Dab solver - History of the Quran

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Since no diacritical points or vowel signs were included, the vocalization was more or less left to the reader. This confusion did occur as many cultures and communities came under the control of an expanding Islamic empire and many readers were unfamiliar to arabic. This meant that even when there was agreement on the consonants, some verbs could be read as active or passive, some nouns could be read with different case endings, and some forms could be read as either nouns or verbs.  In some instances the alteration of a case ending or some other slight change in the vowelling effected the meaning significantly.ref

===  Umayyad Period (44/661–132/750) – Hijazi script  ===

The earliest known manuscripts of the Qur'an are collectively called the Hijazi script, and are mostly associated with the Umayyad period.ref 

Most of the fundamental reform to the manuscripts of the Qur'an took place under , the fifth Umayyad caliph (65/685–86/705).ref 

Under Abd al-Malik’s reign, Abu’l Aswad al-Du’ali (died 688) founded the Arabic grammar and invented the system of placing large colored dots to indicate the tashkil.  Then the Umayyad governor [[...|al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf al-Thaqafi]] later enforced this system.ref 
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One of the three [[Uthman Qur'an|Qur'ans issued by Uthman]] is, according to Islamic tradition, preserved at [[Tashkent]]. The [[Topkapi manuscript]] in Istanbul is also considered to have been commissioned by [[Uthman Ibn Affan|Uthman]].ref According to the Hadith (Al-Bukhari, Vol 6, #510), four Uthmanic manuscripts were prepared, after 653 AD and before Uthman's death 656 AD. Al-Kindi (died 850) wrote in the early 3rd century AH, that only the Damascus copy remained and that was currently in Malatja. Various dates have been given for when the Damascus manuscript perished, and various manuscripts at different times have claimed to be the Damascus manuscript. The last of these remaining alleged [[Damascus manuscripts]] with a traceable past was in Damascus until the fire of 1892.{{Citation needed|date=February 2011}} There have also been large numbers of manuscripts alleged to be the Damascus manuscript&mdash;or even one of the other perished manuscripts. However, there is no sufficient evidence to prove such a link.ref Having studied early Qur'an manuscripts, states: "The oldest manuscripts of the Quran still in existence date from not earlier than about one hundred years after Muhammad's death."ref He comes to this conclusion by analysing the state of development of the script used in the two of the oldest manuscripts available at the time he is writing, the Samarkand and Topkapi codices. The codices are both written in the [[Kufic|Kufic script]]. It "can generally be dated from the late eighth<!-- corrected from "eight" per [[Wikipedia:Quotations]] "trivial spelling or typographical errors that obviously do not affect the intended meaning; these may be silently corrected" --> century depending on the extent of development in the character of the script in each case."ref This technique has been criticised by other scholars, who have cited many instances of early Kufic and pre-Kufic inscriptions. The most important of these is 240m of Qur'anic inscriptions in Kufic script from the founding of the [[Dome of the Rock]] in [[Jerusalem]] (692 AD).ref Inscriptions on rock Hijaaze and early Kufic script may date as early as 646 AD. So based on the above evidence,{{Says who|date=December 2012}} early Kufic scripts existed in the 7th century. The debate between the scholars has moved from one over the date origin of the script to one over state of development of the Kufic script in the early manuscripts and in datable 7th-century inscriptions.
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