al-aqlam al-sitta

E741450

Al-aqlam al-sitta refers to the six canonical styles of classical Islamic calligraphy that became the foundational scripts for writing Arabic in religious, literary, and administrative contexts.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
al-aqlam al-sitta canonical 1

Statements (33)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Arabic script canon
Islamic calligraphy tradition
calligraphic script classification
associatedWith proportional script system
use of dot-based measurement in letter design
considered canonical scripts of classical Islamic calligraphy
consistsOf Muhaqqaq script NERFINISHED
Naskh script NERFINISHED
Rayhani script NERFINISHED
Riqʿa script NERFINISHED
Tawqi script NERFINISHED
Thuluth script NERFINISHED
culturalSignificance key component of Islamic visual culture
standard reference for classical scribal practice
developedInContextOf Islamic civilization NERFINISHED
hasNameInArabic الأقلام الستة
influenced Ottoman calligraphy NERFINISHED
Persian calligraphy
later Arabic handwriting styles
influencedBy earlier Kufic script traditions
literalMeaning the six pens
preservedIn historic Qurʾan codices
museum manuscript collections
role formed basis for aesthetic rules of Arabic calligraphy
provided formal models for copying the Qurʾan
served as standard scripts for official correspondence
standardizedIn medieval Islamic period
taughtIn traditional Islamic calligraphy schools
usedFor Qurʾanic writing
administrative documents
literary manuscripts
religious manuscripts
usedForLanguage Arabic

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.