British historian
John Andrew Boyle (10 March 1916 – 19 November 1978), was a British historian, an accomplished linguist, and Oriental scholar.
Life and career
John was born at Worcester Park , Surrey , England , on 10 March 1916. His father, Andrew Boyle , was the first editor of Everyman's Encyclopaedia (1913–1914), he revised Roget's Thesaurus , and he translated Spinoza 's Ethics [ 1] into English and excerpts of The Pickwick Papers into Portuguese for a Brazilian paper.[ 2]
In 1933, John won a scholarship to Birmingham University where he graduated with first-class honours in German in 1936.[ 3] He later pursued the studies of Oriental languages at the universities of Berlin and Göttingen.[ 4]
In 1941 he became a sapper [ 2] (a soldier who performs a variety of military engineering duties). In 1942 he was assigned to the Foreign Office where he remained until 1950.
"In 1945 he married a colleague, Margaret Elizabeth Dunbar, who gave him three daughters, a life of great domestic happiness, and constant support in his work".[ 2]
He completed his doctoral dissertation under the guidance of Vladimir Minorsky . Boyle received his doctorate in 1947.[ 5]
He later became a professor of Persian at Manchester University .[ 6]
He produced a Persian dictionary and a grammar book of modern Persian .
He was the only European ever to receive the Iranian order of Sepas .
He died of heart failure on November 19, 1978, at the age of 62.[ 7]
Bibliography
Boyle was the author, translator, or editor of the following works:[ 8]
Books
Boyle, John Andrew (1949). A Practical Dictionary of the Persian Language . London: Luzac and Company. ISBN 9780875570570 . Persian words are romanized in this dictionary.
'Ala-ad-Din 'Ata-Malik Juvaini (1958). Boyle, John Andrew (ed.). Tarikh-i Jahangushay [The History of the World-Conqueror ]. Translated by John Andrew Boyle . Harvard University Press . ISBN 0674404009 . Juvaini stopped working on the original Persian-language text in 1260, leaving it in a disorganized and incomplete state. Mirza Muhammad Qazvini completed the best text and published it in 1937. The 1958 edition (Boyle's English translation) is in two volumes. A book review of the 1958 edition was published by The American Historical Review .[ 9] A revised edition of the Boyle translation was published in 1997.
Boyle, John Andrew (1966). Grammar of Modern Persian . Wiesbaden , Germany : Harrassowitz Verlag . ISBN 9783447006927 . (Porta linguarum orientalium; N.S., 9). A review of this book was published in a journal in 1967.[ 10]
Rashīd al-Dīn Faḍlallāh (1971). The Successors of Genghis Khan (PDF) . Translated by John Andrew Boyle . New York City : Columbia University Press . ISBN 0231033516 . Foreword by Ehsan Yarshater ; Preface by John Andrew Boyle. This is a translation of Volume 2 of Rashīd's Jami' al-Tawarikh ("Compendium of Chronicles").
Farīd al-Dīn ʻAṭṭār (1976). The 'Ilāhī-nāma [Book of God ]. UNESCO collection of representative works: Persian heritage series; [no. 29]. Translated by John Andrew Boyle . Manchester , England : Manchester University Press . ISBN 0719006635 . Foreword by Annemarie Schimmel . The 'Ilāhī-nāma is a 12th century Persian poem. An incompletely edited version is publicly accessible, here:
Boyle, John Andrew (1977). The Mongol world empire, 1206-1370 (snippet view) . Volume 58 of Variorum reprints (illustrated, reprint ed.). London: Variorum Collected Studies . ISBN 9780860780021 . OCLC 03891719 . Preface by Owen Lattimore .
Journal articles
Boyle, John Andrew (1952). "Ibn Al-Tiqtaqa and the Ta'rikh-I-Jahan-Gushay of Juvayni". Bulletin of the School of Oriental & African Studies . 15 . Cambridge University Press : 175–77.
Boyle, John Andrew (December 1954). "Iru and Maru in The Secret History of The Mongols" . Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies . 17 (3/4). Harvard–Yenching Institute : 403–410. doi :10.2307/2718320 . JSTOR 2718320 . Attempts to identify two city names that crop up in the description of Chingis’ Western campaigns. Webpage shows first page preview.
