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Jurji Zaydan

Jurji Zaydan[a] (Arabic: جرجي زيدان, ALA-LC: Jurjī Zaydān; December 14, 1861 – July 21, 1914) was a prolific Lebanese novelist, journalist, editor and teacher, most noted for his creation of the magazine Al-Hilal, which he used to serialize his twenty three historical novels.

Jurji Zaydan
جرجي زيدان
Born(1861-12-14)December 14, 1861
Beirut Vilayet, Ottoman Syria (present-day Lebanon)
Died July 21, 1914(1914-07-21) (aged 52)
Cairo, Egypt
OccupationWriter, novelist, journalist, editor and teacher
Literary movementPan-Arabism

His primary goal, as a writer and intellectual during the Nahda, was to make the common Arabic population know their own history through the entertaining medium of the novel. He has enjoyed a widespread popularity. He is also considered to have been one of the first thinkers to help formulate the theory of Arab nationalism.[1]

Early life edit

Jurji Zaydan was born on December 14, 1861, in Beirut to an Eastern Orthodox Christian family of limited means that had probably originated in the Hauran region.[2][3] His father owned a restaurant and, being illiterate and uneducated himself, placed little importance on education. Zaydan dropped out of school after he completed an elementary education to help his father run the business.[4][5]

However, he maintained a desire to educate himself by attending night classes in English until, in 1881, at the age of 20, he was admitted to the Syrian Protestant College as a medical student. He developed an interest in concepts of individualism such as laissez-faire economics, the Freemason belief in a universal enlightenment, and social Darwinism.[4] He was particularly influenced by Samuel Smiles's book, Self-Help (published in 1859) to which he felt he could relate because of its emphasis on a rags-to-riches success story built upon hard work and perseverance.[6] Furthermore, the book's focus on individualism and the self, a relatively new concept in Arab intellectual thought, would be a common theme in Zaydan's later historical novels.

He attended the university around the same time as Yaqub Sarruf (1852–1927), who first translated Self-Help into Arabic and would later found the magazine Al-Muqtataf (The Elite, 1876) with whom he shared ideals of modernizing the Arab world and emphasis on individual success through hard work.[7]

Cornelius Van Dyck, an American professor of pathology at the Syrian Protestant College known for his translation of the Bible into Arabic in 1847, first encouraged Sarruf to translate Self-Help. He also influenced Zaydan's worldview, leading him to adopt the idea that education was the most important factor for the progress and development of a people.[7] Such widespread education could be reached only by widespread internal reform and modernization of all aspects of Arab government and daily life. Zaydan thus became critical of contemporaries such as Egyptian Moustafa Kamal Pascha and Ahmed Orabi, who were concerned solely with gaining independence from Western influence. Zaydan argued that reform must precede independence to ensure its success.

In 1882, Professor E. Lewis was fired from the Syrian Protestant College for lightly praising Charles Darwin in a speech that he made to students of the college. Because the concept of Darwinism was highly controversial in Protestantism, it had forbidden its inclusion in any curriculum. The firing led to mass protests amongst the students, many of whom left or were expelled for rebelling.[4]

Additionally, many of the European pastors running the college were beginning to favour English over Arabic as the language of education. Zaydan was among those who left Syria for Cairo, where many Lebanese intellectuals and members of the Nahda had already relocated as a reaction to increased Ottoman suppression.

After a short stint in the Medical School of 'Ain Shams' and a military expedition with the British army to the Sudan, he turned his focus to developing his writing career.[4]

Yaqub Sarruf began publishing al-Muqtataf in 1876 with help from Cornelius Van Dyck and his Syrian Protestant College classmates Faris Namir and Shahin Makarius. The magazine was concerned primarily covering modern scientific advancements, the first to do so in the Arab world, and it was known particularly known for its controversial coverage of the theory of evolution and Darwinism in the early 1880s.

