Folio from Al-Jazuli's Guidelines to Edification
Artist/Maker
Persian
(or Turkish)
Dateca. 1700
MediumInk and gold on paper
DimensionsOverall: 6 1/2 × 4 1/4 in. (16.5 × 10.8 cm)
Credit LineGift of Frederick B. Artz (OC 1916)
Object number1958.13
Status
Not on viewThis folio is from an unidentified copy of the Dalai‘il al-Khayrat wa Shawariq al-Anwar fi Dhikr al-Salat ‘ala al-Nabi al-Mukhtar (Guidelines to Edification and Enlightenment in Remembrance of Blessings over the Chosen Prophet), a devotional prayer book composed by Muhammad ibn Sulayman al-Jazuli (d. 869 H/1465 CE.). A member of the Berber tribe of Jazula in Moroccon Sus, Muhammad ibn Sulayman was a learned Sufi scholar and jurisconsult. Due to the sacred and talismanic features attributed to it, the Dala‘il has been one of the most frequently copied religious texts in the Muslim world, especially in North Africa, the Ottoman/Turkish lands, Iran, and India.
Divided into sections for each day of the week, the Dala‘il is comparable in format and function to the Medieval Book of Hours. It contains numerous prayers, rhythmic invocations, poetic blessings dedicated to the Prophet Muhammad, a description of his tomb at Medina, and a litany of over two hundred honorary names describing the Prophet’s qualities.
The folio on view is penned in an elegant naskh hand and contains prayers to be recited on Thursdays. Below is an excerpt from the text:
O Allah, I beseech You by the most
superior beseeching, in the most loved of
Your Names, in the most noble of Your
Names, and for the sake that You
blessed us with Muhammad, the praise
and peace of Allah, be upon him, saving
us through him from error.
(Trans. S. Ahmad Darwish)
Exhibition History
Divided into sections for each day of the week, the Dala‘il is comparable in format and function to the Medieval Book of Hours. It contains numerous prayers, rhythmic invocations, poetic blessings dedicated to the Prophet Muhammad, a description of his tomb at Medina, and a litany of over two hundred honorary names describing the Prophet’s qualities.
The folio on view is penned in an elegant naskh hand and contains prayers to be recited on Thursdays. Below is an excerpt from the text:
O Allah, I beseech You by the most
superior beseeching, in the most loved of
Your Names, in the most noble of Your
Names, and for the sake that You
blessed us with Muhammad, the praise
and peace of Allah, be upon him, saving
us through him from error.
(Trans. S. Ahmad Darwish)
Beyond the Surface: Text and Image in Islamic Art
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 6, 2012 - July 31, 2013 )
Collections
- Asian
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late 19th–early 20th century
ca. 1875
late 19th–early 20th century
mid-16th century
mid-19th century
19th century
ca. 1850