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Scribing
During the Life of Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon
Him).
The Revelation scribes wrote down the Quran,
according to the order of Prophet Muhammad (peace
be upon him), on pieces of cloth, leather, bones,
and stones. Its verses were ordered and arranged according
to Allah's inspiration. At the beginning, it was not
gathered in one book. Some of the Prophet's companions
scribed parts and surahs especially for themselves
after they had memorized it from the Prophet.
Compiling Quran during the Era of Abu Bakr Al-Seddiq
Zayd Ibn Thabit gathered the Quran in one book. He
was charged to do this by Abu Bakr Al-Seddiq, according
to an advice from Umar Ibn Al-Khattab. Its resource
was the parts written by the Revelation scribes; so
he gathered all of it in one book, the Holy Quran.
Compiling Quran during the era of Uthman Ibn Affan
In his reign, the Quran was written from
the main copy gathered during the era of Abu Bakr
Al-Seddiq. It was kept at the residence of Hafsah
Bint Umar, (one of the Prophet's wives). He charged
the following scribes to do it:
1.
Zayd Ibn Thabit.
2. Abdullah Ibn Al-Zubair.
3. Said Ibn Al-`As.
4. Abdul-Rahman Ibn Al-Harith Ibn Hisham.
They scribed many copies of Quran, reflecting
in their writing the different correct readings (Arabic
accents) of it; excluding any incorrect one. It was
not marked with dots or vowel points. Uthman kept
a copy at Medina and sent the remaining copies to
the various Islamic countries.
Dotting and vowelization passed through three stages
1. In the first stage: Dots were used
as syntactical marks. This was in the era of Mu`awiyah
Ibn Abi Sufyan, who charged Abu Al-Aswad Al-Dualy
to do it in order to prevent people from a faulty
reading of the Quran.
2. In the second stage: Arabic letters
were marked with different dotting to differentiate
between them (e.g.:B.T.TH). This was in the time of
Abdul-Malik Ibn Marawan, who charged Al-Hajjaj to
do it. Al-Hajjaj, in his turn, charged Nasr Ibn Asem
and Hayy Ibn Yaamor to accomplish it.
3. In the third stage: Complete vowel
points (e.g. dammah, fathah, kasrah) were used, in
the form we are using nowadays. This method was invented
by Al-Khaleel Ibn Ahmed Al Faraheedi.
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