TASMIA – Islamic Museum | Dehradun
تسمية
“Where devotion meets design,
and revelation becomes art.”
Preserving India’s Sacred Calligraphic & Manuscript Heritage
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بسم الله
الرحمن الرحيم

A Sanctuary of Sacred Knowledge

Tasmia is more than a museum — it is a living archive of devotion. Nestled in the foothills of Dehradun, we preserve the artistic and spiritual legacy of India’s Islamic manuscript tradition: the illuminated Qurans, the master calligraphers, the forgotten craft guilds.

From Kufic to Nastaliq, from the Deccan to Kashmir, our collection traces how the sacred word became form — and how form became an act of worship.

1,200+ Manuscripts
14 Script Traditions
8 Centuries Covered

The Script Traditions
of the Quran

Four sacred scripts, each carrying centuries of spiritual discipline, regional genius, and the devotion of master calligraphers.

7th–10th C. كوفي Kufic

The earliest Quranic script — angular, monumental, born in the city of Kufa. Each letter a geometric meditation.

10th C. onward نسخ Naskh

Clarity and proportion. The script that became the standard for printed Qurans — fluid, legible, deeply human.

Mughal India نستعلیق Nastaliq

The bride of scripts. Born in Persia, perfected in India — its diagonal flow is the soul of Mughal manuscript art.

Monumental ثلث Thuluth

Majesty in every stroke. Used for mosque inscriptions and Quran chapter headings — architecture as calligraphy.

View Full Manuscript Collection

Craft Traditions
of Sacred Art

Beyond the written word, devotion found form in wood, metal, stone, and thread. These craft traditions carry the same spiritual intention as calligraphy — the hand as an instrument of remembrance.

ن 01 Wood Carving

Intricate arabesque panels from mosque doors to Quran stands — the forest transformed into geometry and prayer.

ك 02 Metal Engraving

Brass incense burners, copper trays, silver amulet cases — each surface a meditation carved in the metal’s memory.

ص 03 Textile Inscriptions

Woven Quranic verses in silk, gold thread on prayer shawls — the loom as a vehicle of sacred language.

ع 04 Stone Etching

Tomb inscriptions, mihrab mouldings, mausoleum calligraphy — monuments carved in devotion’s most enduring medium.

Exhibitions & Events

Full Programme
Ongoing
The Illuminated Word: Quran Manuscripts from the Deccan
November 2024 – March 2025

A rare assembly of manuscripts from Bijapur, Golconda, and Hyderabad — gold illumination, bold colophons, master calligraphy.

Upcoming
Nastaliq: The Bride of Scripts
April – July 2025

A deep journey into the most celebrated script of the Indian subcontinent — its Persian origins, Mughal maturity, and living masters.

Upcoming
Geometry of Heaven: Islamic Patterns in Indian Architecture
September – December 2025

From Fatehpur Sikri to the Bibi Ka Maqbara — mathematical beauty as a reflection of divine order.

Past
Forgotten Scripts: Regional Quranic Traditions of India
June – October 2024

An excavation of manuscript traditions from Bengal, Malabar, and Sindh — regions whose Islamic art histories remain largely unwritten.

The Scholar’s Archive

A curated repository for researchers, students, and scholars — digitised manuscripts, conservation studies, and script evolution papers.

Access Archive
Research Paper

The Evolution of Nastaliq in the Mughal Ateliers

A comparative study of manuscript hands from Akbar’s scriptorium through Aurangzeb’s period — tracing individual master calligraphers through stylistic analysis.

Dr. Farrukh Ahmed 2024
Conservation Study

Paper and Ink Preservation: Methods for Indian Manuscripts

Conservation protocols developed at Tasmia for dealing with the specific challenges of South Asian manuscript materials, including handmade paper, soot inks, and mineral pigments.

Conservation Team 2023
Script Catalogue

Kufic Variants in Early Indian Qurans: A Visual Taxonomy

Detailed visual taxonomy of regional Kufic variants found in pre-Mughal Indian Quranic manuscripts, with high-resolution comparative plates.

Tasmia Research Unit 2024

Education Programmes

From school groups to doctoral researchers — Tasmia offers layered learning experiences built around authentic manuscript encounters.

Manuscript Workshops

Hands-on sessions with paper marbling, traditional ink-making, and basic calligraphy instruction. Available for all ages. Conducted by practising calligraphers.

Register Now

Scholarly Guided Tours

Curated tours of the collection led by resident scholars. Themed routes: script evolution, illumination traditions, regional Quran schools, or material culture.

Book a Tour

Student Research Programme

A structured residency programme for graduate students and researchers — access to the archive, mentorship from resident scholars, and publication support.

Apply for Residency

Enter the Museum
from Anywhere

A virtual 360° walkthrough of the gallery spaces, plus a curated digital archive of manuscript details too fragile to exhibit.

Start Virtual Tour Browse Digital Archive
360° Gallery Walkthrough

Come to Tasmia

Location

Tasmia — Islamic Museum of Devotional Art
Rajpur Road, Dehradun, Uttarakhand 248001

Visiting Hours

Tuesday – Sunday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
Friday: 2:00 PM – 7:00 PM (Special Timings)
Monday: Closed

Entry

General: ₹150  |  Students: ₹75
Researchers & Scholars: Free (with ID)

Book a Guided Tour

Dehradun, Uttarakhand

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