Background
De Slane was born in Belfast, the son of James McGuckin and Euphemia Hughes.
Orientalist Professor of Arabic
De Slane was born in Belfast, the son of James McGuckin and Euphemia Hughes.
After graduating from Trinity College, Dublin, in 1822 he moved to Paris and studied oriental languages under Silvestre de Sacy.
He became a French national on 31 December 1838. and held the post of the Principal Interpreter of Arabic of the French Army from 1 September 1846 until his retirement on 28 March 1872. He is known for publishing and translating a number of important medieval Arabic texts. In 1828 he was admitted to the Société Asiatique, a French learned society.
The society financed Joseph Toussaint Reinaud and de Slane to prepare a critical edition of the Arabic text of Abu"l-Fida"s Takwin al-Buldan.
This was published in 1840. Between 1843 and 1846 he was sent on a mission by the French Government to catalogue important documents in the libraries of Algiers and Constantine.
In 1846 he was appointed as Principal Interpreter for the French African army. He served as Professor of Arabic at the École de langues orientales in Paris and from 1849 also taught Turkish.
He was also commissioned by the Bibliothèque Nationale to catalogue their Arabic manuscripts.
She died seven years later on 24 September 1833. De Slane was awarded French citizenship on 31 December 1838. He died aged 76 in Passy, France on the 4 August 1878.
In France he was awarded following honours:
Chevalier de la Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur"Honneur, 24 September 1846
Officier de la Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur"Honneur, 26 December 1852
Officer of the Instruction Publique
Elected Member, 1862, of the Institut de France.
Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres. Société Asiatique]
Founding Member of the Association Historique Algérienne.