The Oldest Manuscripts from India and Their Histories
The Oldest Manuscripts from India and Their Histories
A Re-assessment of IO Loth 4 in the British Library
Author(s): Muntazir Ali, Marijn van Putten, Alison Ohta, Sebnem Koser Akcapar, Michael WillisSubject(s): History, Language and Literature Studies, Fine Arts / Performing Arts, Cultural history, Studies of Literature
Published by: KSIĘGARNIA AKADEMICKA Sp. z o.o.
Keywords: Qurʼān—manuscripts; Islamic illumination of books and manuscripts— India; British Library—Collections; India Office Library—manuscripts; ʻAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib—Caliph; Indian manuscripts — seals and notat
Summary/Abstract: This essay examines a copy of the Qur’ān from India, now in the India Office Collections at the British Library. The manuscript, registered as IO Loth 4, belongs to the reasonably large group of early Qur’āns that date to the eighth and ninth centuries CE. While some of these manuscripts have charted histories, what is not widely known is that early Qur’āns also made their way to India. There they have their own special histories, meanings and associations. In attempt to address the long ‘after-life’ of these manuscripts, this paper will examine a single example that arrived in India in the Mughal period and was eventually presented to the Library of the East India House by Lord Dalhousie in 1853. While not the earliest of the Qur’āns brought to India, it nonetheless dates to the circa ninth century CE, making it older than any surviving manuscripts in Sanskrit or Prakrit in India proper.
Journal: Cracow Indological Studies
- Issue Year: 24/2022
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 58-59
- Page Count: 2
- Language: English