Career edit

After briefly serving as assistant editor for al-Muqtataf, Zaydan began producing scholarly works on various historical topics. His interest in history propelled him to travel to London to research Arabic history in the library of the British Museum.

His first book was published in 1889 with Ta'rikh al-Masuniya al-Amm in which he aimed to correct misconceptions about the Freemasons of which he was a member of the "Le Liban" lodge.[8] The Freemason belief that universal knowledge existed and should be available to every person appealed to intellectuals like Zaydan as well as their quest to tap into this knowledge.

In 1890, he published al-Ta'rikh al-'Alamm (History of the World), a rather thin history of Asia and of Africa with a focus on the Middle East. Still, it is cited as one of the first non-Islamic histories to be written in Arabic, marking a turning point in the development of modern Arab education. Before, the entirety of Arab history had been recorded by the ulama, the religious scholars of the Caliphate. It was the first attempt at recording a nonreligious version of Middle Eastern history.

He then taught Arabic and opened a publishing house that he named Dar al-Hilal (The Crescent). His professional and personal life took a turn in 1891, with his marriage to Maryam Matar and the publication of his first historical novel, al-Mamluk al-Shariid (The Fleeing Mamluk).[6] The novel met with such broad success that he was able to quit his teaching job. He would continue to steadily produce roughly one novel a year until his death in 1914.[4]

He began publishing his most influential project, the magazine Al-Hilal (The Crescent) in 1892.[9] It originally contained five sections: a history of the most famous men and events; articles by him or other writers, serialization of his historical novels, monthly events and world news of Egypt and Syria, and eulogies and criticism about mostly contemporary literature.[4] With its focus on informing the public about Islamic history and new concepts within Western civilization, the magazine often took on an encyclopedic tone.

His primary aim remained steady throughout his publication of Al-Hilal and his historical novels: to provide the common Arabic people with an accurate sense of their own history in an accessible, entertaining way. Historical accuracy thus took firm precedence over plot and character development in each of his novels, and he was often critical of Western writers who bent historical fact to fit their literature, claiming such liberties misled the general public.[6]

Historical novel edit

Zaydan would typically write his annual novel during the summer months when al-Hilal was not published to begin its serialisation in the fall. Every novel but one had an almost identical frame.

He would begin each one by picking a historical topic. Though his novels did not follow a logical timeline, they were all centered on some aspect of Islamic history. Next, he would read all available sources on the topic in order to gain the most thorough understanding possible. Then, he would build a skeleton outline based entirely on historical fact. Finally, he would dream up characters and a romance through which he would relate the history.[6]

The scholar's accuracy with which he approached each novel is further demonstrated by his frequent inclusion of documented sources, frequent footnotes and introductory chapters that provided historic, cultural and geographic context to the historic event of choice.[10] The entertainment aspect came in with a love story between fictitious characters and a mystery of some sort to maintain reader interest. His plots were often weak, relying mostly on convenient coincidences between characters to drive the love story and mystery, with almost all of his novels ending in a happy ending.[6]

His characters were often one-dimensional, with no insight given on their skills, background or their view of the time, institutions or society of which they were. Because he would present all character traits and personalities within the first mention of each character, character development was never present. The static characters, coupled with his straightforward, journalistic style were ideal for relating an objective and accurate history in the clearest way possible to the broad Arab public.

Along with providing the general population with education, he also aimed to develop "philosophy of language", which has the explicit purpose of informing, educating and enlightening. He was critical of writing that was accessible to only a small group of people, especially the esoteric language in religious scholarship. Because of the 10% literacy rate among men and 0.05% among women of the time, such gilded language was largely inaccessible to the general public.[4] The introduction of the novel, especially one written in simple, clear language, is particularly noted for shifting the act of reading from the scholarly elite to the individual.

Death and impact edit

In 1910, the newly opened Egyptian University offered Zaydan a professorship in Islamic History, which Zaydan accepted only reluctantly because of his unpopularity amongst conservative Muslims. He was dismissed before beginning in response to significant outcry from the Muslim public, who objected to his Christian origins and secular leanings.

