Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Digital Catalogue of a Photographic Archive of Cairo - The Photographs of Beniamino Facchinelli (1839-1895)

Open Access Digital Catalogue of a Photographic Archive of Cairo - The Photographs of Beniamino Facchinelli (1839-1895)

"I am pleased to release of the digital catalogue of views of Cairo's monumental heritage taken by Italian photographer Beniamino Facchinelli (1839-1895) after his settling in 1875 in the Egyptian capital, where he died twenty years later. The catalogue currently features 726 high-definition reproductions of images identified among the holdings of six libraries and museums across the globe; it is designed to incorporate further ones as they appear in collections willing to share their content in full Open Access mode. 

It is estimated that Facchinelli produced about 1200 topographical views during his stay in Egypt, of which 900 have been already listed and located, though not all copyright-cleared yet. All images are authenticated through cross-referencing, and their original captions are listed in the entries, as well as the albums and publications where they were reproduced. The whole represents a unique documentation on buildings which have either disappeared since then, or been radically transformed in course of restoration; it also includes rare views on their furnishings. Because the photographs of the reconstructed corpus were often commissioned by dedicated preservationists and inserted in their publications (although without any credit to their author), one can closely follow through them how a vanishing architectural, visual and material culture was then viewed, valued and defended."

[Mercedes Volait  - CNRS Research Professor at InVisu
https://invisu.cnrs.fr/  via H-Islamart ]


Thursday, January 14, 2021

Open Access Journal Archive: العربى = al-ʻArabī (1958-1973, 1985-1990)

 

al-ʻArabī = العربى  
Published: [Kuwayt] : [publisher not identified], 1958-
Editor: Editor: Ahmad Zakī
ISSN: 0258-3941

Other titles:

Alaraby : Fabr-ayir 1963-Aghustus 1973
Arabi : Ukt-ubir 1980-
Alarabi : Sibtambir 1973-Sibtambir 1980
ʻArabī

Alphabetical List of Open Access Historical Newspapers and Other Periodicals in Middle East & Islamic Studies


Wednesday, January 6, 2021

OA Book: Fleeing from Fate to Fate: Aḥādīth on Contagion and Pandemics

 

A collection of 40 Ḥadīth related to the pandemic. Published by MT Karaan, Strand, Cape Town, South Africa. 

Book: https://www.yumpu.com/en/document/read/65163171/fleeing-from-fate-to-fatedocx

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

جرائد Jara'id : A Chronology of Nineteenth Century Periodicals in Arabic (1800-1900): A Research Tool

[First posted in AMIR1 September 2012, updated (New URLs) 29 December 2020]

جرائد Jara'id : A Chronology of Nineteenth Century Periodicals in Arabic (1800-1900): A Research Tool
2020 Edition 
Contributions from Hala Auji, Philippe Chevrant, Marina Demetriadou, Lamia Eid, Stacy Fahrenthold, Till Grallert, Rana Issa, Nicole Khayat, Peter Magierski, Leyla von Mende, Adam Mestyan, Christian Meier, Daniel Newman, Geoffrey Roper, Sinai Rusinek, Philip Sadgrove, Ola Seif, and Rogier Visser
Prepared and supervised by Adam Mestyan 
Original 2012 Edition TEI XML-Markup, digital publication, concept and design of the website by Till Grallert 
2020 Edition: Data addition, CETEICean transformation, digital publication, and design of the website by Adam Mestyan and Till Grallert; 
XSLT by Hugh Cayless and Till Grallert 
Advisor to 2020 Edition (CETEICean, JS, XSLT): Hugh Cayless 
Advisor to 2020 Edition (Visualization): Eric Monson 
This database and website are under the Creative Commons copyright of Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) 
This website uses CETEICEan by Hugh Cayless and Raffaele Viglianti to display the umodified TEI file in HTML 
Introductory Notes 
This website provides a chronology of Arabic periodicals between 1800 and 1929. 
Although it is meant to include all periodicals published in Arabic or in Arabic and in another language (such as the usual pair of Arabic and Ottoman Turkish) or in Arabic written in a different script (such as Judeo-Arabic) during the period from 1800 to 1929, this chronology is certainly incomplete.  Furthermore, there remain numerous problems with dating and locating individual publications as well as identifying their owners, editors, or publishers. 
Thus, at the moment we consciously publish a working draft with the purpose of making our information available to the scholarly community. We welcome all readers to submit any comment, corrections, and new data using Adam Mestyan's official email address. We would like to ask all contributors to always refer to the ID of each title – in case of comments on existing entries – and cite their sources, as otherwise we cannot consider the submission for being included in the table. Every contribution will be acknowledged. 
We chose to present the core data as a table containing information on titles, dates of first and last issue published, place(s) of publication, names of publishers and editors, language(s) of publication, and available collections (so far only in English/transliteration but Arabic indexes are coming as well). In addition, we provide various indexes of holding institutions and locations, as well as a bibliography of the most important secondary sources and available union catalogues. To search any part of the website, simply the browser's search function should be invoked (Ctrl-F for Windows, Cmd-F for Mac OSX). 

