Manuscript “Ayat al-Kursi”
For calligrapher and artist / Suhail Salah
The manuscript “Ayat al-Kursi” is published exclusively by the Orient Center for Research and Culture.
See more manuscripts :
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Manuscript “And say, Lord, have mercy on them as they raised me young”
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Manuscript “And the parents are benevolent”
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Manuscript “With hardship comes ease, with hardship is ease”
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Manuscript “Al-Rahman Alam Al-Qur’an”
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Manuscript “Remember the grace of God upon you”
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Manuscript “Praise be to Allah, Lord of the Worlds”
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Manuscript “Lord make it easy for me”
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Manuscript “Say that my prayer, my asceticism and my life are for God, Lord of the Worlds”
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“But the believers are brothers” manuscript
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Manuscript “May God help those who support Him”
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Manuscript “God is the King of the Heavens and the Earth”
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Manuscript “Be patient with beautiful patience”.
Islamic Manuscripts:
It refers to the Islamic heritage that is handwritten in the same way as the manuscript “Ayat al-Kursi”. Muslims have taken great care of manuscripts as they are the only way to preserve the production of the mind from science and letters.
The manuscripts in their beginnings were related to the Holy Quran and the hadiths of the Prophet and what is related to them and serves them, They made them precious works of art and left a great heritage in them.
Suffice it to mention here the magnitude of this Islamic heritage through what is preserved by museums and libraries around the world. Where there are approximately one hundred and twenty-four thousand rare manuscripts in the Turkish city of Istanbul alone, Most of them have never been studied before, This is in contrast to what is found in Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia, India, Iran and other museums and libraries around the world.
The idea of Islamic manuscripts developed in a way that was not expected in any of the pre-Islamic arts in the accuracy of their gilded decorations, the great attractiveness of their images, creativity and grace in the beauty of calligraphy and colors.
He testified to the status of manuscript art in the Islamic era. Attention and care for the quality of calligraphy is normal in the Islamic world, as calligraphers enjoyed a prominent status and prestige in it, especially in Iraq, Egypt, Turkey and Iran, for their work in writing manuscripts of the Qur’an along with copying manuscripts of literature and poetry.