Trismegistos 130009 = LDAB 130009 = chicago.apis.7810
DCLP/LDAB Data [xml]
Title | TM 130009 |
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Works |
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Content | Fada'il al-Ansar; hadith traditions |
Fragments | Chicago, Haskell Oriental Institute 17625 |
Support Material | papyrus |
Date | 815 - 840 |
Origin | Found: Egypt; written: Egypt |
Form and Layout | papyrus sheet (columns: 1) |
Script Type | cursive hand |
Genre | theology |
Culture | science; religion |
Religion | islam |
Print Illustrations | ed. princ., pl. 22-23 |
Availability | © Digital Corpus of Literary Papyri. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. |
Trismegistos: 130009 [source]
Publications | Abbott, Studies in Arabic literary papyri II (Univ. of Chicago Oriental Publications 76) p. 246-261 no. 12 (1967) |
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Inv. no. | Chicago, Haskell Oriental Institute 17625 |
Reuse Type | palimpsest new, effacing: see notes reuse of blank space, old text is: official Arabic letter |
Date | AD 815 - 840 |
Language | Arabic |
Provenance | Egypt[found & written] |
Catalog Record: chicago.apis.7810 [xml]
Title | Hadith |
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Author | Fada'il al-Ansar (?) |
Citations | |
Inv. Id | P. O.I. 17625 |
Support/Dimensions | papyrus ; 20.0 x 16.2 cm |
Condition | Medium quality, medium brown papyrus with large breaks and some peeling. |
Lines | On recto: 19 lines in Arabic; on verso: 9 lines in Arabic |
Recto/Verso | Source of description: On recto and verso: Hadith |
Hands | Originally, this papyrus was used for correspondance of some type and was written in a large, well-spaced script. One phrase of the original text has survived, along with the bismallah. The writer of the hadith began at the bottom of the reverse and continued on the top of the obverse. The script is a fairly fixed, small cursive hand, using two different kinds of ink. The light brown ink of the upper part of the recto has faded considerably, in constrast to the more lasting almost black ink of the rest of the text. Diacritical points are used, but vowels are rarely used. |
Origin | Egypt |
Language | Arabic |
Date | 815-840 A.D. |
Note (general) | The simple circle is sometimes used to mark off headings and for punctuation., as is "ha" with a tail (possibly standing for ha and ya), the abbreviation for "intahaa," meaning "finished." |
Note (general) | Location: Oriental Institute |
Note (general) | Pub. status: Published: recto and verso |
Subjects | Islam; Hadith; Literary; papyrus |
License | This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 License. |
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