He listens to God, Rahman, Rahim. Praise be to God, my Lord, for the sake of...

Title He listens to God, Rahman, Rahim. Praise be to God, my Lord, for the sake of...
Author ibn al-Haggi Ahmad-Hazindar zade, Ash-Shaykh Ibrahim
Publication Date: 1792
Type kitap
Language Arabic
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Library: Phaidra - Univerzitet u Beogradu
Record ID o-1262
Date 2012-03-22 09:03:39
Sample Text From the Phoenician alphabet arose a great number of new writing systems, including the Greek alphabet and the Aramaic, widely used abjad. Modern Western alphabets, such as Latin and Cyrillic, originated from Greek, while Aramaic gave rise to a large number of modern abjads and abugids in Asia. The Aramaic script spread throughout Asia and reached as far as India, and from it arose Brahmi, the abugida, the forerunner of most modern Indian and Southeast Asian scripts. In the Middle East, the Jewish and Nabataean Abjad arose from Aramaic, which retained numerous forms of Aramaic letters. The Syriac script was a cursive variant of Aramaic. It is not entirely clear whether the Arabic Abjad came from Nabataean or Syriac. Year of publication: 1792/93.
Lisans Ovo delo je licencirano pod uslovima licenceCreative Commons CC BY 2.0 AT - Creative Commons Autorstvo 2.0 Austria License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/at/legalcode
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He listens to God, Rahman, Rahim. Praise be to God, my Lord, for the sake of...

Author ibn al-Haggi Ahmad-Hazindar zade, Ash-Shaykh Ibrahim
Publication Date 1792
Type kitap
Language Arabic
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Library Phaidra - Univerzitet u Beogradu
Record ID o-1262
Date 2012-03-22 09:03:39
Sample Text From the Phoenician alphabet arose a great number of new writing systems, including the Greek alphabet and the Aramaic, widely used abjad. Modern Western alphabets, such as Latin and Cyrillic, originated from Greek, while Aramaic gave rise to a large number of modern abjads and abugids in Asia. The Aramaic script spread throughout Asia and reached as far as India, and from it arose Brahmi, the abugida, the forerunner of most modern Indian and Southeast Asian scripts. In the Middle East, the Jewish and Nabataean Abjad arose from Aramaic, which retained numerous forms of Aramaic letters. The Syriac script was a cursive variant of Aramaic. It is not entirely clear whether the Arabic Abjad came from Nabataean or Syriac. Year of publication: 1792/93.
Lisans Ovo delo je licencirano pod uslovima licenceCreative Commons CC BY 2.0 AT - Creative Commons Autorstvo 2.0 Austria License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/at/legalcode
Phaidra - Univerzitet u Beogradu - Ottoman library catalog search
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