Skip to Main Content
RESEARCH GUIDES ACC Home Page ACC Library Homepage

Diwan Naskh |work| Online

A guide to resources for Travel & Tourism students and faculty at Austin Community College

Diwan Naskh |work| Online

An Ottoman invention (16th century) marked by extreme cursiveness and complex, overlapping letters. It was often used for confidential documents to prevent forgeries because it was difficult for laypeople to read.

The roots of this style trace back to the 10th-century Abbasid caliphate, where master calligraphers like and Ibn al-Bawwab standardized the "Six Pens" (Al-Aqlam al-Sitta), including Naskh. diwan naskh

is a specialized and highly legible variant of the classic Naskh script , specifically adapted for the official administrative needs of the Ottoman Empire's royal courts, or "Diwan." While the standard Naskh is the "servant of the Qur'an" due to its clarity and use in religious texts, the Diwan Naskh style was honed for transcribing royal decrees, bureaucratic records, and high-level correspondence. The Dual Nature: Diwani vs. Naskh An Ottoman invention (16th century) marked by extreme

To understand Diwan Naskh, one must distinguish between its two parent influences: is a specialized and highly legible variant of

Characterized by small, rounded, and clear letterforms. It was developed to replace the rigid, angular Kufic script, becoming the standard for books and long-form documents.

ACC Home
Library Home
Contact Us
© 2026 ACC Library Services