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Art. XIX.—Extract from a letter addressed by Professor Westergaard to the Rev. Dr. Wilson, in the year 1843, relative to the Gabrs in Persia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2011

Extract

I am to-day at Ser Yazd, eight farsakhs south of Yazd, on my road to Kennan…. As I suppose the Gabrs interest you most, I will begin my rambling letter with them. I heard at Shiraz, where there are occasionally a few Gabr shopkeepers, that in Kermán there are only a few illiterate Gabrs; so when I at Darebjard heard that the road lies for six days through a complete desert, without any habitation, or the least cultivation, I determined to go straight to Yazd, which would be passing over ground that had been travelled by few or no Europeans before. I found at least on my map many places laid down wrong, even Yazd; and I am now on the road to Kermán, only on account of my having heard at Yazd, that though there are there only one hundred houses, (or about four or five hundred Gabrs), still they have from olden time a good many books, far more than there are in Yazd; whether it be true or not, I shall tell you by and bye.

Type
Original Communications
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1846

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References

1 Query: Would Zoroaster, or the Golden Star, as the Greek translator has his name, be nothing but a mythological or allegorical person,—a star in latter times drawn down from Heaven, and made man, like the Grecian and Scandinavian gods? Would he be Mercury?