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  1. Ignaz Goldziher; Información personal; Nombre en húngaro: Goldziher Ignác: Nacimiento: 22 de junio de 1850 Székesfehérvár : Fallecimiento: 13 de noviembre de 1921 Budapest (Reino de Hungría) Sepultura: Cementerio judío de la Calle Kozma: Nacionalidad: Húngara: Lengua materna: Húngaro: Educación; Educado en: Universidad Humboldt de ...

  2. Ignác (Yitzhaq Yehuda) Goldziher (22 June 1850 – 13 November 1921), often credited as Ignaz Goldziher, was a Hungarian scholar of Islam. Along with the German Theodor Nöldeke and the Dutch Christiaan Snouck Hurgronje , he is considered the founder of modern Islamic studies in Europe.

  3. Ignác Goldziher. SUNY Press, Jan 1, 1967 - Religion - 254 pages. This is the first volume of Goldziher's Muslim Studies, which ranks highly among the classics of the scholarly literature on...

    • Samuel Miklos Stern
    • Ignác Goldziher
    • Samuel Miklos Stern
  4. Ignaz Goldziher stands out as a pre-eminent scholar of Arabic and Islam of his day, spanning the latter decades of the 19th century and the opening of the 20th. Indeed, his own prodigious work arose out of 19th century developments in the academic study of Islam, as the 1917 introduction outlines.

  5. Goldziher was the first to recognize the significance of physical gestures in Islamic prophetic traditions, evident in the rich information found in ḥadīth literature. His interdisciplinary approach allowed him to extract meaning from gestures, even in unexpected places like his 1920 masterpiece "Die Richtungen der islamischen Koranauslesung."

  6. The founder of European Islamic Studies. „Get wisdom, get insight” (Proverbs 4:5) Memorial exhibition commemorating the one hundredth anniversary of Ignaz Goldzihers (1850-1921) death, and organized by the Library of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in collaboration with the Goldziher Institute, aims to commemorate this great humanist ...

  7. GOLDZIHER, IGNAZ (Isaac Judah; 1850–1921), Hungarian scholar, one of the founders of modern Islamic scholarship. Goldziher, born in Szekesfehervar (Stuhlweissenburg), studied Arabic manuscripts at Leyden and Vienna, and traveled in Egypt, Palestine, and Syria before becoming a lecturer at the University of Budapest in 1872.