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Edward William Lane

Edward William Lane (17 September 1801 – 10 August 1876) was a British orientalist, translator and lexicographer. He is known for his Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians and the Arabic-English Lexicon, as well as his translations of One Thousand and One Nights and Selections from the Kur-án.[1]

Edward William Lane
Lane in an Ottoman outfit, plaster by Richard James Lane
Born(1801-09-17)17 September 1801
Hereford, England
Died10 August 1876(1876-08-10) (aged 74)
NationalityBritish
Known forArabic-English Lexicon
Scientific career
FieldsOriental studies

During his lifetime, Lane also wrote a detailed account of Egypt and the country's ancient sites, but the book, titled Description of Egypt, was published posthumously. It was first published by the American University in Cairo Press in 2000 and has been republished several times since then.[2]

Early years edit

Lane was born at Hereford, England, the third son of the Rev. Dr Theopilus Lane, and grand-nephew of Thomas Gainsborough on his mother's side.[3] After his father's death in 1814, Lane was sent to grammar school at Bath and then Hereford,[4] where he showed a talent for mathematics. He visited Cambridge, but did not enrol in any of its colleges.[5]

Instead, Lane joined his brother Richard in London, studying engraving with him. At the same time Lane began his study of Arabic on his own. However, his health soon deteriorated. For the sake of his health and of a new career, he set sail to Egypt.[6]

Work edit

Travels in Egypt edit

Lane had a few reasons to travel to Egypt. He had been studying Arabic for a long period of time and there had been an explosion of egyptomania in England due to Belzoni's exhibition at the Egyptian Hall and the release of Vivant Denon's Travels in Upper and Lower Egypt during the campaigns of General Bonaparte in that country (1803). Lane's health was also deteriorating while living in London and he felt that he needed to migrate to a warmer climate during the harsh winter months. During the 1800s, those who spoke Arabic and were familiar with the Near East could easily apply for jobs serving the British government. Lane set sail for Egypt on 18 July 1825.[7]

Lane arrived in Alexandria in September 1825, and soon left for Cairo. He remained in Egypt for two and a half years, mingling with the locals, dressed as a Turk (the ethnicity of the then-dominant Ottoman Empire), taking notes of his experiences and observations. In Old Cairo, he lived near Bab al-Hadid, and studied Arabic with Sheikh Muhammad 'Ayyad al-Tantawi (1810–1861), who was later invited to teach at Saint Petersburg, Russia.[8]

In Egypt, Lane visited coffee shops and the houses of locals, attended a mosque, and familiarized himself with Islam. He also befriended other British travelers in Egypt at that time, including John Gardner Wilkinson, who had been residing in Cairo. Lane also went on a trip down the Nile to Nubia, visiting numerous sites and taking observational notes.[9] On this trip he visited Abydos, Dendera, Luxor, Kom Ombo, Philae, Abu Simbel and a number of other ancient sites.[10] Lane left Egypt on 7 April 1828.[11]

Description of Egypt edit

Lane's interest in ancient Egypt may have been first aroused by seeing a presentation by Giovanni Battista Belzoni.[12] His original ambition was to publish an account of what had remained of Ancient Egypt. The London publisher John Murray showed early interest in publishing the project (known as Description of Egypt as an homage to the early 1800s publication, Description de l'Égypte[notes 1]), but then backed out. This rejection was probably due to the fact that the book had detailed accounts of Egypt, numerous illustrations, and texts in Arabic, Ancient Egyptian (hieroglyphics) and Ancient Greek which would significantly raise the cost of printing. Large publications were also going out of fashion and Lane was not himself an established author. Due to financial shortcomings, Lane could not publish the book himself, so it remained unpublished until 2000.[13]

