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JOURNEYMEN, MIDDLEMEN: TRAVEL, TRANSCULTURE, AND TECHNOLOGY IN THE ORIGINS OF MUSLIM PRINTING

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

Within a few years of 1820, Muslim-owned printing presses were established under state sponsorship in Iran, Egypt, and India, marking the true beginning of printing in the Islamic world. Printing projects had been initiated before this period—most famously by Ibrahim Müteferrika (1674–1745) in Istanbul—but these were isolated and unsustained ventures. None gathered the joint momentum of state support and technological transfer to compare with what emerged simultaneously in Tabriz, Cairo, and Lucknow. In attempting to understand the common processes behind this “triplet” birth of Muslim printing, this article reconstructs the small circle of individuals whose at times discordant projects collided in creating a sustainable Muslim print tradition in several distinct centers around 1820.

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References

NOTES

Author's note: I am grateful to Willem Floor, Nikki Keddie, Ahmed Mansour, Ulrich Marzolph, and my anonymous readers for comments on earlier versions of this article.

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15 Qasimi, ibid., 15.

16 Bodleian Library, Ouseley ms 159, colophon dated 1812. The travelogue is also printed in Shirazi, Majmuʿa-ye Safarnamaha-ye Mirza Salih Shirazi.

17 The original manuscript bears two titles—Suʾal u Jawab (Questions and Answers) and Guftagu-ye Farsi (Persian Conversation)—and is held at the Bodleian Library (Ouseley ms 390).

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26 Ibid., 169–70.

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28 Shirazi, Majmuʿa-ye Safarnamaha-ye Mirza Salih Shirazi, 169–70, 311–13.

29 F.O. 60/23 (Public Record Office, London).

30 Nile Green, “The Development of Arabic-Script Typography in Georgian Britain,” Printing History n.s. 5 (2009), and Storey, “The Beginnings of Persian Printing in India.”

31 Twelfth Report of the British and Foreign Bible Society for the Year 1816 (London: Tilling & Hughes, 1816), 10, 39, 79.

32 Canton, William, A History of the British and Foreign Bible Society, 5 vols. (London: J. Murray, 1904–10), 1:64Google Scholar, and Green, “The Development of Arabic-Script Typography in Georgian Britain.”

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34 Shirazi, ibid., 167–68. On a similar collaboration, see Fisher, Michael H., “Persian Professor in Britain: Mirza Muhammad Ibrahim at the East India Company's College, 1826–44,” Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 21 (2001): 2432CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Tavakoli-Targhi, Mohamad, Refashioning Iran: Orientalism, Occidentalism, and Historiography (New York: Palgrave, 2001), chap. 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

35 Mathews's Bristol Guide; Being a Complete Ancient and Modern History of the City of Bristol, the Hotwells and Clifton (Bristol, U.K.: printed and sold by Joseph Mathews and sold by the booksellers, 1819), 94. For Salih's tour of Bristol's glass, soap, and brass factories, see Shirazi, Majmuʿa-ye Safarnamaha-ye Mirza Salih Shirazi, 334–35; elsewhere, 207–209.

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38 Ibid., 353, 355 (dāns); Shahidi, Humayun, ed., Guzarish-e Safar-e Mirza Salih Shirazi (Kazaruni) (Tehran: Rah-e Naw, 1983)Google Scholar, 369 (vāns); Safarnama-ye Mirza Salih Shirazi, ed. Ismaʿil-e Raʾin (Tehran: Ruzan, 1968), 375 (dāns). Golpayigani, Tarikh-e Chap va Chapkhana dar Iran, 10–11, quotes two versions of the name (vāls and vāns).

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47 The New Testament of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; Translated into the Hindoostanee Language from the Original Greek by H. Martyn; and Afterwards Carefully Revised with the Assistance of Mirza Fitrit and Other Learned Natives (London: printed by Richard Watts for the British and Foreign Bible Society, 1819).

48 On Lee's involvement, see Darlow, T. H. and Moule, H. F., Historical Catalogue of the Printed Editions of Holy Scripture in the Library of the British and Foreign Bible Society, 2 vols. (London: The Bible House, 1903–1911), 2:744Google Scholar.

49 Ibid., 2:69–70.

50 Ibid., 2:69. Kitab al-Ahd al-Jadid, yaʿni, Injil al-Muqaddas, li-Rabbina Yasuʿ al-Masih (London: Richard Watts, 1821).

