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Mevlânâ Celâleddîn Rumi is considered the foremost mystical Persian poet of Love and is the best-selling poet in the United States. Our four volumes share the 1,867 quatrains from Rumi's Divan-i Kebir, translated by Nevit O. Ergin, the first person ever to translate into English the over 44,000 verses in Rumi's Divan-i Kebir. Although selections of Ergin's translations of Rumi's quatrains have been published before, this is the first time his translations of all 1,867 rubaiyat will have been published - in English only -in their entirety. To quote Ergin, "Rumi is like an infinitely large umbrella covering all we have and beyond."…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Mevlânâ Celâleddîn Rumi is considered the foremost mystical Persian poet of Love and is the best-selling poet in the United States. Our four volumes share the 1,867 quatrains from Rumi's Divan-i Kebir, translated by Nevit O. Ergin, the first person ever to translate into English the over 44,000 verses in Rumi's Divan-i Kebir. Although selections of Ergin's translations of Rumi's quatrains have been published before, this is the first time his translations of all 1,867 rubaiyat will have been published - in English only -in their entirety. To quote Ergin, "Rumi is like an infinitely large umbrella covering all we have and beyond."
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Autorenporträt
Rumi (1207-1273). His full name is Mevlânâ Celâleddîn Muhammed Rumi [Turkish], or Master Jalal of Rum. The Islamic world knows him as Mowl¿n¿ [Our Master]. The West knows him as Rumi. His poetry is beautiful and inspired, reaching the pinnacle of the rich Persian poetic tradition. But, to call him a great poet is an unfortunate understatement, Of far more import, perhaps no other human has ever lived who, through his own words, has given us such a clear view into the journey of a mystic on the road to Absence, to the Divinity, to Nothingness. Rumi was born in present-day Afghanistan in 1207 and lived most of his life in Konya, Turkey, where he died in1273. He was a Muslim scholar, well-respected in his community by those from all walks of life, including imams, priests and rabbis, beggars and Seljuk royalty. Now, 800 years later, mankind is still being blessed with the vastness of his wisdom.