Qur'an
From Wikisource
| Works entitled Qur'an |
The Qur'ān is the central religious text of Islam. Muslims believe the Qur'an to be the literal word of God as revealed to Muhammad over a period of twenty-three years by the angel Gabriel and regard it as God's final revelation to mankind.— Excerpted from Qur'an on Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. |
Public domain [edit]
- Alcoran of Mahomet, translation from the French by Alexander Ross, 1649 [1]
- The Koran (1734), as translated by George Sale[2]
- The Koran (1861), by John Medows Rodwell (scan)
- The Holy Qur'an (1917, revised 1920), by Maulana Muhammad Ali [3]

- El-Kor'an: The Suras Arranged in Chronological Order, (1876) by John Medows Rodwell[4]
- The Qur'ân, (1880) by E.H. Palmer. (scans of part 1 and part 2)
- Quran, a translation by Progressive Muslims Organization. Includes a transliteration of the Arabic.
Public domain outside of the United States [edit]
- The Holy Qur'an, translation by Abdullah Yusuf Ali, 1938.
- The Meaning of the Glorious Koran, translation by Marmaduke Pickthall, 1930