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Middle Eastern Studies in the Netherlands

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2016

Extract

The Domain of Middle Eastern Studies discussed in this paper covers mainly the study of the Arabic, Turkish, and Persian languages and literatures, and the history and cultures of the region where these languages are spoken. Thus, Hebrew and Jewish studies, Armenian studies, and the study of the languages and cultures of the pre-Islamic Middle East are not included.

The introductory section on the history of the field is followed by sections on the programs, on research conditions and trends, and on institutes and foundations concerned with Middle Eastern Studies. The paper does not aim at a historical analysis of the development of Middle Eastern Studies in relation to the specific historical factors (e.g., Calvinism, Asian trade, colonialism) which shaped the field. The accent is on the present-day conditions that seem to determine its current fate.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Middle East Studies Association of North America 1986

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References

1 Grammatica Arabica quinque Libris methodice explicata a Thoma Erpenio (Leiden 1613).

2 Lexicon Arabico-Latinum. Contextum exprobatioribus Orientis Lexicographis (Leiden 1653).

3 Drewes, G. W. J. Cf., Levinus Warner and his Legacy. Three Centuries Legatum Warnerianum in the Leiden University Library (E. J. Brill, Leiden 1970).Google Scholar

4 For more detail and references on the history of Arabic studies in particular, see Brugman, J. and Schröder, P., Arabic studies in the Netherlands (E. J. Brill, Leiden 1979).Google Scholar

5 E. J. Brill, Leiden 1936–1969. Seven volumes.

6 On the history of the study of Oriental languages and cultures in Utrecht, see [Goudriaan, T.], Een bescheiden onderkomen. Historisch overzicht van de studie van de Oosterse talen en kulturen aan de Rijksuniversiteit te Utrecht (E. J. Brill, Leiden 1981).Google Scholar

7 Handleiding tot de kennis van de Mohammedaansche wet volgens de leer der Sjāfi‘itische School (E. J. Brill, Leiden 1903).

8 The tradition of Arabic studies in conjunction with Semitic studies at Groningen goes back to 1618: see Hospers, J. H., Babbels: Toespraken over en uit het Egyptologisch Instituut en het Instituut voor Semitistiek en Archeologie van het Nabije Oosten … (Groningen 1971).Google Scholar

9 Compiled by A. H. de Groot and R. Peters (Nijmegen 1981).

10 See van Koningveld, P. S., Snouck Hurgronje alias Abdoul-Ghaffar (Leiden 1982) 313, for a chronology of the polemics.Google Scholar

11 On the library and its holdings, see Witkam, J.J., “The Middle Eastern Holdings of the Library of the University of Leiden,” BRISMES Bulletin 8.1 (1981) 6064.Google Scholar