Summary of the story
The story tells of a poor young gangster named Aladdin. He lived in a country named "Arabia" in the story (see the story source and background of Aladdin), and was later invited by a magician from the Maghreb. He pretended to be his uncle and picked up a magic lamp in a trapped cave.
The magician was about to make further use of Aladdin when Aladdin found him trapped in a cave. Fortunately, Aladdin also had a magic ring lent to him by a magician. Aladdin rubbed his hands in despair, just happened to rub the ring, summoned the spirit in the ring, and finally ordered the spirit to take himself home with a lamp and successfully escaped from the cave.
Then one day, his mother saw that the oil lamp was worn out and dusty, and wanted to clean it. When she rubbed it, she suddenly summoned a more powerful magic lamp spirit from the inside, waiting for the master's command at any time. With the help of the magic lamp, Aladdin became rich and powerful, and finally married Princess Badroulbadour. The genie of the lamp also built a magnificent palace for Aladdin, even more magnificent than the palace in Sudan.
When the magician heard that Aladdin escaped from the cave and married the princess with the magic lamp, he traced it to the area where Aladdin and his wife lived. Taking advantage of the weakness that the princess didn't know the magic power of the magic lamp, he cheated the magic lamp away with the trick of "trading in the old for the new". When the magician got the magic lamp, he immediately ordered the lamp spirit to move Aladdin's palace to the Maghreb.
Fortunately, Aladdin still has the previous Ring, so he can still use the Ring with less power. Although the nazgul can't directly crack the magic of the lamp spirit, he can still take Aladdin to the Maghreb to help him defeat the magician, recapture the magic lamp and save his beloved wife.
Extended data:
The source and background of the story
The English pantomime cartoon "New Crown for Old Crown" in the 0/9th century AD/KLOC was adapted from Aladdin's story. Benjamin Disraeli, who plays Abanazar, gives the crown representing Indian kingship to Queen Victoria in exchange for the old crown.
Aladdin's story was compiled into The Arabian Nights by French translator Antoine Garland. An Arab storyteller from Aleppo, Syria told the story of Aladdin, which Garang absorbed and polished after listening.
Garang's diary (1March 25th, 709) records that he met a Maronite named Juhenna Deiab, who was introduced to Paris by the famous French traveler paul lukas from Aleppo. Garang's diary also said that his translation of Aladdin was completed at 1709_ 10, arranged in the ninth and tenth volumes of Arabian Nights, and published at 17 10.
John payne's Aladdin and the Magic Lamp and Other Stories was published in London in 190 1. In the book, Garang's contact with people he called Hannah was described in detail, and it was mentioned that there were two Arabic manuscripts of Aladdin's story (including two other "inserted" stories) in the French National Library.
One of the manuscripts is/kloc-a messy manuscript in Syria in the late 8th century. More interestingly, another manuscript belongs to armand Pierre Cushing, an oriental scholar, and was completed in 1703 Baghdad. The French National Library purchased this manuscript at the end of 19.