Zaydan's secular take on history was particularly controversial in Tarikh al-Tamaddun al-Islam (The History of the Islamic Civilization, 1901–1906), in which he offers a critical secular reading of Islamic history in at least five volumes. The experience embittered him until his unexpected death in 1914.[4]

Leaving behind a legacy that includes 23 published novels, numerous scholarly works, and a magazine then circulated in Persia, India, Japan, Western Africa, Zanzibar, Australia, New Zealand, the West Indies, and North and South America, he was one of the most prolific and renowned Arab writers of the time. His impact left a lasting impression on the general Arab population as well as such literary giants as Taha Hussein, Naguib Mahfouz and poet Fadwa Tuqan.[10]

Beyond the amount of work that he produced in his life though, there is the shift in thinking he brought to the Nahda and those who followed it. Because the Arabic novel was written in an accessible language, individualized education took a huge step away from the religious elite and towards the general population. His printing press greatly aided in this attempt to spread new knowledge and ideas to people of all backgrounds.

Major works edit

History edit

  • 1889: Tarikh al-Masuniya al-'Amm (General History of the Freemasons)
  • 1890: Tarikh al-'Amm (The General History of the World)
  • 1899: Tarikh al-Yunan wa al-Ruman (History of Greece and Rome)
  • 1901–1906: Tarikh al-Tamaddun al-Islami 5 vols. (History of Islamic Civilization)
  • 1907: al-'Arab qabl al-Islam (Arabs before Islam)
  • 1907: al-Rih'lat al thlath (The three trips: historic accounts from visits to Istanbul, Europe, and Palestine)
  • 1910–1913: Tarikh Adab al-luga al-'Arabiya 4 vols. (The History of Arabic Literature)
  • 1912: Ṭabaqāt al-umam aw Al-salāʼil al-basharīyah (The Generations of the Nations, or the Descendants of Humanity)

Autobiography edit

  • 1966: Mudakkirat Gurgi Zaidan (The Life of Jurji Zaydan)

Magazine edit

  • 1892–1914: Al Hilal (the Crescent) vol. I-XXII

Novels edit

  • 1891: al-Mamluk al-Sariid (The Fleeing Mamluk)
  • 1892: Asir al-Mutamahdi (The Captive of the Mahdi Pretender)
  • 1893: Istibdad al-Mamalik (Despotism of the Mamluks)
  • 1893: Jihad al-Muhibbin
  • 1896: Armansura al-Misriyya (Egyptian Armansura)
  • 1897/98: Fatat Ghassan (Girls of Ghassan)
  • 1899: 'Adra Quraish (Virgin of Quraish)
  • 1900: 17 Ramadan
  • 1901: Ghadat Karbala (Battle of Karbala)
  • 1902: al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf
  • 1903: Fath al-Andalus (Conquest of Andalusia)
  • 1904: Sharl wa 'Abd al-Rahman (Charles Martel and Abd al-Rahman)
  • 1905: Abu Muslim al-Khurasani (Abu Muslim Khorasani)
  • 1906: al-'Abbasa ukht al-Rashid (Abbasa Sister of Harun al-Rashid)
  • 1907: al-Amin wa al-Ma'mun (al-Amin and al-Ma'mun)
  • 1908: 'Arus Farghana (Bride of Farghana)
  • 1909: Ahmad ibn Tulun
  • 1910: 'Abd al-Rahman al-Nasir
  • 1911: al-Inqilab al-'Uthmani (the Ottoman Revolution)
  • 1912: Fatat al-Qairawan (Girls of Qairawan)
  • 1913: Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi (Saladin)
  • 1914: Shajarat al-Durr (The Pearl Tree)

