Gülru NecipoÄlu (PhD, Harvard University, 1986) is the Aga Khan Professor and Director of the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture at Harvard University. Her books include Architecture, Ceremonial and Power: The Topkapı Palace in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries (1991), The Topkapı Scroll: Geometry and Ornament in Islamic Architecture (1995), and The Age of Sinan: Architectural Culture in the Ottoman Empire (2005). She recently edited The Arts of Ornamental Geometry: A Persian Compendium on Similar and Complementary Interlocking Figures (2017) and A Companion to Islamic Art and Architecture in the Wiley Blackwell Companions to Art History series (co-editor F. Barry Flood, 2017).
Cemal Kafadar (PhD, McGill University, 1987) is Professor of History and the Vehbi Koç Professor of Turkish Studies in the History Department at Harvard University. Among his publications are Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State (1995); a volume of essays on four âordinary livesâ and on autobiographical writing (in Turkish, 2011); and âA Rome of Oneâs Own: Reflections on Cultural Geography and Identity in the Lands of Rum,â Muqarnas 24 (2007) (expanded version published as a book in Turkish, 2018). He has also edited (with Halil Inalcik) Süleyman the Second and His Time (1995). His 2014 article on âthe history of coffee and the nighttimeâ is the subject of a current book project.
Cornell H. Fleischer (PhD, Princeton University, 1982) is the Kanuni Süleyman Professor of Ottoman and Modern Turkish Studies in the departments of History and of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago. A 1988â93 MacArthur Fellow, he is the author, among other publications, of Bureaucrat and Intellectual in the Ottoman Empire: The Historian Mustafa Ali(1986); âThe Lawgiver as Messiah,â in Soliman le magnifique et son temps (1992); âAncient Wisdom and New Sciences,â in Falnama: The Book of Omens (2009); and âA Mediterranean Apocalypse: Prophecies of Empire in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries,â JESHO 61 (2018). He also supervised postâDayton Accord elections in the former Yugoslavia, 1996â98.
"..finding a publication that so deeply mines its core text for discussion and presents it to the reader from myriad angles rather than simply offering a facsimile or transcription bereft of analysis or contextualization is very welcome. Indeed, the bookâs comprehensively cross-disciplinary nature is an impressive achievement and highlights the value of scholars from different fields working together for mutual benefit. The many subjects represented in the inventory, such as philosophy, medicine, theology, and Sufism, are capably outlined and analyzed. Much exists in these volumes that researchers in these numerous fields will find useful and interesting. However, the work will of course also be valuable to scholars in other subjects not directly represented in Ê¿Aá¹Å«fÄ«âs inventory, such as library studies and the history of collections, the history of art and architecture, and womenâs studies... Those desiring to publish complex primary sources should pay attention to the approach taken by the volume editors, both in terms of the wide-ranging publication itself but also to the preparatory workshop stage. Although access to the necessary resources is unfortunately not equally available across institutions, this publication demonstrates what might be achieved through interdisciplinary collaboration and a sensitivity to the contexts surrounding a primary source and its subject matter."
Cailah Jackson in: Nazariyat Volume 6, Issue 2 (2020).
"...the extensive case study presented in this publication will certainly constitute a key reference work for further research on the history of libraries in the post-medieval Ottoman and Muslim world."
Fabrizio Speziale in: Bulletin of SOAS
"...eine inhaltlich unendlich ergiebige Verzeichnis in zwei üppig illustrierten Bänden".
Klaus Kreisner in: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, June 10, 2020.
âNetice olarak diyebiliriz ki bu envanter sadece basit bir kütüphane envanteri deÄil, bunun çok ötesinde tarihî deÄer taÅıyan bir vesikadır. Treasures of Knowledge adlı eser, gerek otuzdan fazla deÄerli müellifi, gerek hacmi, gerek kapsamı ve derinliÄi açısından Türk-İslam kütüphaneleri tarihi alanına anıtsal bir katkıdır. Ayrıca eser bu tarz tarih vesika ve belgelerin nasıl çalıÅılması gerektiÄi konusunda da güzel bir örnektir. Bundan dolayı bu eserin yayınlanmıŠolmasını büyük bir mutlulukla karÅılıyor, bir an önce Türkçeye kazandırılması ya da en azından yurdumuzun önemli kütüphanelerinde yerini almasını canı gönülden temenni ediyorum.â
Hüseyin Åen in: Yeni Åafak, October 15, 2021.
