James Heyworth-Dunne

James Heyworth-Dunne
Born1902
Died1974 (aged 71–72)
Gloucester, England
Academic background
InfluencesH. A. R. Gibb and Ignatius Krachkovsky
Academic work
InstitutionsSOAS, University of London
Middle East Institute
Main interestsArabic literature

James Heyworth-Dunne (1904–1974) was a British orientalist. He studied Arabic literature under Sir H. A. R. Gibb in London in 1932,[1] and became senior reader in Arabic at SOAS, University of London from 1928-1948. Under Gibb's direction he published the edited Arabic texts from the Kitāb al-Awrāķ of Abū Bakr Muḥammad b. Yaḥyā aṣ-Ṣūlī; Kitāb al-Awrāķ : [kism akhbar ash-shuʻara] section on contemporary poets (1934): Akhbār al-Rāḍī wal-Muttaķī (1935): Ash'ār Awlād al-Khulafā’ wa Akhbārum (1936) He associated with Ignatius Krachkovsky, who had written on aṣ-Ṣūlī.[2] He later moved to the Middle East Institute in Washington, D.C. and then lived in Egypt, where he improved Egyptian vernacular. He was multilingual in Arabic, Turkish, Persian and Urdu, collecting, editing and publishing many books about the Islamic world.