Cambridge Catalogue  
  • Your account
  • View basket
  • Help
Home > Catalogue > The Works of Sir William Jones
The Works of Sir William Jones

Details

  • 8 b/w illus.
  • Page extent: 466 pages
  • Size: 216 x 140 mm
  • Weight: 0.59 kg
Add to basket

Paperback

 (ISBN-13: 9781108055727)

  • Published March 2013

Manufactured on demand: supplied direct from the printer

US $43.00
Singapore price US $46.01 (inclusive of GST)

A renowned Enlightenment polymath, Sir William Jones (1746–94) was a lawyer, translator and poet who wrote authoritatively on politics, comparative linguistics and oriental literature. Known initially for his Persian translations and political radicalism, Jones became further celebrated for his study and translation of ancient Sanskrit texts following his appointment to the supreme court in Calcutta in 1783. He spent the next eleven years introducing Europe to the mysticism and rationality of Hinduism through works such as his nine 'Hymns' to Hindu deities and his translation of the Sanskrit classic Sacontalá, influencing Romantic writers from William Blake to August Wilhelm Schlegel. Volume 5 of his thirteen-volume works, published in 1807, contains Jones' researches into Indian botany - including the comparative 'Botanical Observations on Select Indian Plants' - coupled with his groundbreaking Grammar of the Persian Language (1771), the work which established Jones as one of the eighteenth century's greatest orientalists.

Contents

1. The design of the treatise on the plants of India; 2. On the spikenard of the ancients; 3. Additional remarks on the spikenard of the ancients; 4. Botanical observations on the spikenard of the ancients; 5. On the fruit of the mellori; 6. A catalogue of Indian plants; 7. Botanical observations on select Indian plants; 8. A Grammar of the Persian Language.

printer iconPrinter friendly version AddThis