Skip to content
Wellsprings
Katib Celebi

Katib Celebi

1609 CE1657 CE · Yerevan (Erivan)

Katib Celebi (born Mustafa b. Abd Allah, Istanbul, 1609; died Istanbul, 1657) was an Ottoman bibliographer, historian, and geographer, also known by the honorific title Hajji Khalifa — "Hajji" for having performed the pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca, and "Khalifa" (clerk/deputy) from his bureaucratic rank. His father served the Ottoman court, reportedly as a cavalryman (sipahi) and secretary, and Katib Celebi himself entered the imperial financial bureaucracy as a clerk while still young.

For roughly a decade he accompanied the Ottoman army on its eastern campaigns against Safavid Iran, serving as an accounts clerk. Sources report him at Baghdad and Hamadan around 1629-1631, at Aleppo in 1633-34 — where he spent winter quarters combing the city's bookshops, the seed of his lifelong bibliographic passion — and from there on the pilgrimage to Mecca that earned his title. A later campaign took him toward Yerevan before he returned to the capital.

A relative's legacy in the mid-1640s freed him to devote himself fully to study and writing. His best-known work, Kashf al-zunun ("The Removal of Doubt"), is a vast Arabic bibliographical encyclopedia cataloguing thousands of Arabic, Persian, and Turkish books and their disciplines. His geography, Cihannuma ("World-Mirror"), is noted for drawing on European atlases. He died in Istanbul in 1657. Later scholarship often presents him as a bridge-figure between Islamic learning and emerging European science, a characterization debated in degree.

Life journeyclick any stop, or use ←/→Trace on the orchard map →

Stop 2 of 61629–1631Army Clerk On Eastern Campaigns

BaghdadIraq

What they did here

Served as an accounts clerk with the Ottoman army on campaigns against Safavid Iran. Sources place him at Baghdad, but accounts differ: some report a failed Baghdad expedition as early as 1625 (with the siege of Erzurum c.1626-27), others the Baghdad operations of c.1629-1631. Presence and exact dates are not uniformly reported.

About Baghdad

Major Mizrahi center; home of Yosef Hayyim (Ben Ish Chai).

In Baghdad at the same time

al-Najashi

See other sages who lived in Baghdad

Works

No works attributed in the corpus yet.