Difference between revisions of "Category:Early Islamic Studies--Italian"

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* [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies|BACK to the EARLY ISLAMIC STUDIES--INDEX]]
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* [[:Category:Italian Scholarship|BACK to the ITALIAN SCHOLARSHIP--INDEX]]
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* [[:Category:Italy|BACK to the ITALY--INDEX]]
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{| cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="width:100%; vertical-align:top; background:transparent;"
{{WindowMain
|title= [[Early Islamic Studies]] (EIS) -> [[Italian language]]
|backgroundLogo= Bluebg_rounded_croped.png
|logo= history.png
|px= 38
|content= [[File:Quran book.jpg|550px]]


The page: '''Early Islamic Studies--Italian''', includes (in chronological order) scholarly and literary works in the field of [[Early Islamic Studies]], from the 16th century to the present.
}}
{{WindowMain
|title= [[:Category:Early Islamic Scholars & Authors--Italian|EIS Scholars & Authors--Italian]]
|backgroundLogo= Bluebg_rounded_croped.png
|logo = Italian flag.png
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}}


'''Early Islamic Studies in Italian / Italian Scholarship on Early Islam'''


* See [[Early Islamic Scholars in Italy]]
{{WindowMain
|title= EIS (Italian) -- History of research -- Overview
|backgroundLogo= Bluebg_rounded_croped.png
|logo = logo.png
|px= 38
|content=
[[File:Alcorano Arrivabene.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Andrea Arrivabene]]]]
[[File:Ludovico Marracci.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Ludovico Marracci]]]]
[[File:Giovanni Bernardo De Rossi.png|thumb|150px|[[Giovanni Bernardo De Rossi]]]]
[[File:Leone Caetani.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Leone Caetani]]]]
[[File:Francesco Gabrieli.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Francesco Gabrieli]]]]
[[File:Sergio Noja.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Sergio Noja]]]]
[[File:Gabriele Mandel.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Gabriele Mandel]]]]


==Overview==
Because of its geographical location at the center of the Mediterranean and its historical role of bridge between Europe and the Middle East, Italy has played a central role in the development of [[Early Islamic Studies]].


Because of its geographical location at the center of the Mediterranean and its historical role of bridge between Europe and the Middle East, Italy has played a central role in the development of [[Early Islamic Studies]].
* [[1500s]] -> [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1500s ~~|EIS 1500s]]
 
The first Italian translation of the [[Qur'an]], authored by the Florentine [[Andrea Arrivabene]] in 1547, was the first translation ever made into a modern language. Although the Author claimed to have translated the text from the Arabic, his Italian version was based on the Latin version by [[Robert of Ketton]] (Lex Mahumet pseudoprophete, c1143), which had been just printed by [[Theodor Bibliander]] in 1543. Arrivabene's work originated the first versions of the Qur'an into German and Dutch.
 
* [[1600s]] -> [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1600s ~~|EIS 1600s]]


The first translation of the [[Qur'an]] in a modern language was authored by the Florentine [[Andrea Arrivabene]] in 1547. Although the Author claimed to have translated the text from the Arabic, his Italian version was based on the Latin version by [[Robert of Ketton]] (Lex Mahumet pseudoprophete, c1143), which had been just printed by [[Theodor Bibliander]] in 1543. Arrivabene's work originated the first versions of the Qur'an into German and Dutch.
No major work in Italian in the field of Early Islamic Studies was published during the 17th century in the field of Early Islamic Studies.


In 1698 [[Ludovico Marracci]], a catholic priest and professor of Arabic at the University La Sapienza of Rome, published a new Latin translation of the Qu'ran from the original Arabic text, which largely improved on the previous translations.
In 1698 [[Ludovico Marracci]], a catholic priest and professor of Arabic at the University La Sapienza of Rome, published a new Latin translation of the Qu'ran from the original Arabic text, which largely improved on the previous translations.