Translations edit

Until recently, Zaydan's works were not available in English, but they have been translated in a dozen other languages.[11] The Zaidan Foundation, set up by his grandson dr. George Zaidan to promote Arab culture, has commissioned translations of five of his twenty-two historical novels. The work began in 2009, and the books were due to be released in 2011 and 2012.[needs update]:

  • The Conquest of Andalusia (Fath al-Andalus). Translation by Professor Roger Allen (UPenn). October 2011.
  • The Battle of Poitiers (or Charles Martel and 'Abd al- Rahman). Translated by Professor William Granara (Harvard). December 2011.
  • The Caliph's Sister – Harun al-Rashid and the Fall of the Persians (al-Abbasa Ukht al-Rashid). Translated by Professor Issa J. Boullata (McGill). February 2012.
  • The Caliph's Heirs – Brothers at War: the Fall of Baghdad (al-Amin wal-Ma'mun). Translated by Professor Michael Cooperson (UCLA). February 2012.
  • Saladin and the Assassins (Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi). Translated by Professor Paul Starkey (Durham University). April 2012.

Also in 2011, the translator Samah Selim translated Zaydan's novel Shajarat al-Durr into English. It won the Arkansas Arabic Translation Award.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also transliterated Jorge Zaydân, Georgie Zeidan, or Jirjî Zaydan.

References edit

  1. ^ Philipp, Thomas (1973). "Language, History, and Arab National Consciousness in the Thought of Jurji Zaidan (1861-1914)". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 4 (1): 3–22. doi:10.1017/S0020743800027240. JSTOR 162222. S2CID 162260580.
  2. ^ https://zaidanfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Thomas-Philipp-Gurgi-Zaidan-His-Life-and-Thought_SMALL.pdf
  3. ^ Booth, Marilyn (July 28, 2014). Long 1890s in Egypt: Colonial Quiescence, Subterranean Resistance. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-7013-0.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Thomas Philipp (1979). Gurgi Zaidan His Life And Thought. Beirut: Orient Institut. ISBN 978-3-515-01842-5.
  5. ^ "The Zaidan Foundation".
  6. ^ a b c d e Matti Moosa (1983). The Origins of Modern Arabic Fiction. Washington, D.C.: Three Continents. ISBN 978-0-89410-684-2.
  7. ^ a b Donald M. Reid (1970). Syrian Christians, the Rags-to-Riches Story, and Free Enterprise. Cambridge University Press.
  8. ^ Sommer, Dorothe (November 30, 2016). Freemasonry in the Ottoman Empire : a History of the Fraternity and its Influence in Syria and the Levant (New paperback ed.). London. ISBN 9781784536671. OCLC 962793302.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Gerges, Fawaz A. (2018). Making the Arab world : Nasser, Qutb, and the clash that shaped the Middle East. Princeton, New Jersey. p. 44. ISBN 978-1-4008-9007-1. OCLC 1022845920.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ a b Stephen Sheehi (1999). "Doubleness and Duality: Jurji Zaydan's Al-Mamluk Al-Sharid and Allegories of Becoming". Index Islamicus: Journal of Arabic Literature.
  11. ^ Zaidan Foundation

Sources edit

  • Cachia, Pierre. "Literature: Arabic." Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. 2nd ed. Vol. 3. New York: Macmillan Reference USA, 2004. 1418-422. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Gale, Cengage Learning, 2004. Web.
  • Moosa, Matti. The Origins of Modern Arabic Fiction. Washington, D.C.: Three Continents, 1983. Print.
  • Philipp, Thomas, and Jirji Zaydan. Gurgi Zaidan: His Life and Thought. Beirut: Orient-Institut, 1979. Print.
  • Philipp, Thomas. Jurji Zaidan and the Foundations of Arab Nationalism. New York: Syracuse University Press, 2014.
  • Reid, Donald M. "Syrian Christians, the Rags-to-Riches Story, and Free Enterprise." International Journal of Middle East Studies 1.4 (1970): 358–67.
  • Sheehi, Stephen. "Doubleness and Duality: Jurji Zaydan's Al-Mamluk Al-Sharid and Allegories of Becoming." Journal of Arabic Literature 30.I (1999): 90–105. Index Islamicus. Academic Search Complete. Web.
  • Ware, L. B. "Women's Emancipation in the Middle East: Jurji Zaydan's View." Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies 2.Iv (1979): 38–55. Index Islamicus. Web.