 
Lane's illustration of the Ramesseum

In Description of Egypt, Lane provided descriptions and histories of locations within Egypt that he had visited. He was a devout urban geographer, best illustrated by the fact that he devoted five chapters of the book writing about everything in Cairo: the way the city looks when you approach it, a detailed account of Old Cairo, monuments in the city, the nature around it, etc.[14] He also wrote about rural areas.[15]

Lane also discussed the landscape and geography of Egypt, including its deserts, the Nile and how it was formed, Egyptian agriculture, and the climate.[16] An entire chapter of the book was devoted to a political history of Egypt, with specific attention to the history of Muhammad Ali of Egypt.[17]

Lane's Description of Egypt focuses mainly on Ancient Egypt. Though Lane was not credited as such during his lifetime, his text follows the form of Egyptology. The book included a supplement titled On the Ancient Egyptians in which Lane discusses the origin and physical characteristics of Egyptians, the origin of their civilization, hieroglyphics, Ancient Egyptian religion and law, Egyptian priesthood, Egyptian royalty, the caste system, general manners and customs, sacred architecture and sculpture, agriculture, and commerce.[18] In a letter he wrote to his friend Harriet Martineau, Lane stated that he felt the need to put a lot of effort into staying away from Ancient Egypt; he added that in the previous eight years he could not read a book on the subject as it fascinated him so much that it drew his attention away from his work.[19]

Lane spent 32 days at the Giza pyramid complex, drawing, making sketches, and taking notes for his work.[20] At the complex Lane noted that he saw labourers pulling down some of the stone from the Great Sphinx of Giza to use it for modern buildings.[21] He stayed at the Valley of the Kings for 15 days, sleeping in the tomb of Ramses X, and left detailed accounts of each tomb, concluding that there may be further hidden tombs within the Valley.[22]

160 illustrations accompanied Lane's accounts.[23]

Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians edit

 
Lane's illustration of middle- and upper-class Egyptian fashions

Since Lane had trouble publishing his Description of Egypt, at the suggestion of John Murray he expanded a chapter of the original project into a separate book. The result was his Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians (1836), published by the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. The work was partly modelled on Alexander Russell's The Natural History of Aleppo (1756).[24] Lane visited Egypt again in 1833 in order to collect materials to expand and revise the work, after the Society had accepted the publication.[25] The book became a bestseller (still in print), and Lane earned his reputation in the field of Orientalism.

Lane left detailed accounts of everyday life in Egypt in the 19th century, which would prove useful to later researchers. Arthur John Arberry visited Egypt a century after Lane and said that it was like visiting another planet - none of the things Lane had written about were present.[26]

Lane was conscious that his research was handicapped by the fact that gender segregation prevented him from getting a close-up view of Egyptian women - an aspect of Egyptian life that was of particular interest to his readers. He was forced to rely on information passed on by Egyptian men, as he explains:

Many husbands of the middle classes, and some of the higher orders, freely talk of the affairs of the ḥareem with one who professes to agree with them in their general moral sentiments, if they have not to converse through the medium of an interpreter.[27]

However, in order to gain further information, he would later send for his sister, Sophia Lane Poole, so that she could gain access to women-only areas such as hareems and bathhouses and report on what she found.[2] The result was The Englishwoman in Egypt: Letters from Cairo, written during a residence there in 1842, 3 & 4, with E.W. Lane Esq., Author of "The Modern Egyptians" By His Sister. (Poole's own name does not appear within the publication.) The Englishwoman in Egypt contains large sections of Lane's own unpublished work, altered so that it appears to be from Poole's perspective (for example "my brother" being substituted for "I").[28] However, it also relates Poole's own experiences in visiting the hareems that were closed to male visitors.

The One Thousand and One Nights edit

Lane's next major project was a translation of the One Thousand and One Nights. His version first saw light as a monthly serial from 1838 to 1840, and was published in three volumes in 1840. A revised edition was released in 1859. The encyclopedic annotations from the first edition were published posthumously and separately in 1883 by his great-nephew Stanley Lane-Poole, as Arabian Society in the Middle Ages.[29] Lane's version is bowdlerized, and illustrated by William Harvey.