In the 18th and 19th century the contribution of Italian authors to Early Islamic Studies was limited to the translation of a few works from the French, following the success of Voltaire's "Mahomet le prophet," which was translated into Italian by [[Melchiorre Cesarotti]] in 1762 and adapted as an opera to the stage by [[Felice Romani]] in 1817. There was room, however, for one fundamental piece of scholarship, the "Dizionario storico degli autori arabi più celebri e delle principali loro opere" authored in 1807 by University of Parma Professor [[Giovanni Bernardo De Rossi]].
[[~~  ~~ 1700s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1700s ~~]]
 
In the 18th century the contribution of Italian authors to Early Islamic Studies was limited to the translation of the Life of Muhammad by [[Henri de Boulainvilliers]]. Following the success of Voltaire's "Mahomet le prophet," which was translated into Italian by [[Melchiorre Cesarotti]] in 1762, [[Alberto Baccanti]] composed a pome on the the figure of Muhammad. The only original piece of scholarship in Italian was the ''Saggio sull'origine, culto, letteratura e costumi degli arabi avanti il pseudoprofeta Maometto'' by [[Simone Assemani]].
 
[[~~  ~~ 1800s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1800s ~~]]
 
In the early 19th century University of Parma Professor [[Giovanni Bernardo De Rossi]] published the important "Dizionario storico degli autori arabi più celebri e delle principali loro opere" (1807). In 1817 librettist [[Felice Romani]] adapted Voltaire's play to the stage; the opera, set to music by composer [[Peter von Winter]], premiered at [[Teatro alla Scala, Milan, Italy]].
 
[[~~  ~~ 1850s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1850s ~~]]
 
No major work in Italian was published in the second half of the 19th century in the field of Early Islamic Studies.
 
[[~~  ~~ 1900s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1900s ~~]]
 
At the beginning of the 20th century the works of [[Leone Caetani]] mark the rise of the Italian School of Early Islamic Studies.
 
[[~~  ~~ 1910s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1910s ~~]]
 
[[~~  ~~ 1920s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1920s ~~]]
 
In the 1920s and 1930s, authors such as Giuseppe Sacco, Bruno Ducati, and others, published important contribution to the field. In 1929 Luigi Bonelli authored a new translation of the Qur'an as well as a critical edition of the Arabic text in 1937. Works by Émile Dermenghem and Tor Andræ were also translated into Italian.
 
[[~~  ~~ 1950s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1950s ~~]]
 
After the World War II, the Italian School continued its work with a new translation of the Qur'an by Alessandro Bausani in 1955.
 
[[~~  ~~ 1960s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1960s ~~]]
 
Great international acclaim gained in the 1960s the work of [[Francesco Gabrieli]], which was translated into Spanish, English and German.
 
[[~~  ~~ 1970s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1970s ~~]]
 
In the 1970s the leading figure in the field was Sergio Noja. A new translation of the Qur'an appeared, by Federico Peirone in 1979.
 
[[~~  ~~ 1980s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1980s ~~]]
 
A new translation of the Qur'an appeared, by Cherubino Mario Guzzetti in 1989.
 
[[~~  ~~ 1990s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 1990s ~~]]
 
[[~~  ~~ 2000s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 2000s ~~]]
 
In the 1990s and 2000s the growing Muslim presence in Italy has caused the emergence of an Italian Muslim Scholarship. In 1994 Hamza Roberto Blasone published the first Italian translation of the Qur'an authored by an Italian Muslim scholar. The work is still the "official" translation used by the majority of Muslims in Italy. Best known among Italian Muslim authors was Gabriele Mandel, whose work was widely translated in English, French, German, Spanish and other European languages. The tradition of Italian non-Muslim Arabists has been continued by Claudio Lo Jacono, Roberto Tottoli, Paolo Branca and Massimo Campanini.
 
