Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Au Bouquiniste Oriental

ANSAmed

Already in the '50s, Egyptologists like Jean Yoyotte, Serge Sauneron, and Sergio Donadoni were going to the old Sharia bookstore Kasrl El-Nil, just a few steps away from the Egyptian museum in Cairo.

Today the top international names in Egyptology and others continue to visit the narrow and overflowing rooms of the Orientaliste. It is not a rare occurrence to run into Edda Bresciani, an Italian Egyptologist, who participated in digs in Medinet Madi, in Fayoum, intent on digging up the image of an impossible-to-find protome of a lion, or Luisa Bongrani, the first scholar in the world to found a professorship in Nubian Antiquities.

'Au Bouquiniste Oriental' was the name given in 1936 by Feldman, an Egyptian Jew, to this place, which was considered by researchers and collectors to be a precious mine of rare or untracable documents: reports from archaeological digs, written accounts and maps about tomb and temple findings in Egypt dating back to the early 1900s, but also volumes on Coptic, medieval and modern Egypt, which were accumulated slowly but surely by the three owners of the bookstore.

Over 50,000 volumes in all, only partly catalogued and scattered everywhere on bookshelves, in the basement storage room, the second floor; thousands of prints and engravings done by English, German, and French orientalists (including the famed David Roberts) who in the 19th century travelled throughout Egypt, Nubia, Palestine, Jordan, and Lebanon. Hundreds of maps, some of which date back to halfway through the 16th century, and dozens and dozens of old cards and photographs dating back to the early 1900s, stacked in random piles.


See the above page for the full story.

1 comment:

Vincent said...

I love this bookshop! It is truly amazing. Wall to wall books, dusty old books, you pull one out and there is a whole row of books behind that one. I asked for a particular old rare book on the Great Pyramid that I'd been searching for hoping that if anyone had it this shop would. The attendant checked the computer and then called a guy out from the back who, just like in an old movie, pulled a bookcase and it swung out on a hinge and behind was hidden a staircase going down into the basement, which was full of more old books. He returned with the book in hand.

I also found a great old copy of Flinders Petrie's 'Religion and Conscience in Ancient Egypt'.

I have since ordered books directly from here in Australia and and can recommend anyone looking for rare old books.