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Copy of a treatise on talismans and astrology said to be by Aristotle who wrote it for Alexander the Great, then said to have been translated into Arabic at the request of the Caliph al-Muʻtaṣim. 23 ink illustrations of various creatures drawn on slightly darker paper pasted onto the substrate.
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Edition Notes
Manuscript codex.
Title from title page and introduction (f. 4r).
Foliation: Foliated in Hindu-Arabic numerals in pencil, upper center recto. Catchwords every verso, lower left.
Layout: 13 lines per page with some lines shortened when necessary to fit an image.
Script: Written in clear naskh in black ink; pointed.
Decoration: Rubrications in red. 23 small monochrome illustrations on brown paper pasted onto the substrate (f. 34v-37r, 38v-39v, 40v-41v, 42v, 44v-46r).
Origin: The item is undated, but perhaps copied in the 18th or first half of the 19th century.
Shelfmark: MS Or 276.
Digital version available with no restrictions Unrestricted online access.
Electronic reproduction. New York, N.Y.: Columbia University Libraries, 2020. Digitized as part of the Muslim World Manuscripts Project, 2018-2021, funded by CLIR.
Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials. Version 1. December 2002. Digital version conforms to: http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212
Arabic.
Formerly owned by George A. Plimpton (bookplate inside front cover).
Half covers. Brown textile spine and corners with brown and green marble paper sides over pasteboard. Plain brown doublure.
Digitized. 2020 Columbia University Libraries committed to preserve
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