A Qur'an leaf from Spain, late 1100's
Source: http://www.christies.com/LotFinder/search/LOTDETAIL.ASP?sid=&intObjectID=4272342&SE=CMWCAT03+651229+%2D766274156+&QR=M+1+0+Aqc0000900+619699++Aqc0000900+&entry=india&SU=1&RQ=True&AN=1
(downloaded Apr. 2004)
"QUR'AN, SOUTH SPAIN, LATE 12TH CENTURY. Manuscript on parchment, 129ff.
with 25ll. of very fine small sepia Andalusian maghribi, gold trefoils between
verses, gold half palmette every fifth verse, gold roundel every tenth verse,
sura headings in gold kufic issuing a gold openwork palmette into the margin
outlined with blue, other gold and polychrome marginal medallions marking the
tenth verse and the start of the juz, opening and final folios modern replacements,
very slight staining and mould to outer folios, otherwise in very good condition,
in later black morocco binding with simple gold tooled decoration
Folio 6 5/8 x 6¼in. (17 x 16cm.)
Lot Notes: This Qur'an belongs to a small group of similar Qur'ans all of which were copied in Southern Spain. They are all fairly small, this being one of the larger of the group, and are similar in layout and illumination. All are square, and written in a small neat script which has been described as the Valencian script. Nine of the group have colophons, of which six were copied in Valencia. They have an opening page or pages of illumination, which here is sadly lacking. The sura headings are in gold kufic with illuminated palmettes and the text is written on rather white parchment with tightly spaced lines of around 21-28 lines to the page.
Other examples with which this may be compared are a single volume Qur'an
in the collection of Nasser D. Khalili dated AH 596/1199-1200 AD (James,
D.: The Master Scribes, Oxford, 1992, no.20, pp. 92-5); one in Cairo (Dodds,
J.D.(ed): Al-Andalus, New York, 1992, no. 76, p.306); and one in Rabat
(Dodds, op.cit no. 78, p. 308).
Spanish Qur'ans are few in number compared to North African Qur'ans as many
were deliberately destroyed by the Christian conquerors of Spain. None exists
in Spain itself with but few remaining in libraries in North Africa and the
East, poignant reminders of Spain's glorious Islamic heritage."