Table of Contents

  • JONES, WILLIAM

    Michael J. Franklin

    , Sir (1746-1794), orientalist and judge, noted for his enduring commitment to a syncretic East-West synthesis and unshakeable belief in cultural pluralism.

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  • JONG

    David J. Roxburgh

    literary miscellany of Persian prose and poetry, and album of pictures and illustrations. Inventiveness in the production of jongs peaked in Persia in the 1400s and continued into the 1500s, when techniques such as découpage, gold-sprinkled, stenciled, and/or painted borders, and  colored inks or outline for calligraphy were introduced.

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  • JONG-E ESFAHĀN

    Jalil Doostkhah

    (Isfahan anthology), an independent, avant-garde literary periodical, established in Isfahan in 1965 by a circle of literary men, irregularly producing 11 issues from 1965 to 1973. 

  • JORBĀDAQĀN

    cross-reference

    See GOLPĀYAGĀN.

  • JORBĀDAQĀNI, ABU’L-ŠARAF

    cross-reference

    See ABU’L-ŠARAF JORBĀDAQĀNI.

  • JORDAN, SAMUEL MARTIN

    Michael Zirinsky

    (known in Iran as Dr. Jordan; 1871-1952), teacher, Presbyterian minister, missionary, founder and president of the American College of Tehran (later Alborz College).

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  • JORJĀN

    cross-reference

    See GORGĀN.

  • JORJĀNI, ZAYN-AL-DIN ABU’L-ḤASAN ʿALI

    Josef van Ess

    B. MOḤAMMAD B. ʿALI AL-ḤOSAYNI (1340-1413), prolific author and scholar of the early Timurid period.

  • JORJĀNI, ZAYN-AL-DIN ESMĀʿIL

    Hušang Aʿlam

    , ZAYN-AL-DIN ESMĀʿIL b. Ḥasan, better known as Sayyed Esmāʿil Jorjāni (b. Gorgān, 1043-44?; d. Marv, 1136-37), physician who served two Khwarazmshahs (Ḵᵛārazmšāhs), Qo

  • JOSEPH

    Asghar Dadbeh, Annabel Keeler, Chad Kia

    (Ar. Yusof), son of the biblical patriarch Jacob. The story of Joseph has always been a source of attractive subject matters for the exegetists of the Qurʾān, poets, miniaturists, and popular tales.