Three Arabic manuscripts: 1. Mukhtaṣar al-Durr al-thamīn wa-al-mawrid al-muʻīn, sharḥ al-Murshid al-muʻīn ʻalá al-ḍarūrī min ʻulūm al-dīn li-Ibn ʻĀshir by Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad Mayyārah al-Fāsī al-Mālikī, 1590 or 91-1661 or 2 (a Malikī Scholar from the city of Fés, Morocco), being an abridgment of his own work al-Durr al-thamīn wa-al-mawrid al-muʻīn (on Islamic Iaw and doctrines), itself a commentary on a treatise in verse entitled al-Murshid al-muʻīn ʻalá al-ḍarūrī min ʻulūm al-dīn by ʻAbd al-Wāḥid ibn Aḥmad ibn ʻĀshir, 1582 or 3-1630 or 31, a prolific Mālikī scholar also from the city of Fés, Morocco (folios 1a-106a). The verses of Ibn ʻĀshir's poem are written in red. 2. al-Ajurrūmiyah (a famous work on Arabic grammar) by Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad ibn Ājurrūm, 1273 or 4-1323, a prolific Muslim scholar and grammarian from the city of Fés, Morocco (folios 106b-112a). 3. ʻIshrūn min ṣifāt Allāh (Twenty attributes of God) by an anonymous. The first manuscritp is dated but the date is not clear due to dampness, probably 8 Rabīʻ al-Thānī, 1128 (1 April, 1716). The other two manuscripts are not dated. Name and place of copyist are not mentioned, probably in Morocco.