[Haft paykar].[هفت پيکر]. | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

[Haft paykar].[هفت پيکر].
( هفت پيکر)

İsim [Haft paykar].[هفت پيکر].
İsim Orijinal هفت پيکر
Yazar Niẓāmī Ganjavī, 1140 or 1141-1202 or 1203, author.
Basım Tarihi: 1500
Basım Yeri [Iran], [between 1500 and 1599] -
Konu History., Iran., Bahrām V, King of Iran, -438., Iran--History--To 640--Poetry., Storytelling.
Tür Belge
Dil Farsça
Dijital Hayır
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 68 leaves : paper, color illustrations ; 248 x 158 (166 x 88) mm bound to 248 x 166 mm
Kütüphane: Penn Kütüphaneleri
Demirbaş Numarası 779626678
Kayıt Numarası 9954448733503681
Lokasyon University of Pennsylvania Libraries
Tarih 1500
Notlar Ms. codex., Title supplied by cataloger., Foliation: Paper, viii + 68 + viii; [1-68]; the original order of the text, using the current foliation, is 1-12, 24-43, 13-22, 44-68; leaves missing between f. 54 and f. 55., Layout: 17 lines in the central text block (with a division marked between the halves of the couplet on each line), followed by 18 lines written diagonally in the margins, which are ruled along the top, outer, and bottom edges of the columns on each page. Several folios contain corrections or notes along the outermost margins; these are written horizontally along the vertical edges when corresponding to vertical columns or diagonally when corresponding to diagonal sections. Catchword on each leaf, lower left verso., Script: Written in neat nastaʻlīq script; pointed., Decoration: Illuminated headpiece without a title (f. 1v); columns and diagonal sections in margins outlined in gold; outer margin of text block framed in gold, green, and blue; headings in red ink., Binding: Red morocco with blue painted frame and tooled design of circles along the frame, detached. Doublure same as board covers., Origin: Written in Iran in the 16th century., Fragile; worm damage (suggesting at least a phase of the manuscript's history in South Asia), particularly in gutters; oxidation causing long, straight cuts at the ruled margins of several leaves. | Lawrence J. Schoenberg & Barbara Brizdle Manuscript Initiative. | Persian. | Sold by bookseller Thomas Thorpe (London) to Sir Thomas Phillipps, ms. 10465 (stamp, first flyleaf; paper label on spine)., Sold at auction at Sotheby's by the Trustees of the Robinson Trust as part of a collection of Persian, Turkish, and Arabic manuscripts owned by Sir Thomas Phillipps, 25 November 1968, lot 233, to Lawrence J. Schoenberg., Deposit by Lawrence J. Schoenberg and Barbara Brizdle, 2011., Gift of Barbara Brizdle Schoenberg, 2016.
Örnek Metin Lacunose 16th-century copy of a 12th-century romance about the life of Bahrām Gūr, a fifth-century Sasanian king of Iran; the title Haft paykar (in English, Seven beauties or Seven images) refers to the seven princesses that Bahrām marries, each of whom tells the king a story. The text is part of a quintet, or khamsah, of masnavīs—a genre of Persian narrative poetry—by the Persian poet Niẓāmī Ganjavī. It recounts the life of Bahrām Gūr, from his birth to his disappearance in a cave at the narrative's conclusion. The word tam (the end), is written at the end of the romance (f. 68v). Some leaves are out of order in the codex. The correct order, using the current foliation, is 1-12, 24-43, 13-22, 44-68. A section of text is missing, including the end of the Wednesday narrative, all of the Thursday (sandal, or soft brown) narrative, and the beginning of the Friday narrative (following f. 54), One of the leaves, sharing the same layout as the other folios, belongs to a different text from Niẓāmī's quintet, Khusraw o Shīrīn (f. 23). This, along with the absence of a colophon at the end of this manuscript, suggests that the codex likely belonged to a larger set. (Neha Tiwari, University of Pennsylvania)
Atıf Şekli Niẓāmī Ganjavī, Haft paykar (LJS 422). Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, University of Pennsylvania Libraries.
Tür Poetry., Manuscripts, Persian -- 16th century., Manuscripts, Renaissance., codices (bound manuscripts), romances (medieval narratives), Fiction., History.
Kaynağa git Penn Kütüphaneleri Penn Libraries
Penn Libraries Penn Kütüphaneleri
Kaynağa git

[Haft paykar].[هفت پيکر].

