
Muslim Thai Bibliography
8.1. Kitab Jawi
Anonymous. (2013). Berjihad di Pattani (The Fight for the Liberation of Pattani). In R. Gunaratna & A. Acharya (Eds.), The Terrorist Threat from Thailand: Jihad Or Quest for Justice? (pp. 118–145). Dulles: Potomac Books.
Bradley, F. R. (2007a). Primary Source Materials on Southern Thailand Located in Malaysia. Cormosea Bulletin, 30(1).
Bradley, F. R. (2007b). Sheikh Daud bin Abdullah al-Fatani’s Writings Contained in the National Library of Malaysia. Jurnal Filologi Melayu, 16.
Faisol Haji Awang, & Moris, Z. (2009, Dec 11–12). The Intellectual Contribution of Shaykh Daud al-Fatani to the Malay Muslim Community in Southeast Asia (Nusantara) Through His Jawi Work, al-Durr al-Thamin (The Precious Jewel). Paper presented at The Phantasm in Southern Thailand: Historical Writings on Patani and the Islamic World, Chulalongkorn University.
Farouk Yahya. (2016). Magic and divination in Malay illustrated manuscripts. Leiden: Brill.
Farouk Yahya. (2017). The wheel diagram in the Malay divinatory technique of the Faal Qur’an. Indonesia and the Malay World, 45(132), 200–225.
Farouk Yahya. (2021). Calligrams of the Lion of ʿAlī in Southeast Asia. In L. Saif et al. (Eds.), Islamicate Occult Sciences in Theory and Practice (pp. 454–526). Leiden: Brill.
Gallop, A. (2017). Malay manuscripts from Patani. 🔗
Gallop, A. T. (2005a). Manuscript Art of Kelantan: Between Terengganu and Patani. Paper presented at The Spirit and Form of Malay Design, Kuala Lumpur.
Gallop, A. T. (2005b). The Spirit of Langkasuka? Illuminated Manuscripts from the East Coast of the Malay Peninsula. Indonesia and the Malay World, 33(96), 113–182.
Gallop, A. T. (2010). Palace and Pondok: Patronage and Production of Illuminated Manuscripts on the East Coast of the Malay Peninsula. In Zawiya Baba (Ed.), Warisan Seni Ukir Kayu Melayu (pp. 143–162). Bangi: Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Press.
Gallop, A. T. (2017). Malay manuscripts from Patani. 🔗
Hasan Madmarn. (2009). The Strategy of Islamic Education in Southern Thailand: The Kitab Jawi and Islamic Heritage. The Journal of Sophia Asian Studies, 27(1), 38–49.
Horstmann, A. (2000). Nostalgia, Resistance and Beyond: Contesting Uses of Jawi Islamic Literature and the Political Identity of the Patani Malays. Journal of Sophia Asian Studies, 20, 111–122.
Ibrahim Narongraksakhet. (2010). Shaykh Daud al-Fatani Jawi Textbooks and the Malay Language. In Rosnani Hashim (Ed.), Reclaiming the conversation: Islamic intellectual tradition in the Malay Archipelago (pp. 1–15). Kuala Lumpur: The Other Press.
Iik Arifin Mansurnoor. (2009, Dec 11–12). Locating Traditional, Islamic and Modern Historiography in Patani-Jawi Identity. Paper presented at The Phantasm in Southern Thailand: Historical Writings on Patani and the Islamic World, Chulalongkorn University.
Jajat Burhanudin. (2022). Two Islamic Writing Traditions in Southeast Asia: Kitab Jawi and Kitab Kuning with Reference to the Works of Da’ud al-Fatani dan Nawawi al-Bantani. Al-Jami’ah: Journal of Islamic Studies, 60(1), 1–28.
Kratz, E. U. (1996). Southeast Asian Languages and Literatures: A Bibliographic Guide to Burmese, Cambodian, Indonesian, Javanese, Malay, Minangkabau, Thai, and Vietnamese. London: I. B. Tauris.
Matheson-Hooker, V., & Hooker, M. B. (1988). Jawi Literature in Patani: The Maintenance of an Islamic Tradition. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 61(1), 1–86.
Muhammad Arafat bin Mohamad. (2013). Be-longing: Fatanis in Makkah and Jawi. (Ph.D. thesis). Harvard University.
Newbold, T. J. (1838). A Note on Malayan Mss. and the Books Presented to the Society. Madras Journal of Literature and Science, 7, 78–88.