[[~~  ~~ 2010s ~~ ~~]] [[~~ Early Islamic Studies 2010s ~~]]
 
The growing public interest in the history, culture, and religion of Islam is testified in recent years by the increasing number of publications and translations of scholarly and fictional works in the field.
}}
 
|}
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{| id="mp-right" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="width:100%; vertical-align:top; background:#f5faff; background:transparent;"
 
{{WindowMain
|title= EIS [[Languages]] -> [[Italian language|Italian]]
|backgroundLogo= Bluebg_rounded_croped.png
|logo= history.png
|px= 38
|content= [[File:Italian language.jpg|250px]]
 
 
[[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--English|English]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--French|French]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--German|German]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Italian|Italian]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Spanish|Spanish]] -//- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Arabic|Arabic]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Croatian|Croatian]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Czech|Czech]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Danish|Danish]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Dutch|Dutch]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Estonian|Estonian]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Greek|Greek]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Hebrew|Hebrew]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Hungarian|Hungarian]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Japanese|Japanese]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Latin|Latin]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Maltese|Maltese]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Persian|Persian]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Polish|Polish]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Russian|Russian]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Serbian|Serbian]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Slovenian|Slovenian]]
}}
 
 
{{WindowMain
|title= EIS [[Timeline]]
|backgroundLogo= Bluebg_rounded_croped.png
|logo = contents.png
|px= 38
|content= [[File:Timeline.jpg|280px]]
 
 
[[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--2010s|2010s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 2010s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--2000s|2000s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 2000s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1990s|1990s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1990s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1980s|1980s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1980s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1970s|1970s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1970s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1960s|1960s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1960s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1950s|1950s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1950s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1940s|1940s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1940s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1930s|1930s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1930s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1920s|1920s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1920s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1910s|1910s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1910s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1900s|1900s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1900s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1850s|1850s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1850s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1800s|1800s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1800s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1700s|1700s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1700s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1600s|1600s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1600s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1500s|1500s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1500s|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--1400s|1400s]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top 1400s|Top]]) --[[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Pre-Modern|Pre-Modern]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top Pre-Modern|Top]]) -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Medieval|Medieval]] ([[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Top Medieval|Top]]) -//- [[Early Islamic Fiction|EIS Fiction]] >
}}
 
 
{{WindowMain
|title= [[Early Islamic Fiction|EIS Fiction]]
|backgroundLogo= Bluebg_rounded_croped.png
|logo = contents.png
|px= 38
|content= [[File:Thinking.jpg|280px]]
}}
 
 


At the beginning of the 20th century the works of [[Leone Caetani]] mark the rise of the Italian School of Early Islamic Studies. In the 1920s and 1930s, authors such as [[Giuseppe Sacco]], [[Bruno Ducati]], and others, published important contribution to the field. In 1929 [[Luigi Bonelli]] authored a new translation of the Qur'an as well as a critical edition of the Arabic text in 1937. Works by [[Émile Dermenghem]] and [[Tor Andræ]] were also translated into Italian.
{{WindowMain
|title= Cognate Fields (Italian)
|backgroundLogo= Bluebg_rounded_croped.png
|logo= contents.png
|px= 38
|content= [[File:Fields research.jpg|280px]]


The Italian School continued its work after the war with a new translation of the Qur'an by [[Alessandro Bausani]] in 1955. Great international acclaim gained in the 1960s the work of [[Francesco Gabrieli]], which was translated into Spanish, English and German.


In the 1970s and 1980s the leading figure in the field was [[Sergio Noja]]. Two new translation of the Qur'an appeared, one by [[Federico Peirone]] in 1979 and one by [[Cherubino Mario Guzzetti]] in 1989.
[[:Category:Second Temple Studies--Italian|Second Temple Studies]] -- [[:Category:Enochic Studies--Italian|Enochic Studies]] -- [[:Category:Apocalyptic Studies--Italian|Apocalyptic Studies]] -- [[:Category:Qumran Studies--Italian|Qumran Studies]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Italian|OT Apocrypha Studies]] -- [[:Category:Wisdom Studies--Italian|Wisdom Studies]] -- [[:Category:OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--Italian|OT Pseudepigrapha Studies]] -- [[:Category:Hellenistic-Jewish Studies--Italian|Hellenistic-Jewish Studies]] -- [[:Category:Philo Studies--Italian|Philo Studies]] -- [[:Category:Josephus Studies--Italian|Josephus Studies]] -- [[:Category:Historical Jesus Studies--Italian|Historical Jesus Studies]] -- [[:Category:Pauline Studies--Italian|Pauline Studies]] -- [[:Category:Johannine Studies--Italian|Johannine Studies]] -- [[:Category:Petrine Studies--Italian|Petrine Studies]] -- [[:Category:Gospels Studies--Italian|Gospels Studies]] -- [[:Category:Christian Origins Studies--Italian|Christian Origins Studies]] -- [[:Category:New Testament Studies--Italian|New Testament Studies]] -- [[:Category:Early Christian Studies--Italian|Early Christian Studies]] -- [[:Category:Early Jewish Studies--Italian|Early Jewish Studies]] -- [[:Category:Early Islamic Studies--Italian|Early Islamic Studies]] -- [[:Category:Early Samaritan Studies--Italian|Early Samaritan Studies]] -- [[:Category:Hebrew Bible Studies--Italian|Hebrew Bible Studies]] -//- [[:Category:Fiction--Italian|Fiction (Italian)]] >
}}


