Union Catalogue of Manuscripts from the Islamicate World

Persian MS 232 (The John Rylands Research Institute and Library, The University of Manchester)

Persian Manuscripts

Contents

Summary of Contents: The second of four volumes of the Kīmiyā-yi Saʻādat (Alchemy of Happiness), together with Persian MS 231 (Vol. 1), 233 (Vol. 3), and 234 (Vol. 4). A significant Persian orthodox Sufi treatise on religious obligations and moral duties by Muḥammad al-Ghazzālī (ca. 1058–1111), renowned as Hujjat al-Islam (Proof of Islam) on account of his extensive knowledge of the Shafi‘ī school of Islamic law among other topics. Author of about one hundred books and treatises, mainly in Arabic as well as several in Persian, including the present work, which he redacted, translated, and abridged from his much lengthier Arabic work Iḥyā’ ‘Ulūm al-Dīn (Revival of the Religious Sciences). This volume contains the second Rukn (Pillar) subtitled Mu’āmilāt (Affairs), divided into ten Aṣl (Elements).
Incipit: (beginning) برگ ۱پ (folio 1b): اصل اول آداب طعام خوردن است بدانکه راه عبادت هم از جمله عبادتست و زاد راه هم از جمله راهست
Language(s): Persian
1b (94)
Title: Aṣl 1
Title: آداب طعام خوردن
8a (101)
Title: Aṣl 2
Title: آداب نکاح
16a (109)
Title: Aṣl 3
Title: آداب کسب و تجارت
32a (125)
Title: Aṣl 4
Title: طلب حلال
41b (134)
Title: Aṣl 5
Title: آداب صحبت با خلق
59a (152)
Title: Aṣl 6
Title: آداب عزلت
67b (160)
Title: Aṣl 7
Title: آداب سفر
74a (167)
Title: Aṣl 8
Title: آداب سماع و وجد
84a (177)
Title: Aṣl 9
Title: آداب امر به معروف و نهی منکر
93b (186)
Title: Aṣl 10
Title: در رعیت نگاه داشتن و ولایت راندن

Physical Description

Form: codex
Support: Textblock of cross-grained, ivory-coloured paper probably handmade in the Indian subcontinent with ~8 laid lines per cm and no discernible chain lines.
Extent: 101 folios, 2 flyleaves (ff. i + 101 + i)
Dimensions (leaf): 292 × 170 mm.
Dimensions (written): 145 × 105 mm.
Foliation:

Foliated with Arabic figures throughout the four volumes and folio numbers inserted in the table of contents.

Collation

Undetermined. Catchwords on the lower-right corners of the b sides throughout.

Condition

In fair condition, with discoloured and insect damaged areas and historical repairs.

Layout

Written in 1 column with 21 lines per page. Ruled with a miṣtarah hand guide.

Hand(s)

somewhat hastily copied in black nasta‘līq with subheaders in red by Ḥusayn bin Ḥasan.

Decoration


Ruling: Double-ruled in gold outlined in black and blue.

Additions:
Table of Contents:

Binding

Repaired and uniformly rebound as a set with the other volumes in full brown calf.

Title and volume numbers titled in Latin on the spine.

History

Origin: Completed by Ḥusayn bin Ḥasan, probably in the Indian subcontinent; undated, but possibly 17th century.

Provenance and Acquisition

The acquisition of the manuscript in India and its arrival in Britain and division into four volumes remains unclear.

Subsequently acquired by Methodist minister Rev. Adam Clarke (1762–1832), after whose death his son Jospeh Butterworth Bulmer Clarke (d. 1855) inherited the volume and describes its present state in a catalogue published in 1835.

The next year on 20 June 1836, Clarke's son auctioned his father's collection through the London firm of Sotheby & Son where bookseller John George Cochrane (1780–1852) purchased the set for £3 19 shillings.

Probably from Cochrane by scholar Nathaniel Bland (1803–1865) for his library at Randalls Park, Leatherhead. After his death, London bookseller Bernard Quaritch (1819–1899) sold his oriental manuscripts to Alexander Lindsay, 25th Earl of Crawford (1812–1880) in 1866, and moved to Bibliotheca Lindesiana at Haigh Hall, Wigan.

Purchased by Enriqueta Rylands (1843–1908) in 1901 from James Ludovic Lindsay, 26th Earl of Crawford (1847–1913).

Bequeathed by Enriqueta Rylands (1843–1908) in 1908 to the John Rylands Library, Manchester.

Record Sources

Bibliographical description based on an index created by Reza Navabpour circa 1993, derived from a manuscript catalogue by Michael Kerney, circa 1890s, concisely published as Bibliotheca Lindesiana, Hand-list of Oriental Manuscripts: Arabic, Persian, Turkish, 1898.

Manuscript description by Jake Benson in 2022 with reference to the volume in hand.

Availability

To book an in-person or online appointment to consult the manuscript, visit Using the Special Collections Reading Rooms. For any other enquiries please email uml.special-collections@manchester.ac.uk.

Bibliography

    J. B. B. Clarke, A Historical and Descriptive Catalogue of the European and Asiatic Manuscripts in the Library of the late Dr. Adam Clarke, F.S.A., M.R.I.A. (London: J. Murrary, 1835), p. 153, no. 77.
    Sotheby and Son, Catalogue of the Highly Interesting and Valuable Collection of European and Asiatic Manuscripts of the late Dr. Adam Clarke, F.S.A., M.R.I.A. (London: [Printed by Compton and Richie], 1836), p. 56, no. 380.

Funding of Cataloguing

Iran Heritage Foundation

The John Rylands Research Institute


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