Kâtip Çelebi
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Kâtip ÇelebiTemplate:Refn (Script error: No such module "Lang".) or Ḥājjī Khalīfa (Script error: No such module "Lang".)Template:RefnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn (1017 AH/1609 AD – 1068 AH/1657 AD) was a Turkish polymath and author of the 17th-century Ottoman Empire.Template:Sfn He compiled a vast universal bibliographic encyclopaedia of books and sciences, the Kaşf az-Zunūn, and wrote many treatises and essays. “A deliberate and impartial historian… of extensive learning”,Template:Sfn Franz Babinger hailed him "the greatest encyclopaedist among the Ottomans."
Writing with equal facility in Alsina-i Thalātha—the three languages of Ottoman imperial administration, Arabic, Turkish and Persian – principally in Arabic and then in Turkish, his native tongue— he also collaborated on translations from French and Latin. The German orientalist Gustav Flügel published Kaşf az-Zunūn in the original Arabic with parallel Latin translation, entitled Lexicon Bibliographicum et Encyclopaedicum (7 vols.)Template:Refn The orientalist Barthélemy d'Herbelot produced a French edition of the Kaşf az-Zunūn principally with additional material, in the great compendium, Bibliothèque Orientale.Template:Sfn
Life
He was born Muṣṭafa ibn 'Abd Allāh (Script error: No such module "Lang".) in Istanbul in February 1609 (Dhu’l-Qa‘da 1017 AH). His father was a sipahiTemplate:Sfn (cavalrist) and silāhdār (sword bearer) of the Sublime Porte and secretary in the Anadolı muhasebesi (Anatolian finance accountancy) in Istanbul. His mother came from a wealthy Istanbul family.Template:Sfn From age five or six he began learning the Qur’ān, Arabic grammar and calligraphy, and at the age of 14 his father found him a clerical position in the imperial financial bureaucracy.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He excelled in penmanship, accountancy and siyāqat ("Treasury cipher").Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn As the accountant of the commissariat department of the Ottoman army in Anatolia, he fought alongside his father on the Terjan campaign (1624)Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and in the failed expedition to recapture Baghdād from Persian control in 1625. On the return home his father died at Mosul, and his uncle died a month later. In 1626–1627 he was at the siege of Erzurum.
Çelebi had a love of learning from his father, and on his return to Istanbul in 1628 he attended the sermons of the charismatic preacher Qādīzāde, who inspired him to resume his studies. An inheritance allowed him to settle permanently in Istanbul.[1] He continued for 34 years, interrupted only for military service on campaigns to Baghdād (1629) and Hamadan (1630). In 1633 he left his corps' winter quarters in Aleppo to make the Hajj, earning the title Hajji. He rejoined the imperial army at Diyarbakr, where he associated with scholars.Template:Sfn He took part in the recapture of Erivan by Sultan Murad IV, and expeditions to TabrizTemplate:Sfn and Baghdād (1629-1631).
On his return in 1635 to Istanbul, Mehmed Kalfa, an old associate of his father's, secured him an apprentice position as Khalifa (second clerk), in the Audit Office of the Cavalry.Template:Sfn He later obtained a post in the head office of the Commissariat Department. In 1645 a legacy left to him by a wealthy relative enabled him to dedicate himself full-time to scholarship and acquire books. Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn With his master and friend A'rej Mustafa Efendi, he studied the commentary of al-Baydawi, The Roots of Law, commentaries on Ashkāl al-ta’sīs (Ideal Forms),Template:Refn al-Mulakhkhas (Summary) of Chaghmīnī,Template:Refn ‘arūd (prosody) of Andalusī, and Ulugh Beg’s Zīj (Almanac). Template:Sfn He also attended the ders-i 'amm (lecturers), Kurd 'Abd Allāh Efendi at Ayia Sophia and Kechi Mehmed Efendi at the Suleymānīye. In 1642, in order to carry on the chain of oral teaching, he attended Veli Efendi's lectures on the Nukhba, the Alfiya,Template:Refn and The Principles of Tradition. He also studied the Tawdīh, Isfahānī, Qādī-Mīr, al-Maqāsid (Object of Search)Template:Refn, the Ādāb al-bahth (Rules of Disputation), Fanārī, the Tahdhīb and the Shamsiya.
