

In Search of Hybridity: Inculturation, Interculturation and Transculturation in Contemporary Religious Art in Britain by: Vinzent, Jutta Published: (2010)

Religious Influences on Medieval Arabic Philology by: Kopf, Lothar 1917-1964 Published: (1956)Ĭontrolled Multilingual Thesauri for Kazakh Industry-Specific Terms by: Bayekeyeva, Ainur, et al. Promises of Advent: North and South by: Rizo-Patron, Eileen Published: (2008)

Published: (2021)Īncient Palestine Is Multilingual and Diglossic: Introducing Multilingualism Theories to New Testament Studies by: Ong, Hughson T. Multilingual Education in the Republic of Kazakhstan: Problems and Prospects by: Zhumay, Nurmira, et al. Sivan Baskin: Multilingual Israeli Poet in the Age of Globalization by: Yemini, Bat-Zion Published: (2021) The End of the Mamlūk Sultanate: (Why did the Ottomans Spare the Mamlūks of Egypt and Wipe out the Mamlūks of Syria?) by: Ayyālôn, Dāwid 1914-1998 Published: (1987) Through an analysis of this manuscript as a whole, this study proposes that the Miftāḥ’s manuscript was an object of instruction for younger members of society and utilizes wonder as a didactic tool. The information transmitted by the Miftāḥ is not limited to the Persian, Hindavi, Turki, and Arabic language of the text, but also includes the visual knowledge depicted in paintings. The Miftāḥ provides a vocabulary for subjects including textiles, metalwork, jewelry, arms and armor, architecture, and musical instruments. The definitions in this manuscript encompass nearly every facet of Indo-Islamicate art history. Although the Miftāḥ’s only illustrated copy (British Library Or 3299) contains quadruple the number of illustrations as Mandu’s famed Niʿmatnāmah (Book of Delights) and is a unicum within the arts of the Islamicate and South Asian book, it has received minimal scholarly attention. The Miftāḥ is an illustrated dictionary made in the central Indian sultanate of Malwa, based in Mandu. Abstract This article focuses on the Miftāḥ al-Fużalāʾ (Key of the Learned) of Muhammad ibn Muhammad Daʾud Shadiyabadi (ca.
