This exhibition was made possible in particular thanks to cooperation with the Lithuanian National Museum in Vilnius, which provided valuable monuments of ancient Tatar writing. Another extraordinary monument for conservation reasons, shown at the exhibition only for a certain period of time, will be a unique Tatar copy of the Nesvizh Arian Bible from 1572, preserved in the collection of the University of Warsaw Library (which is being prepared for submission to the UNESCO Memory of the World (MoW) Register).
Photo gallery from the exhibition
Co-financed by the Minister of Culture and National Heritage as part of the task “Co-financing the final part of the documentation and exhibition project, devoted to, among others, works of old manuscripts of Polish-Lithuanian Tatars”.
Co-financed by the Minister of Culture and National Heritage as part of the task “Co-financing the final part of the documentation and exhibition project, devoted to, among others, works of old manuscripts of Polish-Lithuanian Tatars”.