Opinions vary on the quality of Lane's translation. Stanley Lane-Poole commented that "Lane's version is markedly superior to any other that has appeared in English, if superiority is allowed to be measured by accuracy and an honest and unambitious desire to reproduce the authentic spirit as well as the letter of the original."[30] Nights researcher and author Robert Irwin writes that Lane's "style tends towards the grandiose and mock-biblical... Word order is frequently and pointlessly inverted. Where the style is not pompously high-flown, it is often painfully and uninspiringly literal... It is also peppered with Latinisms."[31]

Lane himself saw the Nights as an edifying work, as he had expressed earlier in a note in his preface to the Manners and Customs,

There is one work, however, which represents most admirable pictures of the manners and customs of the Arabs, and particularly of those of the Egyptians; it is 'The Thousand and One Nights; or, Arabian Nights' Entertainments:' if the English reader had possessed a close translation of it with sufficient illustrative notes, I might almost have spared myself the labour of the present undertaking.[32]

Dictionary and other works edit

 
Title page of the first volume of the Arabic-English Lexicon

From 1842 onwards, Lane devoted himself to the monumental Arabic-English Lexicon, although he found time to contribute several articles to the journal of Deutsche Morgenländische Gesellschaft.[33] He went to Egypt in 1842 with his wife, two children, and his sister Sophia Lane Poole who was working on her book The Englishwoman in Egypt.[34] On this occasion Lane stayed in Egypt for 7 years, working six days a week on his Lexicon.[35] A local scholar, Ibrahim al-Disqui, helped him with this work. Al-Disqui assisted in locating manuscripts and proofreading these manuscripts for Lane. The two became close during this period and continued to stay friends after they finished the Lexicon.[36]

Lane's Selections from the Kur-án appeared in 1843. It was neither a critical nor a commercial success. Moreover, it was misprint-ridden as Lane was for the third time in Egypt with his family collecting materials for the Arabic-English Lexicon when it was being printed.[37]

Lane was unable to complete his dictionary. He had arrived at the letter Qāf, the 21st letter of the Arabic alphabet, but in 1876 he died at Worthing, Sussex. Lane's great-nephew Stanley Lane-Poole finished the work based on his incomplete notes and published it in the twenty years following his death.[38]

In 1854, an anonymous work entitled The Genesis of the Earth and of Man was published, edited by Lane's nephew Reginald Stuart Poole. The work is attributed by some to Lane.[33]

The part concerning Cairo's early history and topography in Description of Egypt, based on Al-Maqrizi's work and Lane's own observations, was revised by Reginald Stuart Poole in 1847 and published in 1896 as Cairo Fifty Years Ago.[39]

Criticism edit

Lane has been criticized for his particularly unsympathetic description of Egypt's Coptic Christian minority, drawn in part from the words of an Egyptian man who presented himself to Lane as a Copt, although other scholars have reported that the interlocutor was, in fact, a Muslim.[40] In his writings, he describes Copts as "of a sullen temper, extremely avaricious, and abominable dissemblers; cringing or domineering according to circumstances.[41] Scholars such as S.H. Leeder have described "a great deal of the morbid prejudice against the Copts" as being inspired by the writings of Lane.[42]

Personal life edit

Lane was from a notable Orientalist family. His sister, Sophia Lane Poole, was an Oriental scholar, as were his nephew Reginald Stuart Poole and his great-nephew Stanley Lane-Poole, who were themselves distinguished Oriental scholars and archaeologists. His brother, Richard James Lane, was a notable Victorian-era engraver and lithographer known for his portraits. In 1840, Lane married Nafeesah, a Greek-Egyptian woman who had originally been either presented to him or purchased by him as a slave when she was around eight years old, and whom he had undertaken to educate.[2]

