Anastase-Marie al-Karmali
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Butrus Mikha'il 'Awwad al-Marini (Template:Langx[1][2] / Template:ALA-LC;Template:Efn 5 August 1866[3][2] – 7 January 1947), better known as Anastase-MarieTemplate:Efn al-KarmaliTemplate:Sfn (Template:Langx / Template:ALA-LC, Template:Lit) or by his original religious name Anastase-Marie de Saint ÉlieTemplate:Efn[4] (Template:Lit), was an Iraqi Catholic priest and Discalced Carmelite friar[5] of Lebanese and Iraqi origins, best known for his contributions to Arabic lexicology and lexicography[6] and to Arabic philology,[7] as well as for editing the Lughat al-Arab (Template:Langx / Template:ALA-LC, Template:Lit), a "literary, scientific and historical" periodical issued from 1911 to 1914 and from 1926 to 1931. He was also a founding member of the Academy of the Arabic Language in Cairo. Among his most famous works is an unfinished dictionary, Al-Musa'id (Template:Langx / Template:ALA-LC, Template:Lit), of which two volumes were published posthumously. He is considered to have been "one of the artisans of the Nahda"[8] (the Arab renaissance of the late 19th – early 20th century).
Life
Background and studies
Butrus's father, Mikha'il al-Marini, son of 'Awwad al-Marini, came from Bhersaf (modern-day Lebanon), and moved to Baghdad (modern-day Iraq) to work as an interpreter.[2][9] In Baghdad, Mikha'il married Butrus's mother, an Iraqi woman named Maryam Jubran, daughter of the Chaldean Augustin Jubran from Baghdad, descending from an old Iraqi Christian family.[2] Butrus was born in Baghdad,[7][3][9] and was the fourth son of Mikha'il and Maryam.[2]
Butrus received his primary education from the Template:Translit (School of the Carmelite Fathers) in Baghdad. For his secondary education, he went to the Template:Translit, also in Baghdad.Template:Sfn While still a pupil, at the age of 12, he showed such ability in Arabic that he started to give private lessons.Template:Sfn He graduated from the Template:Translit in 1882, at the age of 15,[3]Template:Sfn and was then appointed as teacher of the Arabic language at the Carmelite residence in Basra by the superior of the Carmelite mission.Template:Sfn Around that time, al-Marini's articles began to be published by the Jesuit Beiruti periodical Al-Bashir.Template:Sfn
The death in 1883 of Butrus al-Bustani, author of the Arabic dictionary Muhit al-Muhit, inspired al-Marini to start writing an Arabic dictionary of his own,[10] which would however remain unfinished by the time of his death. Al-Marini initially titled his projected dictionary Dhayl Lisan al-'Arab (Template:Langx / Template:ALA-LC, Template:Lit) before choosing the title Al-Musa'id (Template:Langx / Template:ALA-LC, Template:Lit).[10]
In 1886, al-Marini went to the College of the Jesuit Fathers in Beirut (Template:Translit) to study Arabic, Latin, Greek and French literature.[11]Template:Sfn On 5 May 1888 he entered the Carmelite monastery in Chèvremont, near Liège, Belgium.Template:Sfn He then went to Montpellier, France, to study philosophy and theology.Template:Sfn He took his simple vow in June 1889 and his solemn vow in 1892.Template:Sfn He was ordained a priest on 22 October 1894,Template:Sfn and took the name Anastase-Marie de Saint Élie ('Anastasius-Maria of Saint Elijah').Template:Sfn He would become known in Arabic as "al-Karmali", meaning 'the Carmelite'.