He taught medicine, geography, geometry, the Sí fasl ('Thirty Sections') and the Bīst bāb ('Twenty Chapters') on the astrolabe, Elements of Accidence, al-Fanārī, the Shamsīya on logic, Jāmī, Mukhtasar, Farā’id, Multaqā, Durar, and Ali Qushji's treatises titled al-Muhammadiya on arithmetic and al-Fathīya on astronomy. Template:Refn He wrote that his teaching method was “to enter every plurality by way of unity, and to master first principles by comprehending universals.”Template:Sfn The astronomer Mevlana Mehmed ibn Ahmed Rumi al-Aqhisar was among those who attended his lectures.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
His research ranged across lexicology, fiqh (jurisprudence), logic, rhetoric, tafsīr (Qur’ānic exegesis) and hadīth (Prophetic tradition), mathematics, medicine, mysteries of religion, astronomy, genealogy, history and chronicling.
Among his academic circle, he acquired the sobriquet “Kâtip Çelebi” (Learned Scribe). "Khatib" refers to a government clerk and "Chelebi" was used either for Ottoman princes or for scholars not part of the official hierarchy.Template:Sfn His theology is described as Islamic orthodoxy combined with adherence to Ishrāqī (Illuminationist philosophy).Template:Sfn The politician Köprülü Mehmed Paşa was a friend. It seems his tireless dedication to an arduous study regime, may have contributed to ill health and premature death in 1657 from a heart-attack, aged just 49. On his death, Kâtip Çelebi left unfinished works. His only son died young and, in 1659, after his widow was deceased, his library was partly acquired by Levinus Warner for Leiden University (Legatum Warnerianum).
Çelebi’s taste for book acquisition had begun in Aleppo, and he would later expend a substantial part of his inheritance building his famous library, which came to be the largest in Istanbul in its day.
Works
Kâtip Çelebi was most productive in the decade up to his death in 1657.Template:Sfn He authored at least 23 books, in addition to shorter essays and treatises:Template:Sfn
- Fadhlakat al-Tawārīkh ('Compendium History') (1639); summary account of 150 dynasties.Template:Sfn Fadhlakat; i) Arabic edition from Creation to c. 1639. Fezliké; ii) Turkish edition from 1000 AH to c. 1655. Index of 1,300 sources from original manuscript is lost.
- Taqwīm at-Tawārikh (Script error: No such module "Lang".), ('Calendar of Histories' or ‘Chronological Tables’) (1648); Universal history from Creation of Adam until the year 1648. Written as an index to Fadhlaka partly in Turkish and partly in Persian. Template:Sfn In 1697 Gio. Rinaldo Carli’s Italian translation was published titled Cronologia Historica.
- Cihânnümâ, (var., Djihān-numā, Jihannuma ) (Script error: No such module "Lang".) (‘View of the World’); Two-part geographic dictionary begun in 1648: part I - seas, their configuration and islands; part II - countries, rivers, mountains, roads and lands newly discovered since the 15th century (i.e. America).Template:Sfn Çelebi based the work on Lawāmi’ al-Nūr (‘Flashes of Light’) a translation by Mehmed Ikhlāsī’Template:Refn from the Latin work Atlas Minor by Gerardus Mercator (in the version published by Jodocus Hondius in Arnhem in 1621) ;Template:Sfn the first use of European atlases and sources in Ottoman literature.
