Lot Essay
Although the scribe of this manuscript is not recorded elsewhere, in the colopon he is referred to as 'al-maliki al-mu'ayyadi', which may indicate that he was a slave of Sultan al-Mu'ayyad Shaykh (r.1412-21). This seems to have been al-Qasimi's personal copy, and at the back of the manuscript he records the births of his three sons, Ahmad in AH 825⁄1422 AD, Ibrahim in AH 827⁄1424 AD, and 'Abd al-Rahman in AH 831⁄1428 AD.
The opening folio describes the reading history of the text in Egypt, describing how Qaymas studied the text under a certain Hafiz Shebab al-Din Abu Bakr Ahmad ibn Ahmad al-Hakkari, tracing the transmission back to a reading in Egypt in Shawwal AH 668/May-June 1270 AD, and further back to Abu'l Fadl.
For a note on the provenance of this manuscript, see lot 107.
The opening folio describes the reading history of the text in Egypt, describing how Qaymas studied the text under a certain Hafiz Shebab al-Din Abu Bakr Ahmad ibn Ahmad al-Hakkari, tracing the transmission back to a reading in Egypt in Shawwal AH 668/May-June 1270 AD, and further back to Abu'l Fadl.
For a note on the provenance of this manuscript, see lot 107.