Dictionary of Dictionaries and Eminent Encyclopedias

Dictionary of Dictionaries and Eminent Encyclopedias
Author: Thomas Kabdebo
Publisher:
Total Pages: 440
Release: 1997
Genre: Reference
ISBN:

Enlarged by some 50 percent and equipped with more comprehensive name and subject indexes, the second edition of this unique guide contains bibliographic and descriptive annotations for 8,000 dictionaries. It features 1,500 additional bilingual works, 400 new subject categories, and all the major electronic dictionaries produced in English. While the primary emphasis is on language dictionaries, subject dictionaries on topics as varied as ceramics, bookbinding, and theatre as well as dictionaries issued by international bodies and agencies are included. Covering all the world's languages, works may be bilingual, monolingual, or multilingual as long as there is an English element.

Orientalia

Orientalia
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 708
Release: 1926
Genre: Middle Eastern philology
ISBN:

Between East and West

Between East and West
Author: R. A. Donkin
Publisher: American Philosophical Society
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2003
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780871692481

Up to & including the Age of Discoveries, the wealth of the East was thought in Europe to consist primarily of spices & aromatics. Cloves, nutmeg, mace, & sandalwood all were thought to come from a few small islands in easternmost Indonesia, which no European reached before 1500. Yet supplies of these luxury products were reaching China, India, western Asia, & the Mediterranean lands more than a thousand years earlier. This study of Moluccan spices opens with their natural history & nomenclature, & the discovery of the Islands by Europeans near the opposing (& controversial) limits of Spanish & Portuguese jurisdiction. Donkin traces the expanding interest & long-distance trade in cloves, nutmeg, & sandalwood, first to India & then to the adjacent Arabo-Persian world. The medieval West & China lay on the margins of diffusion, the former in touch with the Levant, the latter with the trading world of South East Asia.