A very early fragmentay Qur'an, written in kufic script, dated to the eighth or ninth century. Contains notes and diacritical marks added by a later hand.
| İsim | A very early fragmentay Qur'an, written in kufic script, dated to the eighth or ninth century. Contains notes and diacritical marks added by a later hand. |
|---|---|
| Konu | BR Christianity | BP Islam. Bahaism. Theosophy, etc | DS Asia |
| Tür | kitap |
| Dil | Arapça |
| Dijital | Evet |
| Yazma | Evet |
| Kütüphane: | University of Birmingham Institutional Research Archive |
| Kayıt Numarası | 145 |
| Lokasyon | Library Services, Special Collections, ITSEE |
| Tarih | 05 Jul 2009 20:22 |
| Notlar | The Virtual Manuscript Room is no longer available. For enquiries into this manuscript please contact the Cadbury Research Library on [email protected]. Details about ordering images and reproduction rights can be found here https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/facilities/cadbury/Imaging-services/index.aspx |
| Örnek Metin | A very early fragmentay Qur'an, written in kufic script, dated to the eighth or ninth century. Contains notes and diacritical marks added by a later hand.This manuscript is contained within the The Mingana Collection of Middle Eastern Manuscripts, held at the Department of Special Collections, University of Birmingham. This collection was founded in Birmingham between 1925 and 1929 by Edward Cadbury, the Chairman of Council of Woodbrooke College and a founding member of the Selly Oak Colleges, who sponsored and financed the Collection, and housed it in the Selly Oak Colleges Library. He named the Collection after its collector, Alphonse Mingana. The Arabic manuscripts are the third largest collection in the UK. The content is mostly religious, mainly Islamic and early Near Eastern Christian. |
| Destekleyenler | University of Birmingham, JISC |
| Kimlik Kodu | 145 |
| Kaynak | Virtual Manuscript Room |