THREE SECTIONS FROM AN EARLY HIJAZI QUR'AN FOLIO
THREE SECTIONS FROM AN EARLY HIJAZI QUR'AN FOLIO

ARABIA, SECOND HALF 7TH/EARLY 8TH CENTURY

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THREE SECTIONS FROM AN EARLY HIJAZI QUR'AN FOLIO
ARABIA, SECOND HALF 7TH/EARLY 8TH CENTURY
Comprising Qur'an VII, sura al-a'raf, vv.158-177, vv.72-93 and vv.185-8(4), Arabic manuscript on vellum, each of the three fragments with between 13 and 15ll. of sepia hijazi, one sura heading marked with a sepia panel containing lozenges filled with chequered motifs, the intersticies similarly decorated, the lozenges outlined with a wavy line and linked through two small circles, each folio fragmentary and with deep brown staining around the edges, one with some re-inking
Largest 6¾ x 5¾in. (17.2 x 14.6cm.)

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Lot Essay

These Qur'an leaves are rare survivals from the earliest period of Qur'an production. During the caliphate of Abu Bakr (633-34 AD), many Muslims who knew the Qur'an by heart were killed in the wars that followed the death of the Prophet. 'Umar feared that parts of the Qur'an would be lost and thus commissioned Zayd ibn Thabit, a former secretary of the Prophet, to collate the Qur'an. It was copied onto sheets and sent to 'Umar when he succeeded to the Caliphate and then to his daughter, Hasfa, one of the Prophet's widows. The second impetus came during the Caliphate of 'Uthman (644-56 AD) when the decision was taken to produce a definitive version of the Qur'an in order to prevent further disputes amongst believers. Again Zayd ibn Thabit was commissioned to supervise the task. This revised version was compared with Hafsa's copy. Several copies were made and sent to the main centres of Islam. It is not known whether the copies belonging to Hafsa survived. Even if they did not, they were not forgotten. The Kitab al-Masahif of Ibn Abi Dawud (d. 928 AD) discusses the various non-canonical readings of the Qur'an. It is accepted that the authorised version was produced around 650 AD.

The 10th century Baghdadi scholar, Ibn al-Nadim, in his bibliographic work, the Fihrist, gives an account of the early forms of the Arabic script. He writes that 'for the alifs of the scripts of Makkah and al-Madinah, there is a turning of the hand to the right and lengthening of the strokes, one form having a slight slant' (quoted in François Déroche, The Abbasid Tradition, The Nasser D. Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, London, 1992, p.27). It is on the basis of this description that in the 19th century Michele Amari identified examples of the Meccan script, which was re-termed by Nabia Abbott about a century later with the name hijazi (Déroche, op.cit., p.27). As well as the characteristic alifs that Ibn al-Nadim describes, other distinctive features include the use of a vertical rather than a horizontal format of folio which became the norm in kufic Qur'an pages from the early Abbasid period. Déroche writes that in the small body of hijazi folios known stylistic inconsistencies are known, in orthography, line spacing and style. Whether this is a result of several scribes working on the same codex, or whether it demonstrates a prioritization of faithfully reproducing the text rather than a concern with aesthetics is unclear.

The very simple geometric ornament serves as an elegant separation marker between two suras. The chevron design on hatched ground is similar to a further hejazi folio dated to the 1st century of the Islam found in the Dar al-Makhtutat al-Yamaniyyah collection in San'a (inv. 00-29.1; illustrated in Masahif Sana'a, exhibition catalogue, Kuwait, 1985, p. 58). Another hijazi folio of a comparable period recently sold in these Rooms, 7 April 2011, lot 10. Palimpsest examples have sold in these Rooms, 1 May 2001, lot 12 and 8 April 2008, lot 20.

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