Lane died on 10 August 1876 and was buried at West Norwood Cemetery. His manuscripts and drawings are in the archive of the Griffith Institute, University of Oxford.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Lane purportedly did not like the Description de l'Égypte and thought it was very inaccurate. He wanted his Description to be more accurate than the work of his predecessors (Thompson 1996, 567)

References edit

  1. ^ Thompson 1996, 565
  2. ^ a b c Thompson, Jason. . Saudi Aramco World. Archived from the original on 29 August 2008. Retrieved 22 June 2008.
  3. ^ Arberry, 87
  4. ^ Tomlinson, Howard (2018). Hereford Cathedral School : a history over 800 years. Herefordshire. ISBN 978-1-910839-23-2. OCLC 1030612754.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Arberry, 87-8
  6. ^ Arberry, 88
  7. ^ Lane-Poole 1877, 14–15
  8. ^ Arberry, 89-92; Irwin (2006), 164
  9. ^ Thompson 1996, 566–567
  10. ^ Lane 2001, 225–492
  11. ^ Thompson 1996, 567
  12. ^ Roper, 244; Irwin (2006), 163
  13. ^ Thompson 1996, 571–572
  14. ^ Lane 2001, 67–97
  15. ^ Lane 2001, 215–291
  16. ^ Lane 2001, 25–47
  17. ^ Thompsen 1996, 577–578
  18. ^ Lane 2001, 508–574
  19. ^ Thompson 1996, 578
  20. ^ Lane 2001, 159
  21. ^ Thompson 1996, 190
  22. ^ Lane 2001, 372–387
  23. ^ Lane 2001, 575–579
  24. ^ Roper, 244; Irwin (2006), 122 & 164
  25. ^ Arberry, 92
  26. ^ Arberry 1997, 98
  27. ^ Lane, 175
  28. ^ Thompson 2010, 574
  29. ^ Arberry, 104
  30. ^ Arberry, 105
  31. ^ Irwin (1994), 24
  32. ^ Lane, xxiv
  33. ^ a b Roper, 249
  34. ^ Arrbery 1997, 108
  35. ^ Arrbery 1997, 109–111
  36. ^ Kudsieh 2016, 54–56
  37. ^ Arberry, 106-7
  38. ^ Arberry, 115
  39. ^ Roper, 245
  40. ^ Dowling 1909, 4
  41. ^ Lane 2001, 373–374
  42. ^ Leeder 1918, 107

Sources edit

  • Arberry, A.J. (1960). Oriental Essays. London: George Allen & Unwin.
  • Dowling, Theodore Edward (1909). The Egyptian Church. London: Cope & Fenwick.
  • Irwin, Robert (1994). The Arabian Nights: A Companion. London: Allen Lane.
  • Irwin, Robert (2006). For Lust of Knowing. London: Allen Lane.
  • Kudsieh, S. 2016. Beyond Colonial Binaries: Amicable Ties among Egyptian and European Scholars, 1820-1850. Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics, 36: 44.
  • Lane, Edward William (1973 [1860]). An Account of the Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians. With a new introduction by John Manchip White. New York: Dover Publications.
  • Lane, E. W. 2001. Description of Egypt. Cairo: American University in Cairo.
  • Lane-Poole, S. 1877. Life of Edward William Lane. London: Williams and Norgate.
  • Leeder, S.H. (1918). Modern Sons of the Pharaohs. London and New York: Hodder & Stoughton.
  • Roper, Geoffrey (1998). "Texts from Nineteenth-Century Egypt: The Role of E. W. Lane", in Paul and Janet Starky (eds) Travellers in Egypt, London; New York: I.B. Tauris, pp. 244–254.
  • Thompson, Jason (1996). "Edward William Lane's 'Description of Egypt'". International Journal of Middle East Studies, 28 (4): 565-583.

