Corner details of monkey, birds and rabbits, folio from the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj) by Jāmī | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

Corner details of monkey, birds and rabbits, folio from the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj) by Jāmī

İsim Corner details of monkey, birds and rabbits, folio from the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj) by Jāmī
Yazar Mashhad
Basım Tarihi: Calligraphy 1520 (926H), painting and borders 1606-1607 (1015H)
Tür Belge
Dil Farsça
Dijital Evet
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 324 mm x 207 mm (height x width)
Kütüphane: Chester Beatty
Kayıt Numarası In 20.105
Lokasyon Indian collection
Tarih Calligraphy 1520 (926H), painting and borders 1606-1607 (1015H)
Notlar Corner details of monkey, birds and rabbits, folio from the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj) by Jāmī (d. 1492). This page of Persian poetry comes from a book entitled the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj), which is also at Chester Beatty (CBL In 20). The Five Treasures in the title are selected from the Seven Thrones (Haft Awrang), an anthology of seven great works composed by the Persian Sufi poet and statesman `Abd al-Raḥmān Jāmī (d. 1492), who lived in Herat (Afghanistan) under the Timurid dynasty. The book has seen two major phases of production, as well as several shifts in political history. The text was written out by the great master calligrapher Sulṭān `Alī Mashhadī in 1520, the final year of his life. His career had overlapped with that of Jāmī, and the two must have known of each other in Herat, where they both served the Timurid ruler Sulṭān Ