Catalogue Géneral du Musée Arabe du Caire. Lampes et Bouteilles en Verre Emaillé.

Wiet, Gaston.

Book ID: 34807

£450.00

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Folio. vii, 193 pp., xcii leaves of plates, half-title, original printed boards, index, b/w photogragh tipped-in on front cover, cover soiled and rubbed round edges & spine, light foxing mainly to preliminary leaves, otherwise copy clean inside and in good condition, Imprimerie de L’Institut Francais d’Archeologie Orientale, Cairo, first edition, 1929.

Synopsis

Gaston Wiet (1887-1971), was a French orientalist. He graduated from the Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales, and with a law degree, was boarder at the Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale of Cairo in 1909–1911. As an assistant professor in Lyon, where he taught Arabic and Turkish, then a professor in Cairo, he was drafted in 1914, assigned to the Armée d’Orient as a second lieutenant and by the end of the war, he was a captain, decorated by the Serbian government. In 1919, he resumed his teaching activities in Lyon and Paris. In 1926 he was appointed director of the Museum of Islamic Art, a position he held until 1951. He wrote 14 of the 35 volumes of the catalog of the museum, of which he did much to enrich the collections, particularly in the areas of items of furniture and epigraphy. In 1940, Wiet became one of the most ardent supporters of Free France and Général de Gaulle in Cairo. On his return to France in 1951, Wiet was appointed professor at the Collège de France (chair of Arabic language and literature), a position he held until 1959. In 1957, he was elected a member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres. After the second world war he worked with the French forces in Syria and Lebanon producing several studies on Islamic art in Syria and Egypt.
This study covers 78 Islamic lamps beginning with the reign of the Ayyubids Sultan of Aleppo and Damascus Malik Nasser Yusuf (1260).
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