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17th-century Quran edition
The Marracci edition is an Arabic edition and Latin translation of the Quran from 1698. It was published in two volumes under the title Alcorani Textus
Marracci_edition
Italian Oriental scholar and professor of Arabic
Ludovico Marracci (6 October 1612 – 5 February 1700), also known by Luigi Marracci, was an Italian Oriental scholar and professor of Arabic at Sapienza
Ludovico_Marracci
19th-century Quranic edition
the Marracci edition in 1698. The publication of the Flügel Quran edition in 1834, in Leipzig by Tauchnitz publishers, superseded these editions. It was
Flügel_edition
17th-century Quran edition
publish the Marracci edition of the Quran in Padua in 1698, this time including a translation and a commentary. The production of these two editions inspired
Hinckelmann_edition
Latin translation of the Quran by Robert of Ketton
some meaning of the original text may be lost. Flügel edition Hinckelmann edition Marracci edition List of translations of the Qur'an Manuscripts Steven
Lex_Mahumet_pseudoprophete
Academic discipline
print editions also once existed, including the Hinckelmann edition, Marracci edition, both from the late 17th century, and notably the Flugel edition, established
Quranic_studies
Retrieved 16 February 2015. Alastair Hamilton, After Marracci: The Reception of Ludovico Marracci’s Edition of The Qur’an in Northern Europe from the Late 17thC
Prodromus
Uzbek Quran manuscript (dated 765–855)
Hinckelmann edition Iraq Quran [ar] Libya Quran [ar] Medina Quran [ar] Marracci edition Mauritania Quran [ar] Qatar Quran [ar] Thaalibia Quran Uthman Taha
Samarkand_Kufic_Quran
German theologian
the first to print a complete edition of the Qur'an in Hamburg in 1694. Later in 1698, a cleric named Ludovico Marracci from the "Society of the Monks
Abraham_Hinckelmann
City and comune in Tuscany, Italy
(1097–1185) Vincenzo Lunardi (1754–1806), aeronautical pioneer aeronaut Ludovico Marracci (1612–1700), priest and first translator of the Qur'an into Latin Felice
Lucca
English Orientalist scholar (1697–1736)
George ODNB, 28 May 2015 Alexander Bevilacqua: The Qur'an Translations of Marracci and Sale, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes The Koran. Translated
George_Sale
Translations of the Islamic holy book
Qur'an", where Marracci disproves Islam from the then Catholic point of view. Despite the Refutation's anti-Islamic tendency, Marracci's translation is
Quran_translations
Sunni Qur'anic exegesis by al-Baydawi
ISBN 9781908433053. Alexander Bevilacqua: The Qur'an Translations of Marracci and Sale, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes "Dr. Gibril Fouad
Tafsir_al-Baydawi
Horse race
Sirlad 1978: Elgay 1979: Marracci The 1916, 1917 and 1925 runnings took place at Parioli, and the 1918, 1944 and 1945 editions were held at Milan. List
Derby_Italiano
101st chapter of the Qur'an
emphasized in the beginning. According to the Papal translator, Ludovico Marracci, the original word Hâwiyat is the name of the lowest dungeon of hell, and
Al-Qaria
16th-century Spanish translator
Leo Africanus Mark of Toledo Ignazio Lomellini Robert of Ketton Ludovico Marracci Starczewska, Katarzyna K. Thomas, David; Chesworth, John (eds.). "Juan
Juan_Gabriel_of_Teruel
Oporinus, Basileae. Third translation from Arabic 1691–1698, by Ludovico Marracci (Padua). First ever published Quraan in Latin Words One to One (2022) by
List of translations of the Quran
List_of_translations_of_the_Quran
Italian painter and architect of the High Baroque (1596–1669)
(Stamperia, Giovanni Antonio Bonardi, Florence, 1652). Authorship in subsequent editions is attributed to Cortona. Cortona employed or trained many prominent artists
Pietro_da_Cortona
Book on Islam by Abdallāh ibn Salām
Alfonso de Espina, Nicolas of Cusa, Dionysius the Carthusian, Ludovico Marracci and the author of the Theophrastus redivivus. Today, the Masāʾil is sometimes
Masa'il_Abdallah_ibn_Salam
National beauty pageant competition in Italy
prizes every year to young, female contestants from Italy. Since the first edition of the contest, in 1939, many of the contestants have gone on to careers
Miss_Italia
perennial thesis (e.g., cf. L. Marracci). Aloys Sprenger (1813–1893) Austria, Das Leben und die Lehre des Mohammad (2nd edition, 3 volumes, Berlin 1869). Carl
List of non-Muslim authors on Islam
