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Scottish orientalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elias John Wilkinson Gibb (3 June 1857 - 5 December 1901) was a Scottish orientalist.
Gibb was born 3 June 1857 in Glasgow, at 25 Newton Place, to Elias John Gibb and Jane Gilman. He was educated by Collier and matriculated from Glasgow University in 1873. Gibb acquired a knowledge of Arabic and Persian languages, and became especially interested in Turkish language and literature. Gibb married and moved to London in 1899. He made a few visits to Europe, but never visited the regions that he studied. He did, however, come to be viewed as a sympathetic and talented orientalist, with an excellent library, and was acquainted with Muslim poets and scholars. His series of volumes on Ottoman poetry is especially noteworthy.[1]
He died 5 December 1901, aged 44 at his residence in London from scarlet fever,[2] and was buried at Kensal Green Cemetery. His library was acquired by Cambridge University, the British Museum, and the British embassy at Constantinople.[1] His name is commemorated in the long running "Gibb Memorial Series" of publications, primarily devoted to the translation of Turkish, Persian, and Arabic texts, funded by the trust established by Jane Gibb (d. 1904), the author's mother.[3]
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