Tuesday, January 10, 2012

1901 copies of the Koran's Largest Digital version

One of the world's largest copy of the Koran have been digitized by the John Rylands Library in Manchester, England. The Qur'an was air-author of 'The Qansuh al-Ghuri Qur'an.

The Muslim holy book was to be hold in the Mamluk Sultan of Egypt when he served in the early 16th century. Because it is too large and delicate to be displayed in the Library, so the John Rylands library adopted a policy to replicate and display it in the digital version.

Digitization efforts spelled Koran is not easy. However, that effort is a short-term process to preserve the books (read: the Koran). Page after page, the library staff to make the Koran the online version of the original text.

The Koran, previously purchased by the wife of John Rylands, Enriqueta the range of 1901. Looking at age, and its significance is expected serajah scholars around the world can learn it in all conditions, including the complicated conditions though.

The process also allows the staff to put back a page that has been erased from the Koran pages in the past. Because indeed, the Qur'an is that old age is too soft to survive.


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