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Bannai script

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bannai, Isfahan 15th/16th century, Koran-Sura 112 al-Ikhlāṣ[1]

Bannai is a script form of the Islamic calligraphy. It was used primarily in Iran in building inscriptions. It is a kind of angular Kufic script, which has geometric forms like square, rhombus, rectangular, parallel and crossed lines. The foundation of Bannai script is the horizontal and vertical directions of the lines, which have equal thickness and completely fill the geometrical form.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ḥabībollāh Fażāʾelī (1971), Aṭlas-e Ḫaṭṭ: Taḥqīq dar Ḫuṭūṭ-e Islāmī (in Persian), Isfahan, p. 166{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ Adolf Grohmann (1971), Arabische Paläographie (in German), vol. 2: Das Schriftwesen, die Lapidarschrift, Graz: Böhlau, Tafel XXIX