Cover image for Lapis and gold : exploring Chester Beatty's Ruzbihan Qur'an
Lapis and gold : exploring Chester Beatty's Ruzbihan Qur'an
Title:
Lapis and gold : exploring Chester Beatty's Ruzbihan Qur'an

Qurʼan
Author:
Wright, Elaine Julia, author.
ISBN:
9781912168040
Physical Description:
xv, 320 pages : color illustrations ; 31 cm
Contents:
Foreword / Fionnuala Croke -- Author's acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Notes to the reader. Part 1 Introducing the manuscript : The manuscript in brief -- A manuscript in need of repair -- How many ruzbihans? -- The historical and art historical context in brief. Part 2 Writing the words of God : The writing surface -- The layout and decoration of the text -- Edge notes and the copying of the text -- Types of script -- Muhaqqaq -- Thulth -- Naskh -- Display scripts -- The spacing of the text: problems and solutions -- Omissions and the irregular placement of text -- Omissions of text from lines of Naskh -- The placement of letters in vertical side panels -- Omissions of text from lines of Muhaqqaq and Thulth -- Omissions of text in earlier Qur'an manuscripts -- Errors and corrections -- The calligrapher -- Ruzbihan's colophon -- Ruzbihan's name. Part 3 Reading and reciting the words of God : Variant readings of teh Qur'an: Hafs and Shu'ba -- Waqf and ibtida (pausing and starting) -- Divisions of the text -- Verse markers : Small-scale script (naskh) markers -- Large-scale script (muhaqqaq-thulth) markers -- Five- and ten-verse marginal devices -- Juz', Nisf al-Juz' and Hizb -- Sajda. Part 4 Decorating the words of God I : Beginning, middle and end illuminations : The beginning -- The middle -- The end, as it is today -- The end, as it was in the sixteenth century -- Khatm prayers and Falnamas in other sixteenth-century Qur'ans -- Vertical side panels : Vertical side panes with multi-coloured blossoms -- Vertical side panels with "stencilled-type" blossoms -- Sura headings and other related panels : Standard gold-ground headings -- Groups of headings based on types of cartouche : Cartouches derived from the cloud collar -- Cartouches with concavely curved ends -- Simple, lobed cartouches -- Other cartouche types -- A change in aesthetic : Script decoration -- Vertical side panels -- Sura headings -- Pigments and palette -- The layout of the openings. Part 5 Decorating the words of God II : Frames : Text area frames -- Vertical side panel frames -- Sura heading frames -- Frames of the beginning, middle, and end illuminations -- Frames of major deocorative elements -- Rays -- Individual motifs : Blossoms, buds and leaves : The lotus and other multi-coloured blossoms -- The lotus: an overview of sixteenth-century Shiraz types -- The lotus and other monochrome, stencilled-type blossoms -- Palettes -- Cloud bands -- Squiggles and eyes -- The manipulation of gold -- Investigating the palette of the Ruzbihan Qur'an / Kristine Rose Beers -- The manuscript's binding : The original, sixteenth-century binding -- The nineteenth-century binding. Part 6 Concluding remarks : Situating the Ruzbihan Qur'an -- From Shiraz to Dublin. Par 7 Appendices : Dimensions and other codicological details of CBL Is 1558 -- Manuscripts with colophons signed by the calligrapher Ruzbihan Muhammas al-Tab'i al-Shirazi -- Sixteenth-century Qur'ans and other manuscripts relevant to the study of Chester Beatty's Ruzbihan Qur'an (CBL Is 1558) -- The Arabic alphabet and numerals -- Waqf (recitation) signs used in the Ruzbihan Qur'an -- Material analysis of the Ruzbihan Qur'an: table of analytical findings -- Illuminated "lookalikes": CBL Is 1558 and a Shamsa and frontispiece in the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery -- Manuscripts with illuminations signed by or attributed to an individual named Ruzbihan -- Concordance of manuscript and folio numbers with figure, plate and page numbers. Bibliography of works cited.
Abstract:
The Chester Beatty Library's 16th-century Ruzbihan Qur'an--produced in the city of Shiraz in southwest Iran--is one of the finest Islamic manuscripts known. In terms of both materials and workmanship, it is exquisite: lapis lazuli and gold, the two most expensive pigments available, are used on every page, while the rendering of the decoration is exceptionally fine. This is the most detailed and comprehensive study of any Islamic manuscript--and it is well worthy of such scrutiny.
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Bibliographical References:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 316-320).
Field 805:
npmlib 10802258 ND3385 K6 W64 ysh
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