calligraphy using the Arabic script, for religious or non-religious expression
A copy of the Qur'an by Ibn al-Bawwab in the year 1000/1001 CE, thought to be the earliest existing example of a Qur'an written in a cursive script. Arabic calligrapher Arabic calligraphy is the artistic practice of handwriting and calligraphy based on the Arabic alphabet. It is known in Arabic as khatt (Arabic: خَطّ), derived from the words 'line', 'design', or 'construction'. Kufic is the oldest form of the Arabic script.
Arabic calligraphy is known and appreciated for its diversity and potential for development. It is linked in Arabic culture to fields including religion, art, architecture, education, and craftsmanship, which in turn have played an important role in its advancement.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).