History of Aleppo (Izz' al-Din Ibn Shaddad, Al-A'lak al-Khafira fi Dikr Umara al-Sham wa al-Jazeera).
ID #35817
Ibn Shaddad, ‘Izz al-Din
8vo. 196 leaves, plus 4 endpapers, Arabic text, produced for patron in France, complete, single column, 13 lines in black naskh, headings and important phrases in red, exceptionally clean copy, nineteenth-century ink inscriptions to endpapers in English, contemporary morocco over pasteboards, stamped and ruled in blind with decorative medallions to centre of covers, but without flap, early inscription “No 4” in black ink to upper cover, edges worn with loss to leather, revealing Arabic manuscript leaves compacted to reuse as pasteboards, decorated manuscript on paper. The binding here is distinctively Near Eastern, and the boards are composed from seventeenth-century Arabic manuscript leaves. However, a 20 mm. long section of the original leather of the outermost edge of the back board shows that this binding cannot have ever had a flap. This probably represents an attempt by an Arabic bookbinder to bind in the style of Western books, as part of this highly individual commission for a Western Arabist; [probably Aleppo or perhaps Constantinople, dated Rabi al-thani 1079 AH (September 1688 AD)].