Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Simone Assemani

Italian Orientalist (1752–1821) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Simone Assemani
Remove ads

Simone Assemani (February 19, 1752 April 7, 1821), grand-nephew of Giuseppe Simone Assemani, was born in Rome.

Thumb
Globus caelestis Cufico-Arabicus Veliterni musei Borgiani, 1790

He was professor of Oriental languages in Padua. He is best known by his masterly detection of the literary imposture of Giuseppe Vella, a Maltese priest, which claimed to be a history of the Saracens in Syria.[1]

Major works

Numismatics

  • Museo Cufico Naniano / illustrato dall' Abate Simone Assemani. Padua 1787–88. Microfilm-Edition Urbana, Ill.: Univ. of Illinois 1998.
  • Sopra le Monete Arabe effigiate. Padua 1809.
  • Spiegazione di due rarissime medaglie cufiche della famiglia degli Ommiadi appartenenti al Museo Majnoni in Milano. Milan, 1818.

Orientalism

  • Saggio sull'origine culto letteratura e costumi degli Arabi avanti Maometto. Padua 1787.
  • Globus caelestis Cufico-Arabicus Veliterni musei Borgiani (in Latin). Padova: Tipografia del Seminario <Padova>. 1750.
  • Catalogo De'Codici Manoscritti Orientali Della Bibliotheca Naniana / Compilato Dall' Abate Simone Assemani Professore Di Lingue Oriental. Padua 1792.
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads