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[Доктринальні настанови та історії пророків]
The manuscript is a compilation of prose and verse works in both Ottoman Turkish and Arabic that are not entirely identifiable. It begins with an Arabic explanation of the important points of Islamic practice, followed by an Ottoman Turkish continuation of the same topic, or translation of the text. Much of it is arranged in the form of questions and answers about the beliefs of a particular mezhep, with a long meditation on the names of Allah and their significance. In the middle, after a break in the main text (dated at this point at 1147 AH/1734-35 CE) that is replaced by later additions, there is a brief explanation of the chieftains of the Quraysh, from Hashim ibn Abd Manaf down to Abu Talib ibn Abd al-Mutallib. This is followed by an elegiac (?) poem about Shah Muhammad Janfi (?) bin Ali in Ottoman Turkish (dated 1146 AH), followed by a dua in Arabic. Then comes a chart of the days of various Hijri months assigned to different letters of the abjad in 1103 AH (1691-92 CE), followed by vocalized Ottoman Turkish hikayeler about the Prophets Ibrahim, Yaqub. The hand changes abruptly here, and the vocalization ceases, but the catchwork implies that it is a continuation of the same text. This goes into a series of questions and answers, as well as beyitler, before ending formally. The final two pages contain considerable amounts of graffiti in various directions and hands.
Physical description: The text is copied in an inconsistent hand or possibly hands, mainly following nesih forms but with occasional influence of nestalik in the sins, shins, and final yaas, or rık’a forms elsewhere. Vocalization is more frequent towards the middle and end of the document. About halfway through the manuscript, the original copy ceases, and is then resumed on the following page in a different but similar hand. It is copied throughout in black ink, with inconsistent and sporadic use of red ink for headers, separators, and overlines. The text is arranged in a single column without textboxes at first, and then goes into two columns when in verse, only to return to a single column in prose. The pages contain 19 lines consistently.