Mashq

Mashq elongations in the Maghrebi script used to write surahs 105-114 of an 18th-century Maghrebi Quran.[1]
Qur'anic manuscript of Surah 17: Al-Isra written in Kufic script with mashq extensions.

Mashq is one of the oldest calligraphic forms of the Arabic script. At the time of the emergence of Islam, this type of writing was likely already in use in various parts of the Arabian Peninsula. It is first attested during the reign of caliph Umar, making it one of the earliest forms of Arabic script, along with Hijazi and Kufic. It was used in most texts produced during the first and second centuries after the Hijra.

  1. ^ Ekthiar, Maryam (2011). "A Manuscript of Five Sections of a Qur'an,18th century: Catalogue Entry". Met Museum.

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