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Koran

Posted: Mon Nov 13, 2006 10:30 pm
by Cognito
i also wonder if there are different versions of the Koran?
Is there a KJ version??
I don't believe King James ever read the Koran, but there are different versions of it. However, if you really want a fight, call a Shia a Sunni or vice versa. And as the Queen of Hearts proclaimed, "Off with their heads!" 8)

Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 9:13 pm
by Starflower
The Smithsonian has a detailed article on Timbuktu and these manuscripts.

http://www.smithsonianmagazine.com/issu ... mbuktu.php
Perusing the volumes, I draw back: the brittle leather has begun to break apart in my hands. Centuries-old pages flutter from broken bindings and crumble into scraps. Some volumes are bloated and misshapen by moisture; others are covered by white or yellow mold. I open a manuscript on astrology, with annotations carefully handwritten in minute letters in the margins: the ink on most pages has blurred into illegibility. "This one is rotten," al-Wangari mutters, setting aside a waterlogged 16th-century Koran. "I am afraid that it is destroyed completely."
The manuscripts paint a portrait of Timbuktu as the Cambridge or Oxford of its day, where from the 1300s to the late 1500s, students came from as far away as the Arabian Peninsula to learn at the feet of masters of law, literature and the sciences. At a time when Europe was emerging from the Middle Ages, African historians were chronicling the rise and fall of Saharan and Sudanese kings, replete with great battles and invasions. Astronomers charted the movement of the stars, physicians provided instructions on nutrition and the therapeutic properties of desert plants, and ethicists debated such issues as polygamy and the smoking of tobacco. Says Tal Tamari, a historian at the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris, who recently visited Timbuktu: "[These discoveries are] going to revolutionize what one thinks about West Africa.