 

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

History of Istanbul : from Antiquity to the 21st century

 History of Istanbul : from Antiquity to the 21st century

"This website is designed for the dissemination of History of Istanbul from Antiquity to XXIst century, a work prepared by the cooperation of Türkiye Diyanet Foundation Center for Islamic Studies (İSAM) and İstanbul Metropolitan Municipality Kültür ve Sanat Ürünleri A.Ş.

The Project for the preparation of the Turkish version of the work was launched in late 2012, and completed and published in 2015. The book was prepared the­matically and composed of around 355 articles written by nearly 260 scientists about different fields such as topography, architecture, religious and social life, management, economics. In this book which consists of 10 volumes, nearly 5300 pages, around 4 thousand visual materials such as maps, miniatures, engravings, paintings, and archive documents were used. The English translation of the work was completed in 2019 and not published yet. It is accessible online..."



Wednesday, November 18, 2020

New OA Book: Muslim Women’s Pilgrimage to Mecca and Beyond Reconfiguring Gender, Religion, and Mobility

 

Muslim Women’s Pilgrimage to Mecca and Beyond
Reconfiguring Gender, Religion, and Mobility

Edited By: Marjo Buitelaar, Manja Stephan-Emmrich, Viola Thimm

Edition1st Edition
First Published2020
eBook Published15 November 2020
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9781003110903
Pages222 pages
eBook ISBN9781003110903

This book investigates female Muslims pilgrimage practices and how these relate to women’s mobility, social relations, identities, and the power structures that shape women’s lives. Bringing together scholars from different disciplines and regional expertise, it offers in-depth investigation of the gendered dimensions of Muslim pilgrimage and the life-worlds of female pilgrims. With a variety of case studies, the contributors explore the experiences of female pilgrims to Mecca and other pilgrimage sites, and how these are embedded in historical and current contexts of globalisation and transnational mobility. This volume will be relevant to a broad audience of researchers across pilgrimage, gender, religious, and Islamic studies.

Link 


Monday, November 2, 2020

New OA resource: al-sharekh archive



"AlSharekh Archive: 228 Arabic journals, 277,000 articles by 46,281 writers 

Access to the archive is open to all via the AlSharekh Archive website https://archive.alsharekh.org 

AlSharekh Archive from Sakhr, is one of the most distinguished Arabic digitization initiatives. It is the first and only one to focus on the content of literary journals providing online access to the content of 228 Arabic literary journals, from 23 Arab countries, dating from the early Arab renaissance (al Nahda) in the mid-nineteenth century to the end of the twenty-first century. 

Among the journals are Arab renaissance journals such as Al-Muqtataf, Al-Muqtabas, Al-Hilal, Al-Adib, Al-Ustadh, Al-Mashriq, Al-Jamaa and others. Authors of the journal articles include prominent Arab writers such as Gerji Zidan, Taha Hussein, Yaqub Sarrouf, Hafez Ibrahim, Albert Adeeb and many others. 

The AlSharekh Archive s’ site is very easy to use and navigate. Users can browse the journal issues or search the metadata indexes of the articles. Journal articles are viewed as images and have not been converted into digital texts because of difficulties in Arabic OCR. 

Some characteristics of the Archive: 

● It is the first Arabic digital library focusing on literary journals. Most of the others mostly cover resources related to Islamic heritage. 

● The website and the content are accessible free of charge. Access is provided to more than a million pages of Arabic literary work, otherwise hidden on bookshelves. 

● The journals are listed on the site according to the country of publishing, which helps in documenting the publishing movement at the country level. 

● Journal issues are organized and displayed in chronological order making it easy to access the specified number and the required article. 

● The Table of Content in each issue of a journal provides links to the pdf of the articles on the list. 

● Articles are accessed in their original form as in the print issues. 

● The search box on the site allows searching by the article’s author, title ,and by the title of the journal. 

● Brief author biographies, and bibliographic information about the journals are also provided. 

Procedures to protect copyright are mentioned in the preamble on the first page of the Archives website. It should be noted that many journals in the Archives are outdated and not subject to intellectual property law. 

Fatme Charafeddine, American University of Beirut"