Schriften und Tagebücher. Fragmente aus dem Orient. Neue Fragmente. Politisch-historische Aufsätze – Tagebücher. In Auswahl herausgegeben und eingeleitet von Hans Feigel und Ernst Molden. TWO VOLUMES.

Fallmerayer, Jacob Philipp (1790-1861).

Book ID: 32412

£55.00

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8vo. Volume I: xxxii, 309 pp., frontispiece portrait / Volume II: 366 pp., [1], half-title, titles printed in red & black, contemporary half-calf, title gilt on decorated spine, set in very good condition, Georg Muller, Munchen & Leipzig, 1913.

Synopsis

Jakob Philipp Fallmerayer (1790 – 1861) was a Tyrolean traveller, journalist, politician and historian. In February 1823 Fallmerayer learned of a prize offered by the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters to encourage research into the history of the Empire of Trebizond. This medieval kingdom, located on the south coast of the Black Sea, was at the time known only through scattered references in Byzantine and Turkish chronicles. Fallmerayer began to collect additional sources in a number of languages, including Arabic and Persian, from libraries across Europe, and corresponded with various scholars, including Silvestre de Sacy and Carl Benedict Hase.
Fallmerayer resolved to travel abroad to collect material for the projected second volume. An opportunity presented itself when the Russian Count Alexander Ivanovich Ostermann-Tolstoy arrived in Munich, seeking a learned companion for an eastward journey. Fallmerayer applied for and received a year-long leave from his teaching duties, and in August 1831 departed from Munich with Ostermann-Tolstoy.
The two sailed first from Trieste to Alexandria, planning to arrive in Jerusalem by Christmas. Instead they remained in Egypt for nearly a year, leaving for Palestine in the summer of 1832.

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