List of Sources with Abbreviations Preface Translations Al-Fatihah (I) Al-Baqarah (II) Al-'Imran (III) An-Nisa' (IV) Al-Ma'idah (V) Al-An'am (VI) Al-A'raf (VII) Al-Anfal (VIII) At-Tawbah (IX) Yunus (X) Hud (XI) Yusuf (XII) Ar-Ra'd (XIII) Ibrahim (XIV) Al-Hijr (XV) An-Nahl (XVI) Al-Isra' (XVII) Al-Kahf (XVIII) Maryam (XIX) Ta Ha (XX) Al-Anbiya' (XXI) Al-Hajj (XXII) Al-Mu'minun (XXIII) An-Nur (XXIV) Al-Furqan (XXV) Ash-Shu'ara' (XXVI) An-Naml (XXVII) Al-Qasas (XXVIII) Al-'Ankabut (XXIX) Ar-Rum (XXX) Luqman (XXXI) As-Sajdah (XXXII) Al-Ahzab (XXXIII) Saba' (XXXIV) Fatir (XXXV) Ya Sin (XXXVI) As-Saffat (XXXVII) Sad (XXXVIII) Az-Zumar (XXXIX) Ghafir (XL) Fussilat (XLI) Ash-Shura (XLII) Az-Zukhruf (XLIII) Ad-Dukhan (XLIV) Al-Ahqaf (XLVI) Muhammad (XLVII) Al-Fath (XLVIII) Al-Hujurat (XLIX) Qaf (L) Adh-Dhariyat (LI) At-Tur (LII) An-Najm (LIII) Al-Qamar (LIV) Ar-Rahman (LV) Al-Waqi'ah (LVI) Al-Hadid (LVII) Al-Hashr (LIX) Al-Mumtahanah (LX) As-Saff (LXI) Al-Munafiqun (LXIII) At-Tahrim (LXVI) Al-Qalam (LXVIII) Al-Jinn (LXXII) Al-Muzzammil (LXXIII) Al-Muddaththir (LXXIV) Al-Qiyamah (LXXV) Al-Insan (LXXVI) Al-Mursalat (LXXVII) An-Naba' (LXXVIII) 'Abasa (LXXX) Al-Mutaffifin (LXXXIII) Al-Buruj (LXXXV) At-Tariq (LXXXVI) Al-Ghashiyah (LXXXVIII) Al-Fajr (LXXXIX) Ad-Duha (XCIII) Ash-Sharh (XCIV) At-Tin (XCV) Al-'Alaq (XCVI) Al-Qadr (XCVII) Al-Qari'ah (CI) Al-'Asr (CIII) Al-Fil (CV) Quraysh (CVI) Al-Kafirun (CIX) Al-Ikhlas (CXII) Al-Falaq (CXIII) An-Nas (CXIV) Appendix: Ninety-Nine Beautiful Names of God Index
The late Dr Martin Lings, formerly Keeper of Oriental Manuscript in the British Museum and the British Library, is the author of, among others, Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources, What is Sufism?, A Sufi Saint of the Twentieth Century, The Book of Certainty and Sufi Poems.
'This translation conveys something of the beauty of the language
of the Sacred Text as no other English translation has been able to
do. It is a major addition to the corpus of Qur'anic
translations.'
*Prof S. H. Nasr*
'These translations by a master of the English language who is also
an eminent student of the Qur'an are of inestimable value.'
*Gai Eaton*
'In addition to his stunning classical English, Dr Martin Lings was
both a master of Arabic and a brilliant scholar of Islam. This rare
combination of skills made him the ideal candidate to translate the
Qur'an.'
*Hamza Yusuf*
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