Description
Book SynopsisLiving Waters - Scandinavian Oriental Studies. In Honour of Frede Løkkegaard
Table of ContentsSumerian literary dialogues and debates and their place in Ancient Near Eastern literature; die Berufung Jesajas und seine Sendung; Bemerkungen zum "Die Kraniche des Ibykus"-Motiv in der orientalischen Literatur; Frederik Ludvig Norden a Alexandrie en 1737 et 1738; der Islam und Athens Demokratie; Manichaean literature and the writings of Augustine; Lewis Larsson - a Swede in Jerusalem in the first half of the 20th century; foot-noters to the Arabian Nights or the Book of the Thousand and One Nights; an anonymous Hebrew erotico-panegyric from Mahzor Cod. Hebr. XXX, Copenhagen; fra El to Alla - Nasir-i Khosro's beretning om Jerusalem i Safarnameh, "Rejsedagbog"; on Akkadian texts in Greek orthography; the fathers of the grandfather - notes on the teachers of Ibn al-Jauzi of Baghdad as evidenced by his grandson Sibt ibn al-Jauzi in this al-Jalis as-salih wal-anis an-nasih; Edvard Brandes som oversaetter of den jodiske bibel; tribal solidarity - ideology and reality, Ibn Haldun's concept of Asabiya; om gud og det ondes ophav ifolge buddhismen; Shadday in the book of Job; the incarnation according to Ethiopian orthodox catechisms; the values of the tenses in modern Cairene Arabic; Adam og Eva - associationer, etymologier og litteraer semantik - perspektivrids; Ejnar Fugmann, the architect, as a portrayer of the Syrian town Hama in the Islamic period; Erwaegungen zu Gen. 2.18; on a grammatical term in Sibawayh and what it has to tell us; deux versions de Futuh al-Buldan?; al-Sarradj's use of triads in Kitab al-luma; participles and verbal nouns formed from the derived forms of the Arabic strong triliteral verb and their treatment in Urdu; Tadschikistans Latifa; was bedeuted BRNZ bei al-Hamdani?; ARSH and KURSI - an essay on the throne traditions in Islam; Babylonian and Assyrian catalogues; a note on the pre-Islamic Arabic dialect of Syria on basis of Greek inscriptions; the Hebrew revolution and the revolution of the Hebrew language between the 1880s and the 1930s; Betrachtungen ueber den Begriff RIDA.