Biographies edit

  • Ahmed, Leila (1978). Edward W Lane. London: Longman.
  • Lane-Poole, Stanley (1877). Life of Edward William Lane. London: Williams and Norgate.
  • Thompson, Jason (2010). Edward William Lane: The Life of the Pioneering Egyptologist and Orientalist, 1801-1876. Cairo: American University in Cairo Press.

External links edit

  • Works by Edward William Lane at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Edward William Lane at Internet Archive
  • Lane's Arabic-English lexicon in the DjVu fileformat: Downloadable At Archive.org In Eight Parts. Each part is about 20 megabytes. See also the related copyright details.
  • Edward William Lane, An Arabic-English Lexicon, ا
  • Catalogue of the Edward Lane manuscripts in the Archive of the Griffith Institute, University of Oxford

edward, william, lane, september, 1801, august, 1876, british, orientalist, translator, lexicographer, known, manners, customs, modern, egyptians, arabic, english, lexicon, well, translations, thousand, nights, selections, from, lane, ottoman, outfit, plaster,. Edward William Lane 17 September 1801 10 August 1876 was a British orientalist translator and lexicographer He is known for his Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians and the Arabic English Lexicon as well as his translations of One Thousand and One Nights and Selections from the Kur an 1 Edward William LaneLane in an Ottoman outfit plaster by Richard James LaneBorn 1801 09 17 17 September 1801Hereford EnglandDied10 August 1876 1876 08 10 aged 74 Broadwater West Sussex EnglandNationalityBritishKnown forArabic English LexiconScientific careerFieldsOriental studiesDuring his lifetime Lane also wrote a detailed account of Egypt and the country s ancient sites but the book titled Description of Egypt was published posthumously It was first published by the American University in Cairo Press in 2000 and has been republished several times since then 2 Contents 1 Early years 2 Work 2 1 Travels in Egypt 2 1 1 Description of Egypt 2 2 Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians 2 3 The One Thousand and One Nights 2 4 Dictionary and other works 3 Criticism 4 Personal life 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 Biographies 9 External linksEarly years editLane was born at Hereford England the third son of the Rev Dr Theopilus Lane and grand nephew of Thomas Gainsborough on his mother s side 3 After his father s death in 1814 Lane was sent to grammar school at Bath and then Hereford 4 where he showed a talent for mathematics He visited Cambridge but did not enrol in any of its colleges 5 Instead Lane joined his brother Richard in London studying engraving with him At the same time Lane began his study of Arabic on his own However his health soon deteriorated For the sake of his health and of a new career he set sail to Egypt 6 Work editTravels in Egypt edit Lane had a few reasons to travel to Egypt He had been studying Arabic for a long period of time and there had been an explosion of egyptomania in England due to Belzoni s exhibition at the Egyptian Hall and the release of Vivant Denon s Travels in Upper and Lower Egypt during the campaigns of General Bonaparte in that country 1803 Lane s health was also deteriorating while living in London and he felt that he needed to migrate to a warmer climate during the harsh winter months During the 1800s those who spoke Arabic and were familiar with the Near East could easily apply for jobs serving the British government Lane set sail for Egypt on 18 July 1825 7 Lane arrived in Alexandria in September 1825 and soon left for Cairo He remained in Egypt for two and a half years mingling with the locals dressed as a Turk the ethnicity of the then dominant Ottoman Empire taking notes of his experiences and observations In Old Cairo he lived near Bab al Hadid and studied Arabic with Sheikh Muhammad Ayyad al Tantawi 1810 1861 who was later invited to teach at Saint Petersburg Russia 8 In Egypt Lane visited coffee shops and the houses of locals attended a mosque and familiarized himself with Islam He also befriended other British travelers in Egypt at that time including John Gardner Wilkinson who had been residing in Cairo Lane also went on a trip down the Nile to Nubia visiting numerous sites and taking observational notes 9 On this trip he visited Abydos Dendera Luxor Kom Ombo Philae Abu Simbel and a number of other ancient sites 10 Lane left Egypt on 7 April 1828 11 Description