The Oriental Tradition of Paul of Aegina's Pragmateia

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The volume investigates how Paul of Aegina's medical handbook or pragmateia was transmitted and transformed through Syriac and Arabic translations, becoming one of the cornerstones of the Islamic medical tradition. It uses new manuscript evidence in order to explore the crucial impact of Paul's pragmateia, tracing its steps through different languages and cultures in the Middle East.
A discussion of different Syriac and Arabic authors who quote the pragmateia such as Ibn Serapion and Rhazes is followed by detailed studies of Greek-Syriac-Arabic translation technique, examining, for instance, ophthalmologic terminology, and giving a critical appraisal of translation syntax and lexicography. Paul's influence on the development of medical theory in the Islamic world and beyond is also addressed, making it an important contribution not only to Graeco-Arabic studies, but also to the history of medicine in general.

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Preliminary Material
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: i–xix
Introduction
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 1–8
Contents to Part One
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 9–12
Syriac Sources
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 13–46
Arabic Sources
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 47–122
Contents to Part Two
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 123–126
Terminology
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 135–221
Lexicography
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 223–238
Conclusions and Prospects
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 285–288
Contents to Part Three
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 289–291
Influence
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 293–309
General Conclusions
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 311–313
Bibliography
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 315–323
General Index
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 325–337
Studies in Ancient Medicine
著者: Peter E. Pormann
页码: 339–340
Peter E. Pormann, D.Phil. (2002) in Classics, University of Oxford, is a Junior Research Fellow in Oriental Studies at Merton College, Oxford. He has published widely on Islamic medicine and its Greek antecedents, notably the Late Antique Alexandrian medical tradition. He has received The Hellenic Foundation’s 2003 Award for the best doctoral thesis in the United Kingdom, in the Byzantine/Medieval History category.
'...written with authority by a scholar who handles with consummate ease the languages of the Hellenistic Greek, Syriac and Arabic cultures of the Middle East, and has mastered the technical niceties of ancient medicine.'
Charles Burnett, Warburg Institute, School of Advanced Studies, London.

This book received The Hellenic Foundation’s 2003 Award for the best doctoral thesis in the United Kingdom, in the Byzantine/Medieval History category
All those interested in cross-cultural transmission of ideas, the theory of translations, the history of medicine, the history of late antique Alexandria and the rise of Islam, as well as Graeco-Arabists, classical philologists and Syriacists.
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