âAs for the publication as a whole, it is a very wide-ranging and important contribution to Ottoman cultural studies which does indeed justify the imposing title Treasures of Knowledge.â
Muhammad Isa Waley, British Library in: The Muslim World Book Review Volume41, Issue 4 (2021).
âIn sum, this two-volume set is a detailed work of philological and analytic labor, completed by a team and targeted towards specialists in Ottoman, Islamic, and Early Modern Intellectual and Literary History. Given that the inventory contains 7,200 titles in about 5,700 volumes, with many of the extant copies scattered around various collections, the task at hand was truly gargantuan. The work is thus a great service to scholarship that historians, philologists, art historians, and historians of science will make recourse to for many years to come. Moreover, for anyone who would like to browse the library of an Ottoman sultan, these volumes offer them their chance.â
Henry Shapiro, The Van Leer Jerusalem Institute in: Early Science and Medicine Volume 26, Issue 3 (2021).
Contents
VOLUME I: ESSAYS
PREFACE BY THE EDITORS
Overview and Significance of the Palace Library Inventory
â1.âGülru NecipoÄlu, The Organization of Knowledge in the Ottoman Palace Library: An Encyclopedic Collection and Its Inventoryâ
â2.âCemal Kafadar, Between Amasya and Istanbul: Bayezid II, His Librarian, and the Textual Turn of the Late Fifteenth Centuryâ
â3.âCornell H. Fleischer, Learning and Sovereignty in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuriesâ
The Palace Library as a Collection and the Book Arts
â4.âZeynep AtbaÅ, Artistic Aspects of Sultan Bayezid IIâs Book Treasury Collection: Extant Volumes Preserved at the Topkapı Palace Museum Libraryâ
â5.âZeren Tanındı, Arts of the Book: The Illustrated and Illuminated Manuscripts Listed in Ê¿Atufiâs Inventoryâ
â6.âJudith Pfeiffer, Prizing the Divan: The Early Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Literary Canon as Mirrored in the Inventories of Müeyyedzadeâs and Bayezid IIâs Library Collections â
APPENDICES
Appendix I-III: Some Identified Manuscripts Stamped with Bayezid IIâs Seal
âAPPENDIX I: Zeynep AtbaÅ, Preliminary List of Manuscripts Stamped with Bayezid IIâs Seal in the Topkapı Palace Museum Libraryâ
âAPPENDIX II: Zeren Tanındı, Preliminary List of Manuscripts Stamped with Bayezid IIâs Seal and Transferred from the Topkapı Palace Inner Treasury to Other Library Collectionsâ
âAPPENDIX III WITH PLATES FROM MANUSCRIPTS AT THE TOPKAPI PALACE MUSEUM LIBRARY: Gülru NecipoÄlu, Some Books Bearing the Seal of Bayezid II and/or Dedications to Him: A Comparison of Titles Inscribed by His Librarian and Corresponding Entries in the Library Inventoryâ
Appendix IV-V: English Translations of the Librarian Ê¿Atufiâs Ottoman Turkish and Arabic Prefaces to the Palace Library Inventory
âAPPENDIX IV: Gülru NecipoÄlu, Translation of Ê¿Atufiâs Ottoman Turkish Preface to the Palace Library Inventoryâ
âAPPENDIX V: Mohsen Goudarzi, Translation of Ê¿Atufiâs Arabic Preface to the Palace Library Inventoryâ
âPrinciples Observed in Transliterating MS Török F. 59â
âTransliterated Text of MS Török F. 59, prepared by Himmet TaÅkömür and Hesna Ergun TaÅkömürâ
âFacsimile of MS Török F. 59â