



Tafsir-e Tabari: The first complete translation of the Quran in Persian, along with its tafsir, which has survived till today.An incomplete Berber translation may have been promulgated by the Barghawata King Salih ibn Tarif in the 8th century, radically expanded with original, non-Quranic material which he claimed had been revealed to him.The 9th-century Persian traveller Buzurg bin Shahryar mentions in his travelogue, Ajaib-ul Hind, that the Hindu king of Mehroke in Kashmir had commissioned the preparation of a Kashmiri translation of the Quran. " wrote a letter to Amir Abdullah bin Umar bin Abdul Aziz of Mansura, requesting him to dispatch a scholar to his court who could explain the tenets of the Islamic shariah in the language "al-Hindia". an anonymous early 9th century Kashmiri Hindu king.

Although not existing today, a Sindhi translation was completed in 884 in Alwar (present-day Sindh, Pakistan), which had been commissioned by Abdullah bin Umar bin Abdul Aziz.It is known (and substantial fragments of it are preserved) because it was used by Nicetas Byzantius, a scholar from Constantinople, in his 'Refutatio' written between 855 and 870. Greek: The purpose is unknown but it is confirmed to be the first-ever complete translation of the Quran.Salman the Persian translated the first chapter of the Qur'an, Al-Fatiha, from Arabic to Persian.Historical (up to the 21st century) 7th–10th centuries
