
This Is The First Major Study Devoted To The Early Arabic Reception And Adaption Of The Figure Of Hermes Trismegistus, The Legendary Egyptian Sage To Whom Were Ascribed Numerous Works On Astrology, Alchemy, Talismans, Medicine, And Philosophy. Before The More Famous Renaissance European Reception Of The Ancient Greek Hermetica, The Arabic Tradition About Hermes And The Works Under His Name Had Been Developing And Flourishing For Seven Hundred Years. The Legendary Egyptian Hermes Trismegistus Was Renowned In Roman Antiquity As An Ancient Sage Whose Teachings Were Represented In Books Of Philosophy And Occult Science. The Works In His Name, Written In Greek By Egyptians Living Under Roman Rule, Subsequently Circulated In Many Languages And Regions Of The Roman And Sasanian Persian Empires. After The Rise Of Arabic As A Prestigious Language Of Scholarship In The Eighth Century, Accounts Of Hermes Identity And Hermetic Texts Were Translated Into Arabic Along With The Hundreds Of Other Works Translated From Greek, Middle Persian, And Other Literary Languages Of Antiquity. Hermetica Were In Fact Among The Earliest Translations Into Arabic, Appearing Already In The Eighth Century. This Book Explains The Origins Of The Arabic Myth Of Hermes Trismegistus, Its Sources, The Reasons For Its Peculiar Character, And Its Varied Significance For The Traditions Of Hermetica In Asia And Northern Africa As Well As Europe. It Shows Who Pre-modern Arabic Scholars Thought Hermes Was And How They Came To That View.
This study investigates the historical origins and evolution of the figure of Hermes Trismegistus within the early Arabic intellectual tradition. Kevin van Bladel, a scholar of Near Eastern languages and history, utilizes a rigorous analysis of primary source translations from Greek, Middle Persian, and Arabic to reconstruct how pre-modern scholars conceptualized this legendary sage. The book argues that the Arabic reception of Hermetic texts was not merely a derivative process but a sophisticated adaptation that flourished for seven centuries before the European Renaissance.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the transmission of ancient wisdom into the Islamic world. Scholars frequently highlight the author's meticulous linguistic analysis and his ability to clarify the complex genealogy of the Arabic Hermetic myth.
Page Count:
296
Publication Date:
2009-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199704481
ISBN-13:
9780199704484
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