of Egypt edit Lane s interest in ancient Egypt may have been first aroused by seeing a presentation by Giovanni Battista Belzoni 12 His original ambition was to publish an account of what had remained of Ancient Egypt The London publisher John Murray showed early interest in publishing the project known as Description of Egypt as an homage to the early 1800s publication Description de l Egypte notes 1 but then backed out This rejection was probably due to the fact that the book had detailed accounts of Egypt numerous illustrations and texts in Arabic Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics and Ancient Greek which would significantly raise the cost of printing Large publications were also going out of fashion and Lane was not himself an established author Due to financial shortcomings Lane could not publish the book himself so it remained unpublished until 2000 13 nbsp Lane s illustration of the RamesseumIn Description of Egypt Lane provided descriptions and histories of locations within Egypt that he had visited He was a devout urban geographer best illustrated by the fact that he devoted five chapters of the book writing about everything in Cairo the way the city looks when you approach it a detailed account of Old Cairo monuments in the city the nature around it etc 14 He also wrote about rural areas 15 Lane also discussed the landscape and geography of Egypt including its deserts the Nile and how it was formed Egyptian agriculture and the climate 16 An entire chapter of the book was devoted to a political history of Egypt with specific attention to the history of Muhammad Ali of Egypt 17 Lane s Description of Egypt focuses mainly on Ancient Egypt Though Lane was not credited as such during his lifetime his text follows the form of Egyptology The book included a supplement titled On the Ancient Egyptians in which Lane discusses the origin and physical characteristics of Egyptians the origin of their civilization hieroglyphics Ancient Egyptian religion and law Egyptian priesthood Egyptian royalty the caste system general manners and customs sacred architecture and sculpture agriculture and commerce 18 In a letter he wrote to his friend Harriet Martineau Lane stated that he felt the need to put a lot of effort into staying away from Ancient Egypt he added that in the previous eight years he could not read a book on the subject as it fascinated him so much that it drew his attention away from his work 19 Lane spent 32 days at the Giza pyramid complex drawing making sketches and taking notes for his work 20 At the complex Lane noted that he saw labourers pulling down some of the stone from the Great Sphinx of Giza to use it for modern buildings 21 He stayed at the Valley of the Kings for 15 days sleeping in the tomb of Ramses X and left detailed accounts of each tomb concluding that there may be further hidden tombs within the Valley 22 160 illustrations accompanied Lane s accounts 23 Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians edit nbsp Lane s illustration of middle and upper class Egyptian fashionsSince Lane had trouble publishing his Description of Egypt at the suggestion of John Murray he expanded a chapter of the original project into a separate book The result was his Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians 1836 published by the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge The work was partly modelled on Alexander Russell s The Natural History of Aleppo 1756 24 Lane visited Egypt again in 1833 in order to collect materials to expand and revise the work after the Society had accepted the publication 25 The book became a bestseller still in print and Lane earned his reputation in the field of Orientalism Lane left detailed accounts of everyday life in Egypt in the 19th century which would prove useful to later researchers Arthur John Arberry visited Egypt a century after Lane and said that it was like visiting another planet none of the things Lane had written about were present 26 Lane was conscious that his research was handicapped by the fact that gender segregation prevented him from getting a close up view of Egyptian women an aspect of Egyptian life that was of particular interest to his readers He was forced to rely on information passed on by Egyptian men as he explains Many husbands of the middle classes and some of the higher orders freely talk of the affairs of the ḥareem with one who professes to agree with them in their general moral