Katib Celebi
1609 CE–1657 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.
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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
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.