Works edit

  • Yaʻqūb Ṣarrūf (1893). al-Muqtaṭaf, Volume 17. Retrieved July 6, 2011.

External links edit

jurji, zaydan, arabic, جرجي, زيدان, jurjī, zaydān, december, 1861, july, 1914, prolific, lebanese, novelist, journalist, editor, teacher, most, noted, creation, magazine, hilal, which, used, serialize, twenty, three, historical, novels, جرجي, زيدانborn, 1861, . Jurji Zaydan a Arabic جرجي زيدان ALA LC Jurji Zaydan December 14 1861 July 21 1914 was a prolific Lebanese novelist journalist editor and teacher most noted for his creation of the magazine Al Hilal which he used to serialize his twenty three historical novels Jurji Zaydanجرجي زيدانBorn 1861 12 14 December 14 1861Beirut Vilayet Ottoman Syria present day Lebanon DiedJuly 21 1914 1914 07 21 aged 52 Cairo EgyptOccupationWriter novelist journalist editor and teacherLiterary movementPan Arabism His primary goal as a writer and intellectual during the Nahda was to make the common Arabic population know their own history through the entertaining medium of the novel He has enjoyed a widespread popularity He is also considered to have been one of the first thinkers to help formulate the theory of Arab nationalism 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Historical novel 4 Death and impact 5 Major works 5 1 History 5 2 Autobiography 5 3 Magazine 5 4 Novels 6 Translations 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 Works 11 External linksEarly life editJurji Zaydan was born on December 14 1861 in Beirut to an Eastern Orthodox Christian family of limited means that had probably originated in the Hauran region 2 3 His father owned a restaurant and being illiterate and uneducated himself placed little importance on education Zaydan dropped out of school after he completed an elementary education to help his father run the business 4 5 However he maintained a desire to educate himself by attending night classes in English until in 1881 at the age of 20 he was admitted to the Syrian Protestant College as a medical student He developed an interest in concepts of individualism such as laissez faire economics the Freemason belief in a universal enlightenment and social Darwinism 4 He was particularly influenced by Samuel Smiles s book Self Help published in 1859 to which he felt he could relate because of its emphasis on a rags to riches success story built upon hard work and perseverance 6 Furthermore the book s focus on individualism and the self a relatively new concept in Arab intellectual thought would be a common theme in Zaydan s later historical novels He attended the university around the same time as Yaqub Sarruf 1852 1927 who first translated Self Help into Arabic and would later found the magazine Al Muqtataf The Elite 1876 with whom he shared ideals of modernizing the Arab world and emphasis on individual success through hard work 7 Cornelius Van Dyck an American professor of pathology at the Syrian Protestant College known for his translation of the Bible into Arabic in 1847 first encouraged Sarruf to translate Self Help He also influenced Zaydan s worldview leading him to adopt the idea that education was the most important factor for the progress and development of a people 7 Such widespread education could be reached only by widespread internal reform and modernization of all aspects of Arab government and daily life Zaydan thus became critical of contemporaries such as Egyptian Moustafa Kamal Pascha and Ahmed Orabi who were concerned solely with gaining independence from Western influence Zaydan argued that reform must precede independence to ensure its success In 1882 Professor E Lewis was fired from the Syrian Protestant College for lightly praising Charles Darwin in a speech that he made to students of the college Because the concept of Darwinism was highly controversial in Protestantism it had forbidden its inclusion in any curriculum The firing led to mass protests amongst the students many of whom left or were expelled for rebelling 4 Additionally many of the European pastors running the college were beginning to favour English over Arabic as the language of education Zaydan was among those who left Syria for Cairo where many Lebanese intellectuals and members of the Nahda had already relocated as