| PREVIOUS | NEXT | NEW SEARCH |
Selections of Arabic, Persian, and Ottoman Calligraphy
|
Qur'anic verses
AUTHOR/CREATOR
Calligrapher: unknown
CREATED/PUBLISHED
14th century
NOTES
Dimensions of Written Surface: 16.5 (w) x 29 (h) cm
Script: Tawqi' and Persian naskh
This Qur'anic fragment includes verses 85-88 of the 3rd chapter of the Qur'an entitled Al 'Imran (The Family of 'Imran). The continuation of these verses appears on the fragment's verso (1-89-154.172 V). In this particular surah, all people are invited to accept Islam, while Muslims in particular are encouraged to seek friendship and security within their communities. Verse 86 asks the question:
And how will God guide those who reject faith / After they accepted it and bore witness / That the Messenger was true / And that clear signs had come to them? / God does not guide unjust people.
Between each horizontal line of Arabic text appear diagonal word-by-word translations into Persian. Unlike similar interlinear Qur'ans that tend to include a Persian translation in red ink (James 1992a: 56-7, cat. no. 10), this particular fragment makes no color differentiation between the Arabic original and its Persian rendition immediately below.
The verses on the verso continue those found on the fragment's recto. Verse 89, which also appears cut out and preserved on another calligraphic panel in the Library of Congress (1-88-154.34, lower horizontal) encourages seeking forgiveness from God:
Unless they repent thereafter and mend their conduct, / for God is Forgiving and Merciful.
This fragment follows the pattern set by Persian Qur'ans produced during the Ilkhanid period (see 1-84-154.27c R & V). It thus can be suggested that this Qur'an dates from the 14th century and was probably made in Iran. Unlike this fragment, later interlinear Persian Qur'ans tend to translate the Arabic text continuously (not word-by-word) in a horizontal (not diagonal) written space (see 1-85-154.67 R & V).
In this fragment, the script used for the Arabic text is tawqi' while the Persian translations are written in a Persian naskh. Tawqi' is similar to thuluth but smaller and with systematic assimilations between letters ordinarily not joined. For example, line four (verse 90) includes the word al-dalun ("those who have gone astray") with the alif and lam (a and l) attached by a playful upturned loop.
In the middle of the right margin appears a section (juz') marker made of a gold central flower, a blue concentric circle, and a circle of radiating gold lines. In the upper left margin appears a (juz') marker shaped like a hanging lamp. It contains a palmette motif outlined in dark brown ink on a gold ground. The verse markers in the text consist of gold flowers with red dots between each petal. All diacritical marks are executed in black ink except for the sukun (showing lack of a vowel), which sometimes appears as a small hollow red circle.
SUBJECT
Tawqi'
Illuminated Islamic manuscripts
Arabic calligraphy
Islamic manuscripts
Arabic script calligraphy
Persian naskh
Islamic calligraphy
MEDIUM
22 (w) x 33.9 (h) cm
CALL NUMBER
1-89-154.172
REPOSITORY
Library of Congress, African and Middle Eastern Division, Washington, D.C. 20540
DIGITAL ID
ascs 223
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.amed/ascs.223
| PREVIOUS | NEXT | NEW SEARCH |