sentiments if they have not to converse through the medium of an interpreter 27 However in order to gain further information he would later send for his sister Sophia Lane Poole so that she could gain access to women only areas such as hareems and bathhouses and report on what she found 2 The result was The Englishwoman in Egypt Letters from Cairo written during a residence there in 1842 3 amp 4 with E W Lane Esq Author of The Modern Egyptians By His Sister Poole s own name does not appear within the publication The Englishwoman in Egypt contains large sections of Lane s own unpublished work altered so that it appears to be from Poole s perspective for example my brother being substituted for I 28 However it also relates Poole s own experiences in visiting the hareems that were closed to male visitors The One Thousand and One Nights edit Lane s next major project was a translation of the One Thousand and One Nights His version first saw light as a monthly serial from 1838 to 1840 and was published in three volumes in 1840 A revised edition was released in 1859 The encyclopedic annotations from the first edition were published posthumously and separately in 1883 by his great nephew Stanley Lane Poole as Arabian Society in the Middle Ages 29 Lane s version is bowdlerized and illustrated by William Harvey Opinions vary on the quality of Lane s translation Stanley Lane Poole commented that Lane s version is markedly superior to any other that has appeared in English if superiority is allowed to be measured by accuracy and an honest and unambitious desire to reproduce the authentic spirit as well as the letter of the original 30 Nights researcher and author Robert Irwin writes that Lane s style tends towards the grandiose and mock biblical Word order is frequently and pointlessly inverted Where the style is not pompously high flown it is often painfully and uninspiringly literal It is also peppered with Latinisms 31 Lane himself saw the Nights as an edifying work as he had expressed earlier in a note in his preface to the Manners and Customs There is one work however which represents most admirable pictures of the manners and customs of the Arabs and particularly of those of the Egyptians it is The Thousand and One Nights or Arabian Nights Entertainments if the English reader had possessed a close translation of it with sufficient illustrative notes I might almost have spared myself the labour of the present undertaking 32 Dictionary and other works edit nbsp Title page of the first volume of the Arabic English LexiconFrom 1842 onwards Lane devoted himself to the monumental Arabic English Lexicon although he found time to contribute several articles to the journal of Deutsche Morgenlandische Gesellschaft 33 He went to Egypt in 1842 with his wife two children and his sister Sophia Lane Poole who was working on her book The Englishwoman in Egypt 34 On this occasion Lane stayed in Egypt for 7 years working six days a week on his Lexicon 35 A local scholar Ibrahim al Disqui helped him with this work Al Disqui assisted in locating manuscripts and proofreading these manuscripts for Lane The two became close during this period and continued to stay friends after they finished the Lexicon 36 Lane s Selections from the Kur an appeared in 1843 It was neither a critical nor a commercial success Moreover it was misprint ridden as Lane was for the third time in Egypt with his family collecting materials for the Arabic English Lexicon when it was being printed 37 Lane was unable to complete his dictionary He had arrived at the letter Qaf the 21st letter of the Arabic alphabet but in 1876 he died at Worthing Sussex Lane s great nephew Stanley Lane Poole finished the work based on his incomplete notes and published it in the twenty years following his death 38 In 1854 an anonymous work entitled The Genesis of the Earth and of Man was published edited by Lane s nephew Reginald Stuart Poole The work is attributed by some to Lane 33 The part concerning Cairo s early history and topography in Description of Egypt based on Al Maqrizi s work and Lane s own observations was revised by Reginald Stuart Poole in 1847 and published in 1896 as Cairo Fifty Years Ago 39 Criticism editLane has been criticized for his particularly unsympathetic description of Egypt s Coptic Christian minority drawn in part from the words of an Egyptian man who presented himself to Lane as a Copt although other scholars have reported that the interlocutor was in