Quranic tradition
The Quran itself (revealed in Arabic, 7th c., public domain) alongside the manuscript, calligraphic, and recitation traditions that transmit it. Text sourced through the Tanzil project; manuscript surrogates via the Met and Wikidata.
Elected by the community.
Stewards curate the circle's priorities, verify provenance, and govern disputes. Stewardship is earned through contribution signal and ratified on the Tenzro ledger.
International collaborative project producing a verified, standards-compliant, UTF-8 Unicode text of the Quran (tanzil.net). Text released under CC BY-ND.
The Department of Asian Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, stewarding one of the most comprehensive holdings of Japanese woodblock prints outside of Japan.
What descends in this circle.
Each root artifact in the circle — and every layer branching from it. Click a node to open.
Contributions in this circle

Double-Sided Leaf from a Qur'an
Unknown
Manuscript · opaque watercolor, ink, and gold on paper

Qur'an Manuscript Folio
Unknown
Drawing · ink, gold, and colors on paper

Qur'an Manuscript Folio (recto)
Unknown
Drawing · ink, gold, and colors on paper