Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Oleg Grabar" in Turkish language version.
In addition to two years (1953-54 and 1960-61) at the American School of Oriental research in Jerusalem, Archaeological expeditions and study trips to the Near East in 1955 (Spain), 1956 (Arab countries and Turkey), 1957 (Turkey), 1959 (Israel), 1961 (Iran and Egypt), 1963 (Syria), 1964 (Syria), 1966 (Syria and Jordan),1968 (Syria), 1969 (Syria, Egypt, Turkey), 1970 (Syria, Iran), 1971 (Syria, Spain), 1972 (Syria, Iran, Afghanistan, Israel, Soviet Central Asia), 1973 (Iran), 1974 (Jordan), 1975 and 1977 (Iran), 1980 (Egypt), 1978 (Turkey), 1979 (Indonesia), 1980 (Jordan), 1980 (Pakistan), 1980 (Saudi Arabia), 1981 (China), 1982 (Senegal, Tunisia), 1983 (Turkey, Pakistan), 1984 (India, Egypt), 1985 (Bangladesh, Egypt), 1986 (Morocco, Spain, Central Asia), 1987 (India), 1988 (Egypt, Morocco), 1989 (Tanzania, Kenya), 1990 (Bulgaria, Kuwait), 1991 (Morocco), 1992 (Russia), 1993 (Syria, Jordan, Israel), 1994 (Morocco), 1995 (Syria), 1996 (Syria, Jordan, Israel), 1997 (Jordan, Syria, Israel), 1998 (China, Central Asian republics), 2000 (Israel), 2001 (India and Turkey), 2002 (Jordan), 2006 (Israel, Turkey, Lebanon, Syria), and 2007 (Turkey)[ölü/kırık bağlantı]
Oleg Grabar’s research has had a profound and far-reaching influence on the study of Islamic art and architecture. His extensive archaeological expeditions and research trips cover the vast expanse of the Islamic world in Africa, the Middle East, and Muslim Asia.
Oleg Grabar’s research has had a profound and far-reaching influence on the study of Islamic art and architecture. His extensive archaeological expeditions and research trips cover the vast expanse of the Islamic world in Africa, the Middle East, and Muslim Asia.