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  2. Old Arabic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Arabic

    Old Arabic and its descendants are classified as Central Semitic languages, which is an intermediate language group containing the Northwest Semitic languages (e.g., Aramaic and Hebrew), the languages of the Dadanitic, Taymanitic inscriptions, the poorly understood languages labeled Thamudic, and the ancient languages of Yemen written in the Ancient South Arabian script.

  3. File:Cairo-codex-nevi'im.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cairo-codex-nevi'im.pdf

    Original file (1,275 × 956 pixels, file size: 22.97 MB, MIME type: application/pdf, 575 pages) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.

  4. File:Hypatian Codex.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hypatian_Codex.pdf

    English: Full PDF file of the Hypatian Codex (Ipat), a manuscript collection containing copies of the Primary Chronicle (PVL), the Kyivan / Kievan Chronicle (KC), and the Galician–Volhynian Chronicle (GVC). It was written some time in the 1420s in the Old East Slavic recension of Church Slavonic, and displays linguistic features, provenance ...

  5. Early Quranic manuscripts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Quranic_manuscripts

    The term Codex Mashhad refers to an old codex of the Qurʾān, now mostly preserved in two manuscripts, MSS 18 and 4116, in the Āstān-i Quds Library, Mashhad, Iran. The first manuscript in 122 folios and the second in 129 folios together constitute more than 90% of the text of the Qurʾān, and it is also likely that other fragments will be ...

  6. Hijazi script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hijazi_script

    Hijazi script (Arabic: خَطّ ٱَلحِجَازِيّ, romanized: khaṭṭ al-ḥijāzī) is the collective name for several early Arabic scripts that developed in the Hejaz (the northwest of the Arabian Peninsula), a region that includes the cities of Mecca and Medina. This type of script was already in use at the time of the emergence of ...

  7. Aleppo Codex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleppo_Codex

    The codex's Hebrew name is כֶּתֶר אֲרָם צוֹבָא ‎ Keṯer ʾĂrām-Ṣoḇāʾ, translated as "Crown of Aleppo". Kether means "crown", and Aram-Ṣovaʾ (literally "outside Aram") was a not-yet-identified biblical city in what is now Syria whose name was applied from the 11th century onward by some Rabbinic sources and Syrian Jews to the area of Aleppo in Syria.

  8. Ancient South Arabian script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_South_Arabian_script

    The Ancient South Arabian script (Old South Arabian: 𐩣𐩯𐩬𐩵 ms 3 nd; modern Arabic: الْمُسْنَد musnad) branched from the Proto-Sinaitic script in about the late 2nd millennium BCE. It was used for writing the Old South Arabian languages Sabaic, Qatabanic, Hadramautic, Minaean, Hasaitic, and Geʽez in Dʿmt.

  9. Codex Mashhad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codex_Mashhad

    Codex Mashhad is an old codex of the Qurʾān, now mostly preserved in two manuscripts, MSS 18 and 4116, in the Āstān-i Quds Library, Mashhad, Iran. The first manuscript in 122 folios and the second in 129 folios together constitute more than 90% of the text of the Qurʾān. [1]: 293 The current codex is in two separate volumes, MSS 18 and 4116.