a reaction to increased Ottoman suppression After a short stint in the Medical School of Ain Shams and a military expedition with the British army to the Sudan he turned his focus to developing his writing career 4 Yaqub Sarruf began publishing al Muqtataf in 1876 with help from Cornelius Van Dyck and his Syrian Protestant College classmates Faris Namir and Shahin Makarius The magazine was concerned primarily covering modern scientific advancements the first to do so in the Arab world and it was known particularly known for its controversial coverage of the theory of evolution and Darwinism in the early 1880s Career editAfter briefly serving as assistant editor for al Muqtataf Zaydan began producing scholarly works on various historical topics His interest in history propelled him to travel to London to research Arabic history in the library of the British Museum His first book was published in 1889 with Ta rikh al Masuniya al Amm in which he aimed to correct misconceptions about the Freemasons of which he was a member of the Le Liban lodge 8 The Freemason belief that universal knowledge existed and should be available to every person appealed to intellectuals like Zaydan as well as their quest to tap into this knowledge In 1890 he published al Ta rikh al Alamm History of the World a rather thin history of Asia and of Africa with a focus on the Middle East Still it is cited as one of the first non Islamic histories to be written in Arabic marking a turning point in the development of modern Arab education Before the entirety of Arab history had been recorded by the ulama the religious scholars of the Caliphate It was the first attempt at recording a nonreligious version of Middle Eastern history He then taught Arabic and opened a publishing house that he named Dar al Hilal The Crescent His professional and personal life took a turn in 1891 with his marriage to Maryam Matar and the publication of his first historical novel al Mamluk al Shariid The Fleeing Mamluk 6 The novel met with such broad success that he was able to quit his teaching job He would continue to steadily produce roughly one novel a year until his death in 1914 4 He began publishing his most influential project the magazine Al Hilal The Crescent in 1892 9 It originally contained five sections a history of the most famous men and events articles by him or other writers serialization of his historical novels monthly events and world news of Egypt and Syria and eulogies and criticism about mostly contemporary literature 4 With its focus on informing the public about Islamic history and new concepts within Western civilization the magazine often took on an encyclopedic tone His primary aim remained steady throughout his publication of Al Hilal and his historical novels to provide the common Arabic people with an accurate sense of their own history in an accessible entertaining way Historical accuracy thus took firm precedence over plot and character development in each of his novels and he was often critical of Western writers who bent historical fact to fit their literature claiming such liberties misled the general public 6 Historical novel editZaydan would typically write his annual novel during the summer months when al Hilal was not published to begin its serialisation in the fall Every novel but one had an almost identical frame He would begin each one by picking a historical topic Though his novels did not follow a logical timeline they were all centered on some aspect of Islamic history Next he would read all available sources on the topic in order to gain the most thorough understanding possible Then he would build a skeleton outline based entirely on historical fact Finally he would dream up characters and a romance through which he would relate the history 6 The scholar s accuracy with which he approached each novel is further demonstrated by his frequent inclusion of documented sources frequent footnotes and introductory chapters that provided historic cultural and geographic context to the historic event of choice 10 The entertainment aspect came in with a love story between fictitious characters and a mystery of some sort to maintain reader interest His plots were often weak relying mostly on convenient