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Title
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fətḥa nägäśt
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Institution
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University Library, Cambridge
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Collection Title
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Ethiopian Manuscripts
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Creator(s)
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Ibn al-ʻAssāl, al-Ṣafī Abū al-Faḍāʼil Mājid, active 13th century
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Description/Scope and Content
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The Law of Kings or Fətḥa Nägäśt is a legal code compiled around 1240 CE by the Coptic Egyptian Christian writer 'Abul Fada'il Ibn al-'Assal in Arabic that was later translated into Ge'ez in Ethiopia and expanded upon with numerous local laws. 'Ibn al-Assal took his laws partly from apostolic writings, and partly from former law codes of the Byzantine rulers. In the centuries since, the Fetḥa Nagaśt has been held in great esteem in Ethiopia, so much so that the prefaces to the country’s modern criminal and civil codes assert the document’s underlying influence. This particular manuscript was copied for Mamher (teacher) Germā Giyorgis and his father Ṣegē Mikā’ēl (ff. 144v, 147r) and was among the trove that fell into the hands of the British at Magdala in 1868. The phrase ‘pillar of faith Tēwodros’ appears on 147r along with the names Habta Giyorgis and Eḫeta Giyorgis.
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Date
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19th cent.
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Identifier
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Or. 2122
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Language
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Ge'ez
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Extent
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147 ff., 4 flyleaves Leaf height: 34.5 cm, width: 26.7 cm.
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Collection Type
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Special Collection
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Level of Processing
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Catalogued - FIHIRST & digitised on CUDL
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Type of Materials/Format
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Codex
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Related Collections: Types of Materials
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Islamic Manuscripts - Ethiopian Manuscripts
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Presevation/Conservation concerns
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Digitised - fragile
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Provenance
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Ethiopia
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Copyright
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Out of copyright
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Donor Information
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Sotheby’s auction (lot #149), 12 December 1966.
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Notes
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Binding: Leather over wooden boards with full blind decoration on both late eighteenth/early nineteenth century. For more information contact the Near & Middle Eastern Specialist