In the 1990s and 2000s the growing Muslim presence in Italy has caused the emergence of an Italian Muslim Scholarship. In 1994 [[Hamza Roberto Blasone]] published the first Italian translation of the Qur'an authored by an Italian Muslim scholar. The work is still the "official" translation used by the majority of Muslims in Italy. Best known among Italian Muslim authors was [[Gabriele Mandel]], whose work was widely translated in English, French, German, Spanish and other European languages. The tradition of Italian non-Muslim Arabists has been continued by [[Roberto Tottoli]], [[Paolo Branca]] and [[Massimo Campanini]]. The growing public interest in the history, culture, and religion of Islam is testified in recent years by the increasing number of publications and translations of scholarly and fictional works in the field.


====Import/export & International Impact====
{{WindowMain
|title= EIS (Italian) -- Highlights
|backgroundLogo= Bluebg_rounded_croped.png
|logo = contents.png
|px= 38
|content=
* [[L'Alcorano di Maometto (The Alquran of Muhammad / 1547 Arrivabene), book]]
* [[Dizionario storico degli autori arabi più celebri e delle principali loro opere (1807 De Rossi), book]]
* [[Annali dell'Islam (Annals of Islam / 1905-1926 Caetani), book]]
* [[Maometto e le grandi conquiste arabe (Muhammad and the Conquests of Islam / 1967 Gabrieli), book]]
}}


More than 1/3 of studies, published in Italy in the field, are translations of works, mostly from France, Germany, the United Kingdom ad the United States. On the other hand, only a few works originally published in Italy have been translated and published in other countries.


In spite of this unfavorable "balance of trade", the Italian School of Early Islamic Studies has a solid reputation in the world. The early works by [[Andrea Arrivabene]] and [[Ludovico Marracci]] were widely used and were fundamental for the spread of the knowledge of the Qur'an in Europe. De Rossi's "Dizionario Storico" (1807) was also a landmark in bibliographical research. Among the Italian Arabists whose work in Early Islam was more widely known outside of Italy, are [[Francesco Gabrieli]], [[Gabriele Mandel]], and [[Massimo Campanini]].
|}
|}

Latest revision as of 17:17, 6 February 2021

Quran book.jpg

The page: Early Islamic Studies--Italian, includes (in chronological order) scholarly and literary works in the field of Early Islamic Studies, from the 16th century to the present.


EIS (Italian) -- History of research -- Overview
EIS (Italian) -- History of research -- Overview

Because of its geographical location at the center of the Mediterranean and its historical role of bridge between Europe and the Middle East, Italy has played a central role in the development of Early Islamic Studies.

The first Italian translation of the Qur'an, authored by the Florentine Andrea Arrivabene in 1547, was the first translation ever made into a modern language. Although the Author claimed to have translated the text from the Arabic, his Italian version was based on the Latin version by Robert of Ketton (Lex Mahumet pseudoprophete, c1143), which had been just printed by Theodor Bibliander in 1543. Arrivabene's work originated the first versions of the Qur'an into German and Dutch.

No major work in Italian in the field of Early Islamic Studies was published during the 17th century in the field of Early Islamic Studies.

In 1698 Ludovico Marracci, a catholic priest and professor of Arabic at the University La Sapienza of Rome, published a new Latin translation of the Qu'ran from the original Arabic text, which largely improved on the previous translations.