coincidences between characters to drive the love story and mystery with almost all of his novels ending in a happy ending 6 His characters were often one dimensional with no insight given on their skills background or their view of the time institutions or society of which they were Because he would present all character traits and personalities within the first mention of each character character development was never present The static characters coupled with his straightforward journalistic style were ideal for relating an objective and accurate history in the clearest way possible to the broad Arab public Along with providing the general population with education he also aimed to develop philosophy of language which has the explicit purpose of informing educating and enlightening He was critical of writing that was accessible to only a small group of people especially the esoteric language in religious scholarship Because of the 10 literacy rate among men and 0 05 among women of the time such gilded language was largely inaccessible to the general public 4 The introduction of the novel especially one written in simple clear language is particularly noted for shifting the act of reading from the scholarly elite to the individual Death and impact editIn 1910 the newly opened Egyptian University offered Zaydan a professorship in Islamic History which Zaydan accepted only reluctantly because of his unpopularity amongst conservative Muslims He was dismissed before beginning in response to significant outcry from the Muslim public who objected to his Christian origins and secular leanings Zaydan s secular take on history was particularly controversial in Tarikh al Tamaddun al Islam The History of the Islamic Civilization 1901 1906 in which he offers a critical secular reading of Islamic history in at least five volumes The experience embittered him until his unexpected death in 1914 4 Leaving behind a legacy that includes 23 published novels numerous scholarly works and a magazine then circulated in Persia India Japan Western Africa Zanzibar Australia New Zealand the West Indies and North and South America he was one of the most prolific and renowned Arab writers of the time His impact left a lasting impression on the general Arab population as well as such literary giants as Taha Hussein Naguib Mahfouz and poet Fadwa Tuqan 10 Beyond the amount of work that he produced in his life though there is the shift in thinking he brought to the Nahda and those who followed it Because the Arabic novel was written in an accessible language individualized education took a huge step away from the religious elite and towards the general population His printing press greatly aided in this attempt to spread new knowledge and ideas to people of all backgrounds Major works editHistory edit 1889 Tarikh al Masuniya al Amm General History of the Freemasons 1890 Tarikh al Amm The General History of the World 1899 Tarikh al Yunan wa al Ruman History of Greece and Rome 1901 1906 Tarikh al Tamaddun al Islami 5 vols History of Islamic Civilization 1907 al Arab qabl al Islam Arabs before Islam 1907 al Rih lat al thlath The three trips historic accounts from visits to Istanbul Europe and Palestine 1910 1913 Tarikh Adab al luga al Arabiya 4 vols The History of Arabic Literature 1912 Ṭabaqat al umam aw Al salaʼil al bashariyah The Generations of the Nations or the Descendants of Humanity Autobiography edit 1966 Mudakkirat Gurgi Zaidan The Life of Jurji Zaydan Magazine edit 1892 1914 Al Hilal the Crescent vol I XXII Novels edit 1891 al Mamluk al Sariid The Fleeing Mamluk 1892 Asir al Mutamahdi The Captive of the Mahdi Pretender 1893 Istibdad al Mamalik Despotism of the Mamluks 1893 Jihad al Muhibbin 1896 Armansura al Misriyya Egyptian Armansura 1897 98 Fatat Ghassan Girls of Ghassan 1899 Adra Quraish Virgin of Quraish 1900 17 Ramadan 1901 Ghadat Karbala Battle of Karbala 1902 al Hajjaj ibn Yusuf 1903 Fath al Andalus Conquest of Andalusia 1904 Sharl wa Abd al Rahman Charles Martel and Abd al Rahman 1905 Abu Muslim al Khurasani Abu Muslim Khorasani 1906 al Abbasa ukht al Rashid Abbasa Sister of Harun al Rashid 1907 al Amin wa al Ma mun al Amin and al Ma mun 1908 Arus Farghana Bride of Farghana 1909 Ahmad ibn Tulun 1910 Abd