( هفت پيکر)
Yazar Niẓāmī Ganjavī, 1140 or 1141-1202 or 1203, author.
Basım Tarihi 1500
Basım Yeri [Iran], [between 1500 and 1599] -
Konu History., Iran., Bahrām V, King of Iran, -438., Iran--History--To 640--Poetry., Storytelling.
Tür Belge
Dil Farsça
Dijital Hayır
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 68 leaves : paper, color illustrations ; 248 x 158 (166 x 88) mm bound to 248 x 166 mm
Kütüphane Penn Kütüphaneleri
Demirbaş Numarası 779626678
Kayıt Numarası 9954448733503681
Lokasyon University of Pennsylvania Libraries
Tarih 1500
Notlar Ms. codex., Title supplied by cataloger., Foliation: Paper, viii + 68 + viii; [1-68]; the original order of the text, using the current foliation, is 1-12, 24-43, 13-22, 44-68; leaves missing between f. 54 and f. 55., Layout: 17 lines in the central text block (with a division marked between the halves of the couplet on each line), followed by 18 lines written diagonally in the margins, which are ruled along the top, outer, and bottom edges of the columns on each page. Several folios contain corrections or notes along the outermost margins; these are written horizontally along the vertical edges when corresponding to vertical columns or diagonally when corresponding to diagonal sections. Catchword on each leaf, lower left verso., Script: Written in neat nastaʻlīq script; pointed., Decoration: Illuminated headpiece without a title (f. 1v); columns and diagonal sections in margins outlined in gold; outer margin of text block framed in gold, green, and blue; headings in red ink., Binding: Red morocco with blue painted frame and tooled design of circles along the frame, detached. Doublure same as board covers., Origin: Written in Iran in the 16th century., Fragile; worm damage (suggesting at least a phase of the manuscript's history in South Asia), particularly in gutters; oxidation causing long, straight cuts at the ruled margins of several leaves. | Lawrence J. Schoenberg & Barbara Brizdle Manuscript Initiative. | Persian. | Sold by bookseller Thomas Thorpe (London) to Sir Thomas Phillipps, ms. 10465 (stamp, first flyleaf; paper label on spine)., Sold at auction at Sotheby's by the Trustees of the Robinson Trust as part of a collection of Persian, Turkish, and Arabic manuscripts owned by Sir Thomas Phillipps, 25 November 1968, lot 233, to Lawrence J. Schoenberg., Deposit by Lawrence J. Schoenberg and Barbara Brizdle, 2011., Gift of Barbara Brizdle Schoenberg, 2016.
Örnek Metin Lacunose 16th-century copy of a 12th-century romance about the life of Bahrām Gūr, a fifth-century Sasanian king of Iran; the title Haft paykar (in English, Seven beauties or Seven images) refers to the seven princesses that Bahrām marries, each of whom tells the king a story. The text is part of a quintet, or khamsah, of masnavīs—a genre of Persian narrative poetry—by the Persian poet Niẓāmī Ganjavī. It recounts the life of Bahrām Gūr, from his birth to his disappearance in a cave at the narrative's conclusion. The word tam (the end), is written at the end of the romance (f. 68v). Some leaves are out of order in the codex. The correct order, using the current foliation, is 1-12, 24-43, 13-22, 44-68. A section of text is missing, including the end of the Wednesday narrative, all of the Thursday (sandal, or soft brown) narrative, and the beginning of the Friday narrative (following f. 54), One of the leaves, sharing the same layout as the other folios, belongs to a different text from Niẓāmī's quintet, Khusraw o Shīrīn (f. 23). This, along with the absence of a colophon at the end of this manuscript, suggests that the codex likely belonged to a larger set. (Neha Tiwari, University of Pennsylvania)
Atıf Şekli Niẓāmī Ganjavī, Haft paykar (LJS 422). Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, University of Pennsylvania Libraries.
Tür Poetry., Manuscripts, Persian -- 16th century., Manuscripts, Renaissance., codices (bound manuscripts), romances (medieval narratives), Fiction., History.
Penn Libraries
Penn Kütüphaneleri yönlendiriliyorsunuz...

Lütfen bekleyiniz.