Kâtip Çelebi
| Kâtip Çelebi | |
|---|---|
| Personal life | |
| Born | Muṣṭafa ibn 'Abd Allāh February 1609 | 
| Died | September 26, 1657 (aged 48) Istanbul, Ottoman Empire | 
| Nationality | Ottoman | 
| Era | Ottoman era | 
| Main interest(s) | History of Civilisation, geography, cartography, science, medicine, Fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence), Kalam (Islamic theology), Philosophy (particularly Illuminationism), Tafsir, Sufism | 
| Notable work(s) | Kaşf az-Zunūn ‘an 'asāmī ‘l-Kutub wa-l’fanūn (كشف الظنون عن أسامي الكتب والفنون) | 
| Known for | Ottoman universal (bibliographic-biographic-historical-geographic-scientific) encyclopedias. | 
| Other names | Haji Kalfa, Hacı Halife | 
| Occupation | Bureaucrat, Historian, Muslim Scholar | 
| Religious life | |
| Religion | Islam | 
| Denomination | Sunni | 
| Jurisprudence | Hanafi | 
| Creed | Sunni Kalam - Ishraqi Philosophical Syncretism | 
| Muslim leader | |
| Influenced by | |
Kâtip Çelebi (كاتب جلبي) or Ḥājjī Khalīfa (حاجي خليفة) (1017 AH/1609 AD – 1068 AH/1657 AD) was a Turkish polymath and author of the 17th-century Ottoman Empire. He compiled a vast universal bibliographic encyclopaedia of books and sciences, the Kaşf az-Zunūn, and wrote many treatises and essays. “A deliberate and impartial historian… of extensive learning”, Franz Babinger hailed him "the greatest encyclopaedist among the Ottomans."
Writing with equal facility in Alsina-i Thalātha—the three languages of Ottoman imperial administration, Arabic, Turkish and Persian – principally in Arabic and then in Turkish, his native tongue— he also collaborated on translations from French and Latin. The German orientalist Gustav Flügel published Kaşf az-Zunūn in the original Arabic with parallel Latin translation, entitled Lexicon Bibliographicum et Encyclopaedicum (7 vols.) The orientalist Barthélemy d'Herbelot produced a French edition of the Kaşf az-Zunūn principally with additional material, in the great compendium, Bibliothèque Orientale.