- Kashf aẓ-Ẓunūn ‘an 'asāmī ‘l-Kutub wa'l-funūnScript error: No such module "anchor". (Script error: No such module "Lang".) (‘Opinion’s Scrutiny of the Names of Books and the Sciences’). Begun in Aleppo in 1042 AH/1632 AD and completed in about 1062 AH/1652 AD, it is a vast bibliographic-biographical dictionary in Arabic, and a research-tool for scholars.Template:Sfn Its list, approx. 15,000 Arabic, Persian and Turkish titles, 9500 authors and 300 arts and sciences, comprises among the most extensive bibliographical dictionaries of Islamic literature.Template:Sfn It was published as Lexicon Bibliographicum et Encyclopaedicum in Latin in 7 vols.Template:Sfn
- Düstûr ül-Amel fî Islâh il-Halel / Dustūr al-amal li islāh al-khalal (Script error: No such module "Lang".) ('Code of Practice for the Rectification of Defects', or 'Instructions for the Reform of Abuses') (1653); This essay on the conduct of the State was published within a couple of years of Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan, and contains some interesting parallels.[2]
- Qānūnnāme-i tashrīfāt (‘Code of Ceremonies') (1653)
- Rajm al-rajīm bi’l-sīn wa’l-jīm (‘The Stoning of the Accursed with Sīn and Jīm’); a collection of fatwas (legal rulings).
- Mīzān al-ḥaqq fī iḫtiyār al-aḥaqq (Template:Langx) (1656); ('Scales of Truth in the Choice of the Righteous One', or 'True Scales for the Detection of Truth'); “The Balance of Truth”; English translation and notes by Geoffrey L. Lewis (1957).
- Tarih-i Frengi - Translation of the Chronique de Jean Carrion (Paris, 1548)Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Rawnaq al-Sultāna – ('Splendour of the Sultanate'); translation of the Historia rerum in Oriente gestarum (Frankfurt, 1587). A history of Constantinople.
- Tuḥfat al-kibār fī asfār al-Bihār (Script error: No such module "Lang".) ('A Gift to the Great concerning Naval Expeditions') (1656) –The History of the Maritime Wars of the TurksTemplate:Sfn (1831) English translation by James Mitchell.[3][4]
- Sullam al-Wuṣūl ilā Ṭabaqāt al-Fuḥūl (Script error: No such module "Lang".) ('Ladder Leading to the Strata of the Eminent') (1651/2) Biographical dictionary of 8561 scholars, ancient and modern, to the letter Ṯāʾ, counterpart to Kashf al-Ẓunūn.Template:Sfn Critical edition 2009. Template:Refn
- Tuḥfat al-Akhyār fī’l-Hukam wa-l’Amthāl wa-l’Asha’ār (Script error: No such module "Lang".) (‘The Precious Gift of the Elect, on Maxims, Proverbs, and Poems’) (1653); completed to the letter Jīm.
- Rumeli und Bosna, geographical treatise (tr. German)Template:Sfn
Legacy
The İzmir Kâtip Çelebi University in İzmir is named after him,[5] and The Newton-Katip Çelebi Fund operates an exchange program for science and innovation between Turkey and the UK.[6]
See also
Notes
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References
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Dustūr al-amal li islāh al-khalal
- ↑ “A Jewel of Ottoman Naval History: The Book of Kâtip Çelebi on Naval Campaigns" in the MuslimHeritage.com
- ↑ "Ottoman Maritime Arsenals And Shipbuilding Technology In The 16th And 17th Centuries" Template:Webarchive in the MuslimHeritage.com
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Bibliography
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- Encyclopædia of Islam (Leiden, 1954) vol. 4, s.v. Ḥād̲j̲d̲j̲ī K̲h̲alīfai.
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- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1"., (Vol.,2; Leipzig, 1837), (Vol.,3; London, 1842), (Vol.,4; London, 1845), (Vol.,5; London, 1850), (Vol.,6; London, 1852).
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- Attribution
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External links
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- "Kâtip Çelebi" at the Encyclopædia Britannica
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- 1609 births
- 1657 deaths
- 17th-century biographers
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