If it's real then we'll undoubtedly discover more of these inscriptions across the country over time.View attachment 354187
Looks similar to this, picture I showed was from Museo Della garesa, or at least that’s what I was told couldn’t find the exact source
It’s just Somali written in arabicI think most of you know about that image on Wikipedia for the waad script entry. My question is this actually an inscription of waad script from the 14th century? And if true why has nobody ever translated the inscription? ..View attachment 354186
If it's real then we'll undoubtedly discover more of these inscriptions across the country over time.
Haha yeah if we could only be so lucky. On the other hand considering how dry our climate is were much luckier than the swahili coast,southeast asia, or India. Since the climate is wet and hot in these places no old writings survive.It is understandable but lowkey a tragedy how during the Islamic Period they were mainly just spreading writing through paper and alwaxs. Even that source from Siyu on the Swahili coast describing SomalisSheikhs from Koonfur who basically wrote Somali using the Arabic script describes how they did so in book form and manufactured books. If they made stone inscriptions as often as they did books we'd have a massive corpus even despite the civil war...
Wow that's incredible.
Some Somali ajami on shop signs in the 1950s Ceerigaabo
Page 22.
Yeah that's why I thought too.Tomb inscription written in arabic not wadaad
The link isn't working
Some Somali ajami on shop signs in the 1950s Ceerigaabo
Page 22.