Pascual de Gayangos y Arce
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Pascual de Gayangos y Arce (June 21, 1809 – October 4, 1897), was a Spanish scholar and Orientalist.
Born in Seville, at the age of thirteen he was sent to school at Pont-le-Voy near Blois. Then, he began the study of Arabic in the École spéciale des Langues orientales of Paris under Silvestre de Sacy. After a visit to Britain, where he married, he obtained a post in the Spanish treasury, and was transferred to the foreign office as translator in 1833.
In 1837 he returned to Britain, wrote extensively in British periodicals, and translated Al Makkari's History of the Mohammedan Dynasties in Spain (1840-1843) for the Royal Asiatic Society. While in England, he made the acquaintance of George Ticknor, to whom he was very helpful. In 1843 he returned to Spain as professor of Arabic at the University of Madrid, a post he held until 1881, when he was made director of public instruction. He resigned on being elected senator for the district of Huelva.
His latter years were spent in cataloguing the Spanish manuscripts in the British Museum; he had previously continued Bergenroth's catalogue of the manuscripts relating to the negotiations between England and Spain in the Simancas archives. His best-known original work is his dissertation on Spanish romances of chivalry in Rivadeneyra's Biblioteca de autores españoles. He died in London.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.