Barthold, Wilhelm ; Boyle, John Andrew (eds.). "D̲j̲uwaynī" . Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Online (EI-2 English) (2nd ed.). Leiden , Netherlands : Brill Publishers . D̲j̲uwaynī was a Persian bureaucrat and historian. "Ata-Malik Juvayni " is the spelling of D̲j̲uwaynī's name used in the title of his English Wikipedia article.
Boyle, John Andrew (June 1956). "On the Titles Given in Juvaini to Certain Mongolian Princes" (PDF) . Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies . 19 (1/2). Harvard–Yenching Institute : 146–154.
Boyle, John Andrew (May 1959). "The Mongols and Europe" . History Today . 9 (5). London: 336–43. Webpage shows short preview.
Boyle, John Andrew (Autumn 1961). "The Death of the Last 'Abbasid Caliph: A Contemporary Muslim Account" . Journal of Semitic Studies . 6 (2): 145–161. doi :10.1093/jss/6.2.145 . ISSN 0022-4480 . Webpage shows first page preview.
Boyle, John Andrew (Autumn 1963). "The Longer Introduction to the 'Zij-i-Ilkhani' of Nasir-ad-Din Tusi" . Journal of Semitic Studies . 8 (2): 244–254. doi :10.1093/jss/8.2.244 . ISSN 0022-4480 . Webpage shows first page preview.
Boyle, John Andrew (1975) [1968]. "Chapter 20(b): 'Umar Khayyam : Astronomer, Mathematician and Poet". In Frye, Richard Nelson (ed.). The Cambridge History of Iran . Vol. 4. pp. 658–664. ISBN 978-0-521-20093-6 . Volume 4 is entitled "From the Arab invasion to the Saljuqs"; a PDF of volume 4 is available here:
Boyle, John Andrew , ed. (1968). "Vol. 5: The Saljuq and Mongol periods" . The Cambridge History of Iran (1st ed.). Cambridge , United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press . ISBN 052106936X . OCLC 457145670 .
Boyle, John Andrew (1970). "Rashīd al-Dīn and the Franks" (PDF) . Central Asiatic Journal . 14 (1/3). Wiesbaden , Germany : Harrassowitz Verlag : 62–67. Webpage shows first page preview.
Boyle, John Andrew (1970). "The significance of the Jami' al-Tawarikh as a source on Mongol history" . Iran-Shinasi (journal) . 2 (1). Bethesda, Maryland : Keyan Foundation: 1–8. ISSN 1051-5364 . OCLC 963373520 . Makes some comparisons with the Yuan Shih (History of Yuan ). An 8-page print book was created from this same Iran-Shinasi journal article, having the same author and title, and published by the Keyan Foundation in 1970.
Boyle, John Andrew (1971). Sinor, Denis (ed.). "Ghazan's letter to Boniface VIII: where was it written?". Proceeding(s) of the Twenty-seventh International Congress of Orientalists, Ann Arbor, Michigan . Wiesbaden , Germany : Harrassowitz Verlag : 601–02. "Una lettera di Ghāzān Khan (anni di regno: 1295-1304), il mecenate di Rashīd al-Dīn, indirizzata a papa Bonifacio VIII (anni di pontificato: 1294-1303), datata 12 aprile 1302 e ora custodita nell’Archivio Segreto Vaticano, mostra gli stretti contatti tra l’Ilkhan e il Pontefice suo contemporaneo28." [A letter from Ghāzān Khan (reign: 1295-1304), the patron of Rashīd al-Dīn, addressed to Pope Boniface VIII (pontificate: 1294-1303), dated 12 April 1302 and now kept in the Vatican Secret Archives, shows the close contacts between the Ilkhan and his contemporary Pontiff. 28] (Quotation from "La strada per il Catai. Contatti tra Oriente e Occidente al tempo di Marco Polo" ISBN-10: 8862507739, ISBN-13: 9788862507738, Pages 213/216, Year 2019, Alvise Andreose, editor)
Boyle, John Andrew (1971). "Marco Polo and His Description of the World". History Today . 21 (11): 759–69.
Boyle, John Andrew (1971). "Rashīd al-Dīn: The First World Historian" . Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies . 9 . Taylor & Francis : 19–26. doi :10.2307/4300435 . ISSN 0578-6967 . JSTOR 4300435 . Webpage shows first page preview.
