K
Karin
Guest
*PRINCETON, N.J. - In a marriage of new technology and old documents, a vast treasure trove of information about life in the early Islamic world is about to go online, enabling Muslims, scholars and the merely curious to peer into a window on the faith’s rich history. *
*Numbering more than 10,000 texts, Princeton University’s collection of handwritten Islamic documents, books and letters is the largest in North America. They date from the eighth and ninth centuries - soon after the faith was founded - to the fall of the Ottoman Empire in the early 1900s; most have gone unseen outside New Jersey for nearly a century. *
*Now the university is starting a four-year project to categorize the entire collection, and to digitize and post online about 200 of the most important works so that scholars around the world can study them *
**READ THE REST OF THE ARTICLE HERE ** (SOURCE)
*Numbering more than 10,000 texts, Princeton University’s collection of handwritten Islamic documents, books and letters is the largest in North America. They date from the eighth and ninth centuries - soon after the faith was founded - to the fall of the Ottoman Empire in the early 1900s; most have gone unseen outside New Jersey for nearly a century. *
*Now the university is starting a four-year project to categorize the entire collection, and to digitize and post online about 200 of the most important works so that scholars around the world can study them *
**READ THE REST OF THE ARTICLE HERE ** (SOURCE)