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QUR'AN MAMLUK EGYPT OR SYRIA, 14TH CENTURY Arabic manuscript on cream paper, 266ff., each with 13ll. of large black naskh, tajwid in red, gold and polychrome verse markers, sura headings in gold thuluth, juz' and sajda marginal markers in gold thuluth, marginal annotations in red, opening bifolio with double carpet page with geometric panels in gold and blue, illuminated panels above and below with calligraphic cartouches, the sura headings on folio 1v. in white thuluth on blue and gold illuminated panels, final folio with later owners' notes, some pigment loss to carpet page, areas of marginal repair, in brown morocco stamped with geometric panels Folio 12 ? x 9 ?in. (31.5 x 22.5cm.)
This Qur'an can perhaps be seen as a prototype for what is later dubbed by David James, the 'star polygon group', a collection of magnificent Qur'ans made during the reign of Sultan Sha'ban (1363-1376) (James, 1988, p178). Lings, in his discussion of the Mamluk frontispiece from the early 14th century describes it as a 'a geometric composition often with a central star polygon, or some other centrifugal device, surrounded by elaborate alternating palmettes' (Lings, 1976, p.39).
In terms of style, the illumination of our Qur'an relates to a magnificent example of the 'star polygon group' in the National Library, Cairo which is signed and dated AH 757/1356 AD (published in Martin Lings, 1976, no.74). That Qur'an shares with ours a web of geometric interlace outlined with plain white borders and radiating from a central star - in that case 12-pointed in our case 8. Both have ovoid panels containing text in white thuluth above and below set within gold clouds on blue ground with loose fleshy leaves, and strapwork borders surrounding the geometric lattice. The Cairo example is undoubtedly more complex in conception and fine in illumination than the present - indeed it was made a waqf by Sultan Sha'ban in 1368 for his mother's madrasa (the madrasa of Khwand Barakah in the Khatt al-Tabbanah in Cairo). However the features that it shares with ours seem to indicate that ours is either a prototype for the 'star polygon group' or a contemporaneous example albeit not a royal commission.