Non-figurative ornaments in early Mus'hafs The following manuscripts are listed in a chronological order, however the date estimates of a codex may be concurrent or similar to those of other manuscripts due to the wide range of date estimates offered by
radiocarbon dating: The
Birmingham Quran manuscript is a
parchment on which two leaves of an
early Quranic manuscript are written. In 2015 the manuscript, which is held by the
University of Birmingham, was
radiocarbon dated to between 568 and 645
CE (in the Islamic calendar, between 56
BH and 25
AH). It is part of the
Mingana Collection of Middle Eastern manuscripts, held by the university's
Cadbury Research Library. It was on display at the University of Birmingham in 2015 and then at
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery until 5 August 2016. The Cadbury Research Library has carried out
multispectral analysis of the manuscript and
XRF analysis of the inks. There are no
diacritical marks to indicate short vowels, but consonants are occasionally differentiated with oblique dashes. The text is laid out in the format that was to become standard for complete Quran manuscripts, with chapter divisions indicated by a decorated line in the form of basic geometric shapes painted with
red lead, an ancient pigment used from 300 BCE onwards, such motifs vary in color and shapes in this manuscript, in one folio, three wavy threads of orange-red colour separated by dots run parallel over the entire span of the page, In the outer margin, the three lines are interlaced to draw a highly stylized
palm leaf, in another folio, the separator is covered with blackheads. The verse endings are indicated by intertextual clustered dots. In the
codex Parisino-petropolitanus, one of the
oldest extant manuscripts of the
Quran. With its largest part of the fragmentary manuscript being held at the
Bibliothèque nationale de France,
Paris, as BnF Arabe 328(ab), with 70
folia. And another 46 folia are kept in the
National Library of Russia in
Saint-Petersburg. Two additional folia have been preserved, one kept in the
Vatican Library (
Vat. Ar. 1605/1) and the other in the
Khalili Collections in London (KFQ 60), attributed to the 7th century, six oval dots ranked in three pairs also punctuate the verses. Every fifth verse is marked by a red
alif surrounded by dots (rather than hollow circles like in Codex B. L. Or. 2165). The
surahs are separated by a space. In the Codex B. L. Or. 2165, a Qur'ānic manuscript from the 1st century Hijra, with its fragments in the
British Library,
London (United Kingdom);
Bibliothèque Nationale,
Paris (France) and in
Dār al–Athar al–Islāmiyyah,
Kuwait city (Kuwait). Six oval dots ranked in three pairs punctuate the verses. Every tenth verse is marked by a red hollow circle surrounded by dots. Simple ornaments of the borders and openings of the surahs in the pages of the 1st century
hijra Qur'ans are also found
. A notable example is the
TIEM ŞE 321 Mus'haf (This manuscript belongs to the Şam Evrakı ‘Papers of Syria’ collection, at the
Turkish and Islamic arts Museum). The surah headings of this codex are illuminated but do not represent the text found in the pages. The decorations of this Qur'an resembles those of the Umayyad mosaics of the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem. It's dated to the period after 72 AH / 691–692 CE or more probably during the last quarter of the 1st (early 8th) century
hijra. The “Umayyad Codex of Fusṭāṭ” (Codex Marcel 13) of the 1st century of hijra, is a manuscript that may have been one of the mus'hafs that were sent by
al-Hajjaj to many important cities including
Fusṭāṭ that contained reformed orthography, it is written in the
Kufic or perhaps late
ḥijāzī script. This copy was written with 25 lines to the page on folios in vertical format. The average height of the line is about 11.5 mm. With homogenous quires with five bifolios. The surah headings of this codex are illuminated but irregularly. Another manuscript housed in the
Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum is the "Qur'an of 'Uthman", due to its
colophon that attributes the scribal work of the mus'haf to
'Uthman bin' Affan, the third
Rashidun caliph, however, the style of script and decorations seems to go against this claim. Therefore, it is more likely that this manuscript dates back to the second half of 1st century or first half of 2nd century
hijra. The codex was restored by
Dāwūd bin ʿAlī al-Kaylānī on 3 December 1437 CE. The manuscript is written on parchment made out of
gazelle skin. While the folios from the restoration of 1437 CE are made out of paper. Every tenth ayah is marked with a circular gold medallion surrounded by blue, green, and red dots. The
Topkapı Mushaf, also called “Qur'ān Of ʿUthmān” (
Topkapi Museum,
Istanbul,
Turkey), From 1st / 2nd Century Hijra, is traditionally attributed to Uthman Ibn Affan. But the paleographic assessment indicates that the Topkapi manuscript comes closest to those writings that date back to the 8th century. Its illuminations are similar to those found in the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, the Umayyad Mosque in
Damascus and other
Umayyad monuments. Its surahs are separated by ornamented horizontal bands. The manuscript also contains large circular rosettes, these are found after every 5 and 10
Ayahs, while rectangular shaped signs are found after every 100 verses and signs of similar shape following every 200 verses in some surahs. As for the
“Qur'ān Of ʿUthmān” (also known as the Uthman Quran, Samarkand codex, Samarkand manuscript and Tashkent Quran) at Tashkent (
Samarkand),
Uzbekistan, based on
orthographic and
palaeographic studies, it probably dates from the 8th or 9th century. Radio-carbon dating shows a 95.4% probability of a date between 775 and 995. Its verse endings are marked by small panels of diagonals lines; the tenth verse is marked with a square medallion illuminated in blue, green, red and
manganese with a
stellar design.
Emergence of Arabic miniatures The only surviving Arabic illuminated manuscript dating from before the 11th century is the "Great Umayyad Qur'an". Found in
the Great Mosque in Sana'a, ornamentation of this manuscript incorporated motifs that are very similar to those used to decorate the
Dome of the Rock, the
Great Mosque of Damascus and the
desert castles of Umayyads. Because of this the time of production of this Qur'an has been narrowed to between 691 and 743 CE. It is the only lavishly illuminated Qur'an codex extant that can be securely placed in the Umayyad period. It's currently housed in the
Dar al-Makhtutat. The manuscript includes full illustrations that take up entire pages, and also
sūrah dividers and ornamental borders. One of the miniatures representing
Jannah is based on a
cosmogram, and, on the reverse, a
mosque.
Rise The first illustrated Arabic manuscript still preserved from the 11th century is
Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi's
Book of Fixed Stars, dated from around 1009 (
Bodleian Library, Marsh144). This
astronomy work was copied by the author's son himself, from models that already existed in the previous century. It is then necessary to wait until the end of the twelfth century to find a boom in miniatures in the
Arab world. == Development ==