Boyle, John Andrew (1974). "Some Thoughts on the Sources for the Il-Khanid Period of Persian History". Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies . 12 . Taylor & Francis : 185–88. ISSN 0578-6967 .
Boyle, John Andrew (1974). "The Alexander Legend in Central Asia". Folklore (journal) . 85 (4). London: The Folklore Society : 217–28.
Boyle, John Andrew (1976). "The Il-Khans of Persia and the Princes of Europe" . Central Asiatic Journal . 20 (1/2). Wiesbaden , Germany : Harrassowitz Verlag : 25–40. JSTOR 41927857 . Webpage shows first page preview.
Boyle, John Andrew (April 1979). "Alexander and the Mongols" . The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland (2). Cambridge University Press : 123–136. JSTOR 25211053 .
- - - - - - - -
- "Mongolia before Genghis Khan: the native tradition", Journal of the Anglo-Mongolian Society 2:1 (1975), 60-69.
- "The last barbarian invaders: the impact of the Mongol conquest upon East and West," Memoirs and Proceedings 112 (1969-70), 5-19.
- "The burial place of the Great Khan Ogedei," in 11th PIAC (1970), 45-50.
- "Sites and localities connected with the history of the Mongol empire," in Olon Ulsyn, v. 1 (1972), 75-79.
- "The seasonal residences of the Great Khan Ogedei, Central Asiatic Journal 16 (1972), 125-131. Also in 12th PIAC (1974), 145-151.
- "Kirakos of Ganjak on the Mongols", Central Asiatic Journal 8 (1963), 199-214
- "The summer and winter camping grounds of the Kereit", Central Asiatic Journal 17 (1973), 108-110.
References
^ de Spinoza, Benedictus (1910). Spinoza's Ethics and "De Intellectus Emendatione" . Translated by Andrew Boyle. With an Introduction by George Santayana . See also the Preview of this book. On the 4th page (unnumbered) of said Preview, witness these words: "Spinoza's Ethics and 'De Intellectus Emendatione' Translated by A. Boyle with Introduction by Professor G. Santayana"
^ a b c Beckingham, C. F. (1979). "Obituary of Professor J. A. Boyle" . The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland (2). Cambridge University Press : 184–186. JSTOR 25211076 .
^ Melville, Charles P. (2023). "BIOGRAPHY OF JOHN ANTHONY BOYLE entitled 'J. A. Boyle (1916–78) Trustee (1971–78)' " . Edinburgh University Press . doi :10.1515/9781399516273-023 . This is chapter 21 of the book A Short History of the Gibb Memorial Trust and its Trustees . Webpage contains preview.
^ "BOYLE, JOHN ANDREW – Encyclopaedia Iranica" . Iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 19 October 2013 .
^ Avery, Peter William ; Mansfield, Peter John ; Grimwood-Jones, Diana (1979). "Obituary of Professor John Andrew Boyle" . British Society for Middle Eastern Studies. Bulletin . 6 (1). doi :10.1080/13530197908705263 .
^ Elwell-Sutton, L. P. (1 January 1979). "Obituary: John Andrew Boyle". Folklore . 90 (1): 105–106. doi :10.1080/0015587X.1979.9716129 . John Andrew Boyle was born in 1916 into a family of Scottish origin to whom cosmopolitan interests were almost second nature (his grandmother was Spanish, and his father, a well-known bibliophile and bookseller, was at one time ...
^ "Obituary of Dr. John A. Boyle" (PDF) . Hamdard Islamicus . 2 (2). Pakistan : 116. 1979. Obituary is on 4th page of the PDF file.
^ "Boyle, John Andrew - People and organisations - Trove" . Trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 19 October 2013 .
^ Young, T. Cuyler (1 January 1959). "Book review of The History of the World-Conqueror " . The American Historical Review . 64 (2): 350–351. Public page displays a small preview.
^ Windfuhr, Gernot Ludwig (October 1967). "Book review of 'Grammar of Modern Persian' by John Andrew Boyle" . Journal of the American Oriental Society . 87 (4). American Oriental Society : 627–630. doi :10.2307/597622 . JSTOR 597622 . Public page displays a small preview.
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