~~ ~~ 1700s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1700s ~~

In the 18th century the contribution of Italian authors to Early Islamic Studies was limited to the translation of the Life of Muhammad by Henri de Boulainvilliers. Following the success of Voltaire's "Mahomet le prophet," which was translated into Italian by Melchiorre Cesarotti in 1762, Alberto Baccanti composed a pome on the the figure of Muhammad. The only original piece of scholarship in Italian was the Saggio sull'origine, culto, letteratura e costumi degli arabi avanti il pseudoprofeta Maometto by Simone Assemani.

~~ ~~ 1800s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1800s ~~

In the early 19th century University of Parma Professor Giovanni Bernardo De Rossi published the important "Dizionario storico degli autori arabi più celebri e delle principali loro opere" (1807). In 1817 librettist Felice Romani adapted Voltaire's play to the stage; the opera, set to music by composer Peter von Winter, premiered at Teatro alla Scala, Milan, Italy.

~~ ~~ 1850s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1850s ~~

No major work in Italian was published in the second half of the 19th century in the field of Early Islamic Studies.

~~ ~~ 1900s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1900s ~~

At the beginning of the 20th century the works of Leone Caetani mark the rise of the Italian School of Early Islamic Studies.

~~ ~~ 1910s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1910s ~~

~~ ~~ 1920s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1920s ~~

In the 1920s and 1930s, authors such as Giuseppe Sacco, Bruno Ducati, and others, published important contribution to the field. In 1929 Luigi Bonelli authored a new translation of the Qur'an as well as a critical edition of the Arabic text in 1937. Works by Émile Dermenghem and Tor Andræ were also translated into Italian.

~~ ~~ 1950s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1950s ~~

After the World War II, the Italian School continued its work with a new translation of the Qur'an by Alessandro Bausani in 1955.

~~ ~~ 1960s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1960s ~~

Great international acclaim gained in the 1960s the work of Francesco Gabrieli, which was translated into Spanish, English and German.

~~ ~~ 1970s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1970s ~~

In the 1970s the leading figure in the field was Sergio Noja. A new translation of the Qur'an appeared, by Federico Peirone in 1979.

~~ ~~ 1980s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1980s ~~

A new translation of the Qur'an appeared, by Cherubino Mario Guzzetti in 1989.

~~ ~~ 1990s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 1990s ~~

~~ ~~ 2000s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 2000s ~~

In the 1990s and 2000s the growing Muslim presence in Italy has caused the emergence of an Italian Muslim Scholarship. In 1994 Hamza Roberto Blasone published the first Italian translation of the Qur'an authored by an Italian Muslim scholar. The work is still the "official" translation used by the majority of Muslims in Italy. Best known among Italian Muslim authors was Gabriele Mandel, whose work was widely translated in English, French, German, Spanish and other European languages. The tradition of Italian non-Muslim Arabists has been continued by Claudio Lo Jacono, Roberto Tottoli, Paolo Branca and Massimo Campanini.

~~ ~~ 2010s ~~ ~~ ~~ Early Islamic Studies 2010s ~~

The growing public interest in the history, culture, and religion of Islam is testified in recent years by the increasing number of publications and translations of scholarly and fictional works in the field.



Timeline.jpg


2010s (Top) -- 2000s (Top) -- 1990s (Top) -- 1980s (Top) -- 1970s (Top) -- 1960s (Top) -- 1950s (Top) -- 1940s (Top) -- 1930s (Top) -- 1920s (Top) -- 1910s (Top) -- 1900s (Top) -- 1850s (Top) -- 1800s (Top) -- 1700s (Top) -- 1600s (Top) -- 1500s (Top) -- 1400s (Top) --Pre-Modern (Top) -- Medieval (Top) -//- EIS Fiction >


Fiction.jpg



Cognate Fields (Italian)
Cognate Fields (Italian)


EIS (Italian) -- Highlights
EIS (Italian) -- Highlights


Pages in category "Early Islamic Studies--Italian"

The following 83 pages are in this category, out of 83 total.

1

Media in category "Early Islamic Studies--Italian"

The following 5 files are in this category, out of 5 total.