51 Darlow and Moule, Historical Catalogue, 2:1204.

52 Twelfth Report of the British and Foreign Bible Society, 10; Thirteenth Report of the British and Foreign Bible Society for the Year 1817 (London: Tilling & Hughes, 1817), 338.

53 For superlative detail, see Rummonds, Richard-Gabriel, Nineteenth-Century Printing Practices and the Iron Handpress, 2 vols. (London: British Library, 2004)Google Scholar. On operating imported handpresses in Iran, see Golpayigani, Tarikh-e Chap va Chapkhana dar Iran, 12–13.

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58 Dagmar Glass, “Die nahda und ihre Technik im 19. Jahrhundert: Arabische Druckereien in Ägypten und Syrien” in Marzolph, Das gedruckte Buch im Vorderen Orient, 59–64, and G. J. Roper, “The Beginnings of Arabic Printing by the ABCFM, 1822–1841,” Harvard Library Bulletin, new series, 9 (1998): 50–68.

59 Shirazi, Majmuʿa-ye Safarnamaha-ye Mirza Salih Shirazi, 345.

60 For statistical data, see Green, “Development of Arabic-Script Typography.”

61 Thirteenth Report of the British and Foreign Bible Society, 338.

62 Leigh's New Picture of London (London: Samuel Leigh, 1819).

63 Howsam, Cheap Bibles.

64 Roper, “Beginnings of Arabic Printing by the ABCFM.”

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68 Duncan, Travels through Part of the United States and Canada, 1:201.

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70 Based on portable presses available in London in 1819: Rummonds, Nineteenth-Century Printing Practices, 2:859.

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75 “Account of the Rev. Mr. Lee,” Oxford University and City Herald (26 September 1818), back page: “Mr. Lee has in hand a new translation of the Old Testament into Persian, in conjunction with Mirza Khaleel.”

76 Twelfth Report of the British and Foreign Bible Society, 10. On Jaʿfar's translations in Saint Petersburg in the mid-1820s, also with Ouseley and Lee's collaboration, see Bullen, George, Catalogue of the Library of the British and Foreign Bible Society (London: Reed and Pardon, 1857), 5, 80Google Scholar.

77 Roberts, William, Memoirs of the Life of Hannah More, 2 vols. (London: R. B. Seeley & W. Burnside, 1836), 246Google Scholar, based on More's own diary. For Salih's version and confirmation of receiving Practical Piety (the title transcribed from the English), see Shirazi, Majmuʿa-ye Safarnamaha-ye Mirza Salih Shirazi, 331–32.

78 Hashimi, Muhammad Sadr-e, Tarikh-e Jaraʾid va Majallat-e Iran, 4 vols. (Isfahan, Iran: Intisharat-e Kamal, 1984–85)Google Scholar, and Qasimi, Avvalinha-ye Matbuʿat-e Iran, especially Chapter 1.

79 An early copy of Salih's subsequent newspaper, Akhbar-e Vaqaʾiʿ (Current News), was published in “Persian Newspaper and Translation,” Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 5 (1839): 355–71. Also Hashimi Tarikh-e Jaraʾid, 1:2.

80 Shirazi, Majmuʿa-ye Safarnamaha-ye Mirza Salih Shirazi, 352. On London's newspaper presses as seen in 1887 by the Iranian Hajji Pirzada (d. 1903), see Safarnama-ye Hajji Muhammad ʿAli Pirzada, 1303–1306, ed. Haiz Farmanfarmaʾiyan (Tehran: Danishgah-e Tihran, 1963–65), 301–302.

81 Salih and/or his companions featured in The Times on 29 September 1818, 7 December 1818, and 18 January 1823. In The Times alone, articles—often frivolous—on Abu al-Hasan appeared on 21 and 30 December 1809, 12 and 18 January 1810, 23 February 1810, 24 and 29 March 1810, 27 April 1819, 1 and 24 May 1819, and 1 and 10 June 1819. For Abu al-Hasan's own exasperated observations on England's newspapers, see Cloake, M. M., ed. and trans., A Persian at the Court of King George 1809–10: The Journal of Mirza Abu'l Hassan Khan (London: Barrie & Jenkins, 1988), 83, 248, 253Google Scholar.

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84 Shirazi, Majmuʿa-ye Safarnamaha-ye Mirza Salih Shirazi, 278.

