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ID090385
Title ProperJourneymen, middlemen
Other Title Informationtravel, transculture, and technology in the origins of muslim printing
LanguageENG
AuthorGreen, Nile
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)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.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 41, No. 2; May 2009: p.203-224
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 41, No. 2; May 2009: p.203-224
Key WordsJourneymen ;  Middlemen ;  Transculture ;  Technology ;  Iran ;  Egypt ;  India ;  Technological Transfer