London: The palimpsest of a Holy Quran copied onto a Christian text has achieved £596,790 (USD831,299 or OMR320,000 approx.) during the Art of the Islamic and Indian Worlds Including Oriental Rugs and Carpets auction, which is still ongoing.
Lot 1 of the sale was a manuscript dating to the earliest period of Islam. The leaves from these folios derive from an earlier Coptic manuscript containing passages from the Book of Deuteronomy, which is part of the Torah and the Christian Old Testament. It was very probably produced in Egypt, home to the Coptic community.
This appears to be the only recorded example of a Holy Quran written above a Christian text and the importance of this manuscript resonates with the historical reality of religious communities in the Near East, and as such are an invaluable survival from the earliest centuries of Islam.
With the help of French scholar Dr. Eléonore Cellard, this remarkable discovery was made, as the folios are in fact a palimpsest, which is a manuscript from which the first writing has been effaced so that the vellum could be reused. Beneath the Arabic script an original Coptic text may clearly be seen.