"T"a"n" "m"a"n"u"s"c"r"i"p"t" "p"a"g"e"s" "h"e"a"v"i"l"y" "s"t"a"i"n"e"d" "o"p"e"n" "t"o" "d"o"u"b"l"e" "p"a"g"e" "s"p"r"e"a"d"." "L"e"f"t" "p"a"g"e" "2"9" "n"a"r"r"o"w"l"y"-"s"p"a"c"e"d" "l"i"n"e"s"," "r"i"g"h"t" "p"a"g"e" "2"1" "l"i"n"e"s" "o"f" "d"a"r"k" "b"r"o"w"n" "c"a"l"l"i"g"r"a"p"h"y"," "a"c"c"e"n"t"e"d" "b"y" "o"c"c"a"s"i"o"n"a"l" "b"o"l"d" "r"e"d" "p"h"r"a"s"e"s"." "B"e"l"o"w" "t"h"e" "f"i"r"s"t" "l"i"n"e" "i"s" "a" "s"p"a"c"e" "i"n" "t"h"e" "t"e"x"t" "w"i"t"h" "t"h"r"e"e" "b"o"l"d" "r"e"d" "p"h"r"a"s"e"s"," "d"e"c"o"r"a"t"e"d" "o"n" "e"i"t"h"e"r" "s"i"d"e" "b"y" "a" "d"e"s"i"g"n" "o"f" "b"r"o"w"n" "d"o"t"s" "w"i"t"h" "r"e"d" "c"i"r"c"l"e"s"."
AKM513, Manuscripts of Mi'a layla wa layla and Kitab al-Jaghrafiya (One Hundred and One Nights and the Book of Geography)

© The Aga Khan Museum

Click on the image to zoom

Manuscripts of Mi'a layla wa layla and Kitab al-Jaghrafiya
One Hundred and One Nights and the Book of Geography
  • Accession Number:AKM513
  • Creator:Author (of original text): al-Zuhri
    Copied by: `Abdullah ibn `Abd al-Mawla al-Nujum
  • Place:Spain
  • Dimensions:19 x 26.5 cm
  • Date:1235/AH 632
  • Materials and Technique:opaque watercolour and ink on paper
  • This object is included in the following tour(s):
    Stop #3 of Audio Guide: Interconnectedness

    Click below to listen

    Next up in the Interconnectedness Tour:

      Dagger and sheath,
      AKM963

This manuscript contains the earliest extant copy of al-Zuhri’s Book of Geography, followed by one of the earliest versions of the famous stories of the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid, A Thousand and One Nights, thought to have been adapted from a Persian source. The Book of Geography was written as a companion for a map of the world commissioned by the Abbasid caliph al-Ma'mun. It provides a description of the world at the time, including important new information about trade routes and commodities traded in the western Islamic lands and sub-Saharan Africa, as well as about the expansion of Islam. The second oldest copy is housed in the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, and is dated 1410 CE. The version of the Thousand and One Nights in this text is written in maghribi script and entitled A Hundred and One Nights, establishing its antiquity within the larger “Nights” tradition.

Note: This online resource is reviewed and updated on an ongoing basis. We are committed to improving this information and will revise and update knowledge about this object as it becomes available.

news_icon

Get connected. Stay engaged. Sign up for the latest updates from the Aga Khan Museum