al Rahman al Nasir 1911 al Inqilab al Uthmani the Ottoman Revolution 1912 Fatat al Qairawan Girls of Qairawan 1913 Salah al Din al Ayyubi Saladin 1914 Shajarat al Durr The Pearl Tree Translations editUntil recently Zaydan s works were not available in English but they have been translated in a dozen other languages 11 The Zaidan Foundation set up by his grandson dr George Zaidan to promote Arab culture has commissioned translations of five of his twenty two historical novels The work began in 2009 and the books were due to be released in 2011 and 2012 needs update The Conquest of Andalusia Fath al Andalus Translation by Professor Roger Allen UPenn October 2011 The Battle of Poitiers or Charles Martel and Abd al Rahman Translated by Professor William Granara Harvard December 2011 The Caliph s Sister Harun al Rashid and the Fall of the Persians al Abbasa Ukht al Rashid Translated by Professor Issa J Boullata McGill February 2012 The Caliph s Heirs Brothers at War the Fall of Baghdad al Amin wal Ma mun Translated by Professor Michael Cooperson UCLA February 2012 Saladin and the Assassins Salah al Din al Ayyubi Translated by Professor Paul Starkey Durham University April 2012 Also in 2011 the translator Samah Selim translated Zaydan s novel Shajarat al Durr into English It won the Arkansas Arabic Translation Award Notes edit Also transliterated Jorge Zaydan Georgie Zeidan or Jirji Zaydan References edit Philipp Thomas 1973 Language History and Arab National Consciousness in the Thought of Jurji Zaidan 1861 1914 International Journal of Middle East Studies 4 1 3 22 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027240 JSTOR 162222 S2CID 162260580 https zaidanfoundation org wp content uploads 2022 09 Thomas Philipp Gurgi Zaidan His Life and Thought SMALL pdf Booth Marilyn July 28 2014 Long 1890s in Egypt Colonial Quiescence Subterranean Resistance Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 7013 0 a b c d e f g h Thomas Philipp 1979 Gurgi Zaidan His Life And Thought Beirut Orient Institut ISBN 978 3 515 01842 5 The Zaidan Foundation a b c d e Matti Moosa 1983 The Origins of Modern Arabic Fiction Washington D C Three Continents ISBN 978 0 89410 684 2 a b Donald M Reid 1970 Syrian Christians the Rags to Riches Story and Free Enterprise Cambridge University Press Sommer Dorothe November 30 2016 Freemasonry in the Ottoman Empire a History of the Fraternity and its Influence in Syria and the Levant New paperback ed London ISBN 9781784536671 OCLC 962793302 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gerges Fawaz A 2018 Making the Arab world Nasser Qutb and the clash that shaped the Middle East Princeton New Jersey p 44 ISBN 978 1 4008 9007 1 OCLC 1022845920 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Stephen Sheehi 1999 Doubleness and Duality Jurji Zaydan s Al Mamluk Al Sharid and Allegories of Becoming Index Islamicus Journal of Arabic Literature Zaidan FoundationSources editCachia Pierre Literature Arabic Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa 2nd ed Vol 3 New York Macmillan Reference USA 2004 1418 422 Gale Virtual Reference Library Gale Cengage Learning 2004 Web Moosa Matti The Origins of Modern Arabic Fiction Washington D C Three Continents 1983 Print Philipp Thomas and Jirji Zaydan Gurgi Zaidan His Life and Thought Beirut Orient Institut 1979 Print Philipp Thomas Jurji Zaidan and the Foundations of Arab Nationalism New York Syracuse University Press 2014 Reid Donald M Syrian Christians the Rags to Riches Story and Free Enterprise International Journal of Middle East Studies 1 4 1970 358 67 Sheehi Stephen Doubleness and Duality Jurji Zaydan s Al Mamluk Al Sharid and Allegories of Becoming Journal of Arabic Literature 30 I 1999 90 105 Index Islamicus Academic Search Complete Web Ware L B Women s Emancipation in the Middle East Jurji Zaydan s View Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies 2 Iv 1979 38 55 Index Islamicus Web Works editYaʻqub Ṣarruf 1893 al Muqtaṭaf Volume 17 Retrieved July 6 2011 External links editWorks by or about Jurji Zaydan at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jurji Zaydan amp oldid 1220279218, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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