fact a Muslim 40 In his writings he describes Copts as of a sullen temper extremely avaricious and abominable dissemblers cringing or domineering according to circumstances 41 Scholars such as S H Leeder have described a great deal of the morbid prejudice against the Copts as being inspired by the writings of Lane 42 Personal life editLane was from a notable Orientalist family His sister Sophia Lane Poole was an Oriental scholar as were his nephew Reginald Stuart Poole and his great nephew Stanley Lane Poole who were themselves distinguished Oriental scholars and archaeologists His brother Richard James Lane was a notable Victorian era engraver and lithographer known for his portraits In 1840 Lane married Nafeesah a Greek Egyptian woman who had originally been either presented to him or purchased by him as a slave when she was around eight years old and whom he had undertaken to educate 2 Lane died on 10 August 1876 and was buried at West Norwood Cemetery His manuscripts and drawings are in the archive of the Griffith Institute University of Oxford See also editOrientalism Orientalism book by Edward Said Oriental studiesNotes edit Lane purportedly did not like the Description de l Egypte and thought it was very inaccurate He wanted his Description to be more accurate than the work of his predecessors Thompson 1996 567 References edit Thompson 1996 565 a b c Thompson Jason An Account of the Journeys and Writings of the Indefatigable Mr Lane Saudi Aramco World Archived from the original on 29 August 2008 Retrieved 22 June 2008 Arberry 87 Tomlinson Howard 2018 Hereford Cathedral School a history over 800 years Herefordshire ISBN 978 1 910839 23 2 OCLC 1030612754 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Arberry 87 8 Arberry 88 Lane Poole 1877 14 15 Arberry 89 92 Irwin 2006 164 Thompson 1996 566 567 Lane 2001 225 492 Thompson 1996 567 Roper 244 Irwin 2006 163 Thompson 1996 571 572 Lane 2001 67 97 Lane 2001 215 291 Lane 2001 25 47 Thompsen 1996 577 578 Lane 2001 508 574 Thompson 1996 578 Lane 2001 159 Thompson 1996 190 Lane 2001 372 387 Lane 2001 575 579 Roper 244 Irwin 2006 122 amp 164 Arberry 92 Arberry 1997 98 Lane 175 Thompson 2010 574 Arberry 104 Arberry 105 Irwin 1994 24 Lane xxiv a b Roper 249 Arrbery 1997 108 Arrbery 1997 109 111 Kudsieh 2016 54 56 Arberry 106 7 Arberry 115 Roper 245 Dowling 1909 4 Lane 2001 373 374 Leeder 1918 107 Sources edit Arberry A J 1960 Oriental Essays London George Allen amp Unwin Dowling Theodore Edward 1909 The Egyptian Church London Cope amp Fenwick Irwin Robert 1994 The Arabian Nights A Companion London Allen Lane Irwin Robert 2006 For Lust of Knowing London Allen Lane Kudsieh S 2016 Beyond Colonial Binaries Amicable Ties among Egyptian and European Scholars 1820 1850 Alif Journal of Comparative Poetics 36 44 Lane Edward William 1973 1860 An Account of the Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians With a new introduction by John Manchip White New York Dover Publications Lane E W 2001 Description of Egypt Cairo American University in Cairo Lane Poole S 1877 Life of Edward William Lane London Williams and Norgate Leeder S H 1918 Modern Sons of the Pharaohs London and New York Hodder amp Stoughton Roper Geoffrey 1998 Texts from Nineteenth Century Egypt The Role of E W Lane in Paul and Janet Starky eds Travellers in Egypt London New York I B Tauris pp 244 254 Thompson Jason 1996 Edward William Lane s Description of Egypt International Journal of Middle East Studies 28 4 565 583 Biographies editAhmed Leila 1978 Edward W Lane London Longman Lane Poole Stanley 1877 Life of Edward William Lane London Williams and Norgate Thompson Jason 2010 Edward William Lane The Life of the Pioneering Egyptologist and Orientalist 1801 1876 Cairo American University in Cairo Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edward William Lane Works by Edward William Lane at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Edward William Lane at Internet Archive Lane s Arabic English lexicon in the DjVu fileformat Downloadable At Archive org In Eight Parts Each part is about 20 megabytes See also the related copyright details Edward William Lane An Arabic English Lexicon ا Catalogue of the Edward Lane manuscripts in the Archive of the Griffith Institute University of Oxford Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward William Lane amp oldid 1176598425, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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