Early years as a priest
In the period following his ordination, al-Karmali toured Spain before returning to Baghdad.Template:Sfn As principal of the Template:Translit, he taught Arabic and French, preached and counselled.[12][13] At the same time, his articles were published in the magazines of Egypt, Syria and Iraq. Some of these articles were about the different communities of Iraq. In 1900 and 1901, al-Karmali published two articles about the Mandaeans,Template:Efn a community with which he would become "deeply involved".Template:Sfn However, his description of the Shabak people in an article of 1902Template:Efn "has been the source of much misunderstanding and biased secondary literature."Template:Sfn
In June 1908, al-Karmali was asked to escort Louis Massignon from Baghdad to Beirut after Massignon's captivity. Al-Karmali eventually accompanied him all the way to Brittany, where he met Massignon's parents, before returning to Baghdad. Al-Karmali and Louis Massignon would maintain a correspondence until 1936.[14]
In 1911, al-Karmali got involved in the academic debates which followed the discoveries (including his own discovery) of forged manuscripts of the Yazidi Book of Revelation and the Yazidi Black Book.Template:Efn
Also in 1911, al-Karmali founded Lughat al-Arab ('The Language of the Arabs'), a "literary, scientific historical monthly magazine" (Template:Langx / Template:ALA-LC).[15] The magazine's publication would be interrupted by World War I, before resuming for six more years between 1926 and 1931. The discovery of the lost text of the first Arabic dictionary, the Kitab al-'Ayn, was announced in 1914 in this journal.Template:Sfn
World War I and later years
In 1914, as World War I had started, the Ottomans accused al-Karmali of being a spy and exiled him to Kayseri in Central Anatolia,Template:Sfn where he was retained until 1916.Template:Sfn Upon his release, al-Karmali returned to Baghdad in July 1916. During his absence, his library had been destroyed in great part.Template:Sfn Al-Karmali would however rebuild his collection, which would number 15,000 volumes and 2,500 manuscripts in the mid-1930s.Template:Sfn
Around 1920, al-Karmali became the first librarian of the Script error: No such module "lang". (Peace Library) in Baghdad, and introduced a system of modern management. He helped develop the Library's collection, donating printed materials from his private collection, when other collections in foreign languages remained in the monastery library. The Peace Library would later be renamed the Baghdad Public Library, and in 1961 would become the basis for the establishment of the Iraq National Library.
In the 1930s, al-Karmali played an instrumental role in defending the Mandaean community against accusations of astrolatry, by taking part in the case filed by the Mandaean high priest Dakhil Aidan against the Iraqi historian 'Abd al-Razzaq al-Hasani.Template:Efn
On 8 October 1933, al-Karmali was appointed as a member of the Academy of the Arabic Language in Cairo by Fuad I of Egypt.Template:Sfn He took part in it from its inaugural session of 1934 onwards.Template:Sfn
Shortly before his death, al-Karmali donated 2,500 books and 1,500 manuscripts from his personal library to the Iraq Museum Library.Template:Sfn[16]Template:Efn Al-Karmali died in Baghdad on 7 January 1947.
Writings
As of 2010, many of al-Karmali's writings were unpublished or lost.Template:Sfn
Books
- In Arabic
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- In French
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Articles
- In Arabic
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- In French
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Awards and honours
- Ordre des Palmes académiques (1920)Template:Sfn
- Member of the Order of the British EmpireTemplate:Sfn
Notes
References
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ a b c d e Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ a b c Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "ولد الأب أنستاس ماري الكرملي، في بغداد، يوم ٥ آب ١٨٦٦، من أب لبناني الأصل، وأم بغدادية. / تلقى دروسه الابتدائية في « مدرسة الآباء الكرمليين » ببغداد، وأتم دراسته الثانوية في « مدرسة الاتفاق الكاثوليكي » ببغداد وتخرج منها في سنة ١٨٨٢."
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ a b Cite error: Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Son rayonnement personnel, ses publications et sa correspondance publiée dans certaines revues comme Al-Machrek en font un des artisans de la Nahda selon les spécialistes de la question."
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "[Butrus] was born in 1866 in Baghdad, where his father had moved from his native Lebanon to work as an interpreter"
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "باشر الأب أنستاس الكرملى بتأليف معجمه في عام ١٨٨٣ أي في السنة التي توفى فيها المعلم بطرس البستاني، صاحب « محيط المحيط » وظل يعمل فيه باحثا ومدققا في مفرداته حتى قبيل وفاته عام ١٩٤٧ وبكلمة أخرى، ان العلامة الكرملي، أمضى أكثر من نصف قرن على إعداد هذا المعجم النفيس، فاطلق عليه اسم « ذيل لسان العرب »، وقد […]"
- ↑ Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "وفي عام 1886 غادر بغداد إلى كلية الآباء اليسوعيين في بيروت فتعمق فيها في دراسة العربية كما تعلم اللاتينية واليونانية وأتم دراسة آداب اللغة الفرنسية"
- ↑ Template:In langAnastas Al-Karmali in the Temple of Arabic-أنستاس الكرملي.. في معبد العربية Template:Webarchive. Accessed 2008-June-16.
- ↑ Al Hilaly, A.A-R. Al Kermal: Early Founder of the Iraq National Library. In: Iraqi Biography. 1972. Baghdad/Beirut: Dar al Nahdah
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Portail mondial des revues
- ↑ Al-Hilaly, A.A-R. Ibid
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Sources
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- Pages with script errors
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- 1866 births
- 1947 deaths
- Religious leaders from Baghdad
- Discalced Carmelites
- Iraqi people of Lebanese descent
- Iraqi lexicographers
- Iraqi philologists
- Iraqi Roman Catholic clergy
- Lexicographers of Arabic
- Members of the Academy of the Arabic Language in Cairo
- Nahda
- Scholars of Mandaeism