The indefatigable Mr Lane
Egypt

The indefatigable Mr Lane


SaudiAramco World

Late one September afternoon in 1825, an apprehensive 24-year-old Englishman arrived in the Eastern Harbor of Alexandria, Egypt. “As I approached the shore,” he wrote, “I felt like an Eastern bridegroom, about to lift up the veil of his bride, and to see, for the first time, the features which were to charm, or disappoint, or disgust him.” He continued:

I was not visiting Egypt merely as a traveller, to examine its pyramids and temples and grottoes, and, after satisfying my curiosity, to quit it for other scenes and other pleasures: I was about to throw myself entirely among strangers; to adopt their language, their customs and their dress; and, in associating almost exclusively with the natives, to prosecute the study of their literature. My feelings therefore, on that occasion, partook too much of anxiety to be very pleasing.

Edward William Lane need not have worried. He would become, one day, Britain’s most renowned scholar of the Middle East. He would write a fascinating study of Egyptian society, a book so definitive and widely read that it would never go out of print; his great Arabic–English dictionary would become a basic, irreplaceable reference work; and his translation of The Arabian Nights would delight and instruct generations of readers. Lane’s name would come to be known throughout the field of Middle Eastern studies, admired by western and Arab scholars alike.


See the above page for the full story.





- Book Review: Edward William Lane
Al Ahram Weekly (Jill Kamil) Jason Thompson's Edward William Lane, "is no mere biography", he explains. "It is a collective biography, in the sense that it is about the clusters of people around Lane. He was a central figure, a planner. They tended...

- New Book: From An Antique Land
Rowman and Littlefield From an Antique Land: An Introduction to Ancient Near Eastern Literature. Edited by Carl S. Ehrlich One of the chapters in this book focuses on Egyptian literature. Many of the world's first written records have been found in...

- So You Want To Be An Egyptologist?
www.newton.ac.uk Well, one thing for sure, it's not the tomb raiding, treasure looting and torch scorching career of the Indiana Jones Hollywood series. Eugene Cruz-Uribe and Nigel Strudwick have put together a list of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)...

- Egyptian Tourism
http://www.strategiy.com/airlinenew.asp?id=20060416083028"Last year Egypt received a record-setting 8.6 million tourists and is experiencing growth of up to 60% in some Middle Eastern markets alone. The ‘Nawart Masr’ (‘You Light Up Egypt!’) campaign...

- Oblique Refractions
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2005/769/cu4.htmA fascinating article in Al Ahram Weekly about an The Edward W Said Memorial Lecture was delivered on 1 November Said's 70th birthday) visiting professor David Damrosch, a professor of English and Comparative...



Egypt








.