Showing 1 - 12 results of 12 for search '', query time: 0.02s Refine Results
Published 1963
Jerusalem delivered /

: Select bibliography (compiled by Joann Soloff)" : xxxiv, 446 pages ; 19 cm. : Bibliography : pages xxxiii-xxxiv.

Published 1992
Akhenaten /

: xiv, 172 pages ; 20 cm. : 0702223670

Published 1967
al-Madāʼiḥ al-nabawīyah.

: 272 pages ; 24 cm. : Bibliographical footnotes. : .alaa-sweed

A shattered visage lies-- : nineteenth century poetry inspired by ancient Egypt /

: xviii, 155 pages : illustrations, map ; 21 cm. : Includes bibliographical references (pages 152-154) and indexes. : 0954762223

Qalāʼid al-ʻiqyān /

: iv, 307 pages ; 24 cm : Includes bibliographical references and index.

Qala'id al-'iqyan /

: 4, 307 pages ; 24 cm.

Published 1950
al-Qaṣāʼid al-sabʻ al-nabawīyah /

: 57 pages ; 25 cm.

Published 2019
Rustam nāma : Dāstān-i manẓūm-i Musalmān shudan-i Rustam bih dast-i Imām ʿAlī ('alayhi al-salām) bih inḍimām-i Muʿjiz-nāma-yi Mawlā-yi muttaqiyān /

: In his Meccan days Muḥammad's message was rejected by many as a threat to the values and interests of the community. Among his opponents, there was a merchant called Naḍr b. Ḥārith. From his visits to the city of Ḥīra in Mesopotamia, a cultural melting-pot of Iranian, Christian, and pagan Arab beliefs and traditions, he had brought back stories from Iranian folklore, especially about Rustam and Isfandyār, with which he tried to attract the attention of those listening to Muḥammad's speeches, away from the latter's revolutionary message. This explains why the religious elite of the Persianate world rejected Iranian epic folklore as contrary to the message of Shīʿī Islam, Rustam in particular being viewed as incompatibele with the person of Imam ʿAlī. But folklore being difficult to eradicate, Rustam was often depicted as a Muslim convert and enemy-turned-friend of ʿAlī, like in this poem from Safavid times. A miracle story involving ʿAlī accompanies it.
: 1 online resource. : 9789004405042
9789648700657

Published 2011
Brill's companion to Lucan /

: Although it was labeled an anti-epic for trumping the celebratory scope of the Roman national epos, Lucan's Bellum Civile is a hymn to lost republican liberty composed under Nero's tyrannical empire. Lucan lost his life in a foiled conspiracy to replace the emperor, but his poem survived the wreckage of antiquity and enjoyed uninterrupted readership. The present collection samples the most current approaches to Lucan's poem, its themes, its dialogue with other texts, its reception in medieval and early modern literature, and its relevance to audiences of all times.
: 1 online resource (xxi, 625 pages) : Includes bibliographical references and indexes. : 9789004217096 : Available to subscribing member institutions only.

Published 2010
Brill's companion to Silius Italicus /

: Only recently have scholars turned their attention to Silius Italicus' Punica , a poem the reputation of which was eclipsed by the emergence of Virgil's Aeneid as the canonical Latin epos of Augustan Rome. This collection of essays aims at examining the importance of Silius' historical epic in Flavian, Domitianic Rome by offering a detailed overview of the poem's context and intertext, its themes and images, and its reception from antiquity through Renaissance and modern philological criticism. This pioneering volume is the first comprehensive, collaborative study on the longest epic poem in Latin literature.
: 1 online resource (xxi, 512 pages) : Includes bibliographical references (p. 449-472) and indexes. : 9789004217119 : Available to subscribing member institutions only.

Published 1957
The mevlidi sherif /

: "First published 1943."
The first four couplets set to music (unaccompanied): [2] p. at end.
Translation of a Turkish poem in praise of the prophet, originally entitled Vesiletu'n-necat (The means of deliverance). : 41, [3] pages ; 18 cm. : Includes bibliographical references.

Published 1859
Hādhā kitāb Ḥalbat al-kumayt fī al-adab wa-al-nawādir al-mutaʻalliqah bi-al-khamrīyāt /

: 2, 340 pages ; 29 cm.