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87 “Newspaper” (1839): 359–60 (in Persian), 367–68 (in English).

88 “Newspaper” (1839): 362 (in Persian), 369 (in English).

89 Golpayigani, Tarikh-e Chap va Chapkhana dar Iran, 13. On the unconfirmed 1828 Gulistan, see Qasimi, Sarguzasht-e Matbuʿat-e Iran, 1:191.

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95 I have consulted these books in the Royal Asiatic Society. Details of their bequest appear in Anon., “Biographical Sketch of his Late Royal Highness Abbas Mirza, Prince Royal of Persia, Hon. MRAS,” Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1 (1834): 323.

96 Ulrich Marzolph, “Der lithographische Druck einer illustrierten persischen Prophetengeschichte (1267/1850)” in Marzolph, Das gedruckte Buch im Vorderen Orient, 86.

97 Floor, “Čāp” and Kamran Ekbal and Lutz Richter-Bernburg, “John Cormick,” Encyclopaedia Iranica. However, Golpayigani, Tarikh-e Chap va Chapkhana dar Iran, 13, attributes the book to Muhammad ibn al-Sabur al-Khuʾi.

98 On the ʿulamaʾ consultation, see Shahla Babazada, Tarikh-e Chap dar Iran (Tehran: Tahuri, 1999), 14–15.

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104 Sabat, Tarikh al-Tabaʿa, 151. On Morosi, see Memorie della Reale Accademia delle Scienze di Torino (Torino, Italy: Stamperia Reale, 1820), xlii, and L. E. Funaro, “Mezzi, metodie macchine: Notizie su Giuseppe Morosi,” Nuncius: Annali di Storia della Scienza, fasc. 1 (1998).

105 Funaro, ibid., especially 99, 101, 110.

106 Forni, Viaggio nell'Egitto, 1:141. On a more general level, L. A. Balboni, Gl'Italiani nella civiltà egiziana del secolo XIX: Storia-biografie-monografie (Alessandria, Italy: V. Pennason, 1906), 3:377, and Sabat, Tarikh al-Tabaʿa, 150–52.

107 Brocchi, Giornale delle osservazioni fatte ne' viaggi in Egitto, 1:172–74.

108 Dizionario Italiano e Arabo (Bolacco [Bulaq], Egypt: Stampa Reale, 1822), with contents in Arabic/Roman type.

109 Forni, Viaggio nell'Egitto, 1:140, and Silvera, “First Egyptian Student Mission,” 7.

110 Pinto, Olga, “Mose Castelli, Tipografo Italiano al Cairo,” in A Francesco Gabrieli: Studi Orientalistici Offerti nel Sessantesimo Compleanno dai suoi Colleghi e Discepoli (Rome: Università di Roma, 1964)Google Scholar. Glass, “Die nahda und ihre Technik,” 66, records somewhat later dates for Castelli.

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118 Proudfoot, Ian, Early Malay Printed Books: A Provisional Catalogue of Materials (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: Academy of Malay Studies, 1993), 2, 13–17Google Scholar, and van der Putten, J., “Printing in Riau: Two Steps toward Modernity,” Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land-en Volkenkunde 153 (1997), 717–36Google Scholar.

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120 Fazlı wrote an account of his Afghan travels: Mehmed Fazlı, Resimli Efgan Seyahatı (Istanbul: Matbaa-i Ahmed Ihsan, 1909). On printing and Moroccan travelers, see Al-Saffar, Muhammed, Disorienting Encounters: Travels of a Moroccan Scholar in France in 1845–1846, trans. Miller, Susan Gilson (Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 1992), 201206Google Scholar.

121 Clogg, Richard, “An Attempt to Revive Turkish Printing in Istanbul in 1779,” International Journal of Middle East Studies 10 (1979): 6770CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

122 Behdad, Ali, “The Powerful Art of Qajar Photography: Orientalism and (Self)-Orientalizing in Nineteenth-Century Iran,” Iranian Studies 34 (2001): 141–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

123 Marcel, Jean-Joseph, Oratio Dominica CL Linguis Versa, et Propriis Cujusque Linguæ Characteribus Plerumque Expressa (Paris: Typis Imperialibus, 1805)Google Scholar.

124 Marcel, Jean-Joseph, Leçons de langue arabe (Paris: Éberhart, imprimeur du Collège Royal de France, 1819)Google Scholar.