A composite manuscript containing four works, the first three copied by Dervīş Maḥmūd bin el-Ḥācc ʿAbdülkerīm, known as Ciġālazāde in 1202 AH (1787–88 CE). This late Ottoman manuscript contains four works, two in Persian and two in Ottoman Turkish: Pandnāmah (Book of Advice), spuriously attributed to the poet Farīd al-Dīn ʿAṭṭār (d. 1230). Ottoman scribe 'Ciġālazāde' Dervīş Maḥmūd bin ‘Abdülkerīm, whose patronym connotes descent from the aristocratic Genoese Cicala family, completed the first, second, and third works in 1202 AH (1787–88 CE), while an unidentified individual copied the third.
description
A composite manuscript containing four works, the first three copied by Dervīş Maḥmūd bin el-Ḥācc ʿAbdülkerīm, known as Ciġālazāde in 1202 AH (1787–88 CE). This late Ottoman manuscript contains four works, two in Persian and two in Ottoman Turkish: Pandnāmah (Book of Advice), spuriously attributed to the poet Farīd al-Dīn ʿAṭṭār (d. 1230). Ottoman scribe 'Ciġālazāde' Dervīş Maḥmūd bin ‘Abdülkerīm, whose patronym connotes descent from the aristocratic Genoese Cicala family, completed the first, second, and third works in 1202 AH (1787–88 CE), while an unidentified individual copied the third.
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