List_of_non-Muslim_authors_on_Islam
his predecessor André du Ryer (1647). He also pays homage to Ludovico Marracci 's Latin translation (1698), which he cites in the notes. In the Life of
Claude-Étienne_Savary
Christian scholar, author, translator
assessments of the Lead Books, particularly the work of the Arabist Ludovico Marracci. In addition to his polemical writings, Dobelio assembled a significant
Marcos_Dobelio
MARRACCI EDITION
MARRACCI EDITION
Boy/Male
Tamil
Mayamareechahantre | மாயாமாஂரீசாஹாநà¯à®¤à¯à®°à¯‡
Slayer of demon tatakas son mariachi
Mayamareechahantre | மாயாமாஂரீசாஹாநà¯à®¤à¯à®°à¯‡
Boy/Male
Hindu
Slayer of demon tatakas son mariachi
Surname or Lastname
English
English : probably a habitational name from a place in Devon named Bowditch, from the Old English phrase būfan dīce ‘above the ditch’.The surname Bowditch is well known in New England. Nathaniel Bowditch (1773–1838), author of The Practical Navigator (1772), a standard work that went through more than sixty editions, was born in Salem, MA, the son of a shipmaster. The family can be traced back, via a clothier who settled in New England in 1671, to Thorncombe in Devon in the early 16th century.
MARRACCI EDITION
MARRACCI EDITION
Boy/Male
Arabic, Indian, Muslim
Dazzling; Brilliant
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Intelligent and Wise
Girl/Female
Indian, Tamil
Goddess Amman
Girl/Female
Tamil
Divine, Rose
Boy/Male
Indian
Similar; Option
Boy/Male
Hindu
Merciful
Girl/Female
Indian
Goddess; Study
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Entire Knowledgeable
Biblical
bull of Africa; a fat bull
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : metonymic occupational name for a turnspit, i.e. a servant who turned the spit, from Old French haste ‘(roasting) spit’.A bearer of the name Haste from Paris is documented in Montreal in 1662.
MARRACCI EDITION
MARRACCI EDITION
MARRACCI EDITION
MARRACCI EDITION
MARRACCI EDITION
a.
Containing notes by different persons; -- applied to a publication; as, a variorum edition of a book.
a.
Applied to books or editions (esp. of the Greek New Testament and the classics) printed and published by the Elzevir family at Amsterdam, Leyden, etc., from about 1592 to 1680; also, applied to a round open type introduced by them.
n.
The whole number of copies of a work printed and published at one time; as, the first edition was soon sold.
n.
The state of being improved; betterment; advance; also, that which is improved; as, the new edition is an improvement on the old.
n.
The pressure of the type on the paper, or the result of such pressure, as regards its appearance; as, a heavy impression; a clear, or a poor, impression; also, a single copy as the result of printing, or the whole edition printed at a given time.
n.
A mark [thus /, or Ö ]; -- so called as resembling a needle. In old MSS. or editions of the classics, it marks suspected passages or readings.
v. t.
To print again; to print a second or a new edition of.
a.
Pertaining to the dauphin of France; as, the Delphin classics, an edition of the Latin classics, prepared in the reign of Louis XIV., for the use of the dauphin (in usum Delphini).
a.
Published after the death of the author; as, posthumous works; a posthumous edition.
n.
An editor.
n.
A second or a new impression or edition of any printed work; specifically, the publication in one country of a work previously published in another.
n.
A literary work edited and published, as by a certain editor or in a certain manner; as, a good edition of Chaucer; Chalmers' edition of Shakespeare.
n.
An incorrect or spurious edition.
v. t.
To strike off an impression or impressions of, from type, or from stereotype, electrotype, or engraved plates, or the like; in a wider sense, to do the typesetting, presswork, etc., of (a book or other publication); as, to print books, newspapers, pictures; to print an edition of a book.
n.
To reconsider; to revise, as a manuscript before printing it, or a book for a new edition.
n.
A history or description of books and manuscripts, with notices of the different editions, the times when they were printed, etc.
sing.
A collection of the Holy Scriptures in six languages or six versions in parallel columns; particularly, the edition of the Old Testament published by Origen, in the 3d century.
v. i.
To stir with strong emotion; to grieve; to mourn. [Corrupted into yearn in modern editions of Shakespeare.]