Calligrapher Mohamed Shawky

 Muhammad Shawqi was born in Seidler in Kastamoni on the Black Sea in 1244, and moved in his youth to Istanbul. He began learning calligraphy at an early age at the hands of his uncle Muhammad Khulusi (died in 1291), and obtained his license in 1257, and when he saw in him talent and brilliance, he decided to take it to Mustafa Ezzat, acknowledging that. That he could not benefit him more than he did, and out of appreciation for the blessing of his uncle upon him, he refrained from taking the line from others and received the righteous supplication from him. Tajweed reached a high position that made him the owner of a unique style in calligraphy that was followed by calligraphers after him, and it was narrated that he said: They taught me calligraphy in the world of dreams. Muhammad Shawqi worked in the "Editor's Record" with military glasses, and a professor of correction calligraphy in several military schools. At the same time, he was a teacher to the sons of Sultan Abdul Hamid II, and he received at his hands many outstanding calligraphers, among whom were Ahmed Aref Al-Filbawi and Muhammad Fahmy. Muhammad Shawqi was a first-class calligrapher, very keen on the accuracy of his lines and the difficulties he prepared for the students, and his friend Muhammad Sami said about him: “Shawki does not misdraw the letters, even if he wanted to.” . Shawqi was virtuous and chaste who did not get paid for his written work that he was writing, and what he brought as a pardon was sent to the needy in the village where he was born, and he was satisfied with the salary he received from his official job. He wrote a Quran and a number of guides for good deeds, decorations, pieces and sections, and a lot From various educational texts He died, may God have mercy on him, in Istanbul in 1304 and was buried next to his teacher and uncle Muhammad Khulusi.


 





Shawky's brochure free link

https://www.gulf-up.com/ll63ril54qyt

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