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Akimushkin O. Central Asian Manuscripts’ Bindings (1730s — 1930s) // Manuscripta Orientalia. Vol. 7. No. 2. June 2001. P. Asiatische Forschungen, Bd. 137 // Manuscripta Orientalia. Vol. 7. No. 3. September 2001. P. 4—8.
Central Asian bindings during the period in question were extremely specific — easily recognizable and very similar in appearance (a well-established range of colours, very subdued graphic design, the complete absence of a flap). They were not full leather bindings, but 90% paste-board (muqawwā’). Both covers of such a binding were usually made from poured whole paste-board, although well pasted and pressed paper-board of separate sheets (papier-mâché) was sometimes used. The edges of paste-board covers were strengthened with light, thin, well-worked leather and reinforced with a back spine of the same finish and co1our. The back spine sometimes had two tongued flaps that extended upward and downward (1.5—2.0 cm) for pulling the manuscript out of a pile on the shelf (Eastern manuscripts were kept lying, not standing as in Europe)…
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Ключевые слова мукавва переплеты рукописи центральноазиатские фонд персидских рукописей
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17 марта 2025 г. ИВР РАН проводит однодневную научную конференцию «Актуальные проблемы буддологических и индологических исследований–18». |
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