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Epigraphist, artist, keen hiker, nature-lover and traveller, the German scholar Julius Euting (1839-1913) was one of the great Semitists of his time. In a life full of academic achievement, he made ground-breaking contributions to Punic, Hebrew and Aramaic studies. In 1883, Euting embarked on his most significant and dangerous journey, in the company of the French-Alsatian geographer Charles Huber (1847-84). Their expedition into remote northern Arabia had as its goal the collection of ancient texts and the investigation of archaeological sites such as Taymā' and Madā'in Sālih, and was also…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Epigraphist, artist, keen hiker, nature-lover and traveller, the German scholar Julius Euting (1839-1913) was one of the great Semitists of his time. In a life full of academic achievement, he made ground-breaking contributions to Punic, Hebrew and Aramaic studies. In 1883, Euting embarked on his most significant and dangerous journey, in the company of the French-Alsatian geographer Charles Huber (1847-84). Their expedition into remote northern Arabia had as its goal the collection of ancient texts and the investigation of archaeological sites such as Taymā' and Madā'in Sālih, and was also intended to enable Huber to firm up his geographical discoveries. But they failed to collaborate successfully. Their relationship was poisoned by Franco-German rivalry and Huber's financial dependence upon Euting, and the two men separated at Madā'in Sālih. Euting made his way to the Red Sea coast at great risk to his life, while Huber stayed on in Arabia, only to be murdered north of Jiddah in July 1884. Euting's notebooks are replete with vivid observations, entertaining anecdotes and personal reactions, alongside the earliest careful records of Aramaic, Nabataean and Ancient North Arabian inscriptions and rock art. Their most outstanding feature is the vast quantity of watercolours and sketches that adorn them. This important document of European exploration of Arabia is presented here for the first time in English, with a lavish selection of Euting's original artworks. William Facey's introduction presents the story of Euting's life and his relationship with Huber, and sets his 1883-84 journey in the context of 19th-century Arabian exploration. Finally, the affair of the Tayma Stele, the celebrated Aramaic inscription now in the Musée du Louvre, comes under the spotlight. In a new analysis of this notorious Franco-German imbroglio, the prevailing idea that Huber first saw it in 1880 is held up to scrutiny, and Euting at last given proper credit for its discovery in 1884. Volume I contains 352 pages. Volume II contains 384 pages.
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Autorenporträt
Julius Euting (1839-1913) was one of the foremost Semitic epigraphists of his generation. A colorful character with an adventurous streak, he set out from Damascus in 1883 with the French-Alsatian explorer, Charles Huber, on a dangerous expedition into the deserts of northern Arabia in quest of ancient inscriptions and graffiti. Along the way, Euting kept a meticulous record of his many discoveries in notebooks and sketchbooks, in which he put his artistic talent to prolific use. This graphic and personal record, never before published in English, includes the story of how the famous Tayma Stele was discovered and how the first thorough record of the Nabataean inscriptions at Madā'in Sālih was made. It is a travel account that entitles Euting to a prominent place among 19th-century explorers of Arabia.