Bernard Quaritch as an antiquarian bookseller

Bernard Quaritch as an antiquarian bookseller. E. Glasgow.
Library review 47 (1998) nr. 1, p. 38-41.

Summary

This is a brief study of the life and work of the celebrated antiquarian bookseller Bernard Quaritch (1819‐1899). Born in Germany and having served his apprenticeship as a bookseller there, he came to London in 1842 with a letter of introduction to John Murray. After a short period in Paris he finally settled in London in 1845, setting up his own business there in 1845. This flourished and in his Victorian heyday Quaritch had an international fame, priding himself on being bookseller to many “eminent Victorians”. In 1859 he was also first to venture to publish Edward Fitzgerald’s somewhat daring “Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam”. Quaritch had a firm and lasting influence on books and literature of his time. Apart from his enormous influence on private libraries he helped decisively to build up the collections of the British Museum and of the H.C. Folger Library in the USA. He illustrates how the book trade in Victorian England made its own forceful contributions to the advancement of literature, learning and libraries of all sorts.

Omar Khayyâm

Omar Khayyâm. L.P. Elwell-Sutton.
In: Eshan Yarshater. Persian Literature. Albany : Bibliotheca Persica. [1988]. ISBN: 0887062636

Un récit nommé Khayyám …

Un récit nommé Khayyám. La rivalité Gazáli-Khayyám selon al-Bayhaqi et la première notice biographique concernant le Maître de Nishápúr. J. Lambert; A.-F. de Prémare.
Arabica, 34 (1987), pp. 197–220

Záhír al-Din ‘Ali al-Bayhaqî, dans son ouvrage Tatimmat siwán al-hikma, présente, entre autres, une notice sur la vie et la mort de ‘Umar Khayyám qu’il a connu en 507/1113-4.

Omar Khayyam: astronomer, mathematician and poet

Omar Khayyam: astronomer, mathematician and poet. John Andrew Boyle.
Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 52 (1969) 1, p. 30-45

General article investigating what is known about Khayyám, the years of his birth and death, his background, and the various manuscripts that have come to light in recent years.

Omar Khayyâm

Omar Khayyâm. Jan Rypka.
In: History of Iranian literature. Rypka, Jan; Jahn, Karl (eds.). Dordrecht, Reidl, 1968. pp. 189–193.

General article about Khayyám, the known facts of his life and the works and manuscripts ascribed to him.

Edward FitzGerald

Edward FitzGerald. Maurice Bowra.
Iran. Journal of the Iran Society 1 (1963), p. 1-12

In the nineteenth century, England, despite its reputation for ruthless conventionality, was a happy home for eccentrics, for men who with an almost unconscious confidence pursued their private whims and maintained a curious innocence from the world around them. To this select and agreeable company belonged Edward FitzGerald. He was not, strictly speaking, English, but Anglo-Irish, coming from a family long settled in Ireland but regarding itself as an outpost of English manners and superiority, and confirmed in its belief by an ample income and several large houses. Though FitzGerald lived to be 74, his life was undramatic, and such dramas as befell him he took with a philosophical calm. Even when his father lost his money trying to find coal on his Manchester estate and was declared bankrupt, FitzGerald’s existence was not troubled.

FitzGerald and Omar Khayyam

FitzGerald and Omar Khayyam. Patrick Pointon.
Contemporary Review 78 (1950), p. 99-102.

General article about FitzGerald, his life, his friends and his letters and the story of the Rubáiyát

Umar Khayyam and his age

Umar Khayyam and his age. Otto Rothfeld. Bombay, Taraporevala, 1922.

Summary:

Study of Omar Khayyám’s life and works, in correlation to the historical and spiritual development of Islam. With quatrains from Whinfield’s translation.

Contents:
Umar’s Life and Period
The Significance of Umar’s Ruba’iat

Neue Beiträge zur Chajjám-Forschung

Neue Beiträge zur Chajjám-Forschung. Christian H. Rempis. Leipzig, Harrassowitz, 1943.

Contents:
1. Sagen um Omar Chajjám.
2. Die Ältesten Auszuge aus Omar-e Chajjám.

Omar Khayyam and Fitzgerald

Omar Khayyam and Fitzgerald. A.J. Arberry. London: Iran Society, 1959. 19 p. (Iran Society occasional papers, no. 1)

Summary:
A paper read before the Iran Society on 17th February, 1959.