Hiob Ludolf and Johann Michael Wansleben. Oriental Studies, Politics, and History between Gotha and Africa, 1650-1700

Authors

  • Daniel Haas Doctoral Candidate, University of Hamburg; Herzog Ernst Fellow, University of Erfurt

Abstract

The work under review promises to contribute to our understanding of two individuals who were of great importance for early modern European interest in Ethiopia: Hiob Ludolf (1624-1704) and Johann Michael Wansleben (1635-1679). The former is known as an “armchair scholar” who meticulously collected knowledge about a wide range of matters relating to Ethiopia, while the latter is known as a travelling “manuscript hunter”[1] who never actually visited the country. However, only three of the total twenty-two chapters focus on Wansleben. From the perspective of Ethiopian studies, this is regrettable, as the significance of Wansleben for Ethiopic studies has been highlighted, for example, by Alessandro Bausi.[2] Nevertheless, this does not diminish the overall high quality of the individual contributions or the volume as a whole – after all, editors of academic conference proceedings are dependent on the range of topics submitted by the scholarly community.

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Published

2026-01-09

Issue

Section

Book Reviews