to Egypt, the Disguise of the King of Egypt as a MessengerWhen He Went to Alexander, and the Story Between Him and Alexander 68The Story of Alexander, Who Wished to Hear Stories from the Ruler ofEgypt, and the Latter's Storytelling 77The Narration of the Story of King Tahta¯j by the Ruler of Egypt to Alexander 88The Narration of the Story of the Merchant's Son by the Ruler of Egypt toAlexander 92How Alexander, Disguised as a Messenger, Visited Candace, the Queen ofAndalusia, and their Story 96Alexander's Journey to the Land of Darkness and What Occurred There 102The Story of the Scorpion, the Snake and the Youth Who Was Sleepingin the Garden, and the Wonder that Alexander Experienced 105Alexander's Arrival in Turkestan by way of the Akhzar Sea, and theStory Between Him and the King of that Region 108The Story of the Barrel of Wheat Found in Alexander's Treasure Houseand the Life of Bahra¯m, his Father and their Wives 109The Story of the Hermits with the Daughter of the King and What Happened 112The Storytelling of the King of the City with Alexander about Justice 115Alexander's Journey to Siyavu¯ shgard and his Story with the King of that City 116Alexander's Arrival in the Land of China, the Wonders He Saw andhis Story with the Kings of that Land 120Alexander's Arrival as Messenger at the Court of the Khaqa¯n of theChinese Turkestan and the Story Between Them 121The Trick of the Khaqa¯n's Wife to Murder Him and What Occurred 136The Story Between the Sons of the Khaqa¯n and Alexander, their Planto Poison Alexander through his Concubine, and How AlexanderDiscovered that by Wisdom 140Alexander's Arrival in the Land of Taghma¯j and Alexander's Visit toAlexander of that Land as a Messenger 146Alexander's Arrival in the Land of Demons and the Cannibal Zang?¯s,and his War Against Them 151Alexander's Arrival at the Well, his Story with the Zang?¯ and the MaidenWho Was with Him and her Own Story 158Alexander's Arrival at the Hermit's Cloister on the Mountaintopand their Story 161Alexander's Arrival in the Land of the Fairies and the Story of his Meetingwith Ara¯q?¯t, the Fairy Queen, and What . . . 164viii The Persian AlexanderAlexander's Invasion into Ara¯q?¯t's Territory and the Arrival of Ara¯q?¯t's Uncleto her Aid 178The Arrival of Ara¯q?¯t's Uncle and the Fairies at the Camp, and the StoryBetween Him and Alexander 180Alexander's Arrival in Russia, the Story Between Him and the Russians,and the Dream He Had in that Land 189Alexander's Arrival at the Fortress of Qa¯til the Zang?¯, the Story Betweenthe King and the Zang?¯s, and the Seizure of the Fort 193The Story of Qa¯til the Zang?¯ Who Sent 2,000 Men to Seek the Bride, andAlexander's Surprise Attack on Them 200The Story of Ra¯fi' the Zang?¯, Who Came to the Aid of his Brother, andtheir War Against Alexander 207How 'Anbar Received Qa¯til's Letter, Gathered an Army and Went to theAid of his Uncle, an