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OverviewThis book explores the unprecedented Ottoman interest in illustrated cosmographies and their representation of the world and its inhabitants. It analyses fifteen illustrated manuscripts of four cosmographical texts on the Old and New Worlds (in Arabic, Persian and Ottoman Turkish) produced in the capital Istanbul and the Ottoman provinces of Egypt, Syria and Baghdad, c. 15501700. Overall, dozens of richly illustrated cosmographies were copied across the span of six hundred years, from the late thirteenth until the nineteenth century, in different artistic centres and by different political entities in Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Egypt and India. This study points to an unprecedented and unparalleled production of illustrated cosmographies in the Ottoman period, in particular during the second half of the sixteenth century. It explores the changes introduced into Ottoman cosmographical manuscripts, including representations of holy geography, popular medicine, the dangers of seafaring, Egyptian antiquities, portraits of the Ottoman sultans and depictions of the Orthodox Christian and European. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bilha MoorPublisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press ISBN: 9781399543873ISBN 10: 1399543873 Pages: 448 Publication Date: 30 June 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsThe book is a model of erudition, it covers many aspects of Ottoman and Middle Eastern material and literary culture, and comprises of interesting details, that turn the academic discussion into a fascinating tableau of a pre-modern society.--Rachel Milstein, The Hebrew University The main theme of the book, that the iconography of these texts reflects changing views of the world, is well argued by a comparative wide-ranging study both of contemporary European manuscripts and of earlier Islamic ones. The depth and range of the author's scholarship is extremely impressive.--Bernard O'Kane, The American University in Cairo Author InformationBilha Moor is Assistant Professor of Art History at University of Denver, specialising in Islamic Art and Architecture. She completed her PhD at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2011. Prior to her current position, she was the Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral fellow of Islamic art at Northwestern University (USA), a Rothschild postdoctoral fellow at SOAS University of London, and a research associate with the Shahnama Project at the University of Cambridge. Her research has been published in Artibus Asiae, Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam and Manuscripta Orientalia and she has book chapters in Disliking Others: Loathing, Hostility and Distrust in Pre-Modern Ottoman Lands, ed. Hakan T. Karateke, H. Erdem C?pa and Helga Anetshofer (Academic Studies Press, 2018) and Shahnama Studies II: The Reception of Firdausi's Shahnama, edited by Charles Melville and Gabrielle van den Berg (Brill, 2012), as well as The Encyclopaedia of the Qur'?n Online, edited by Johanna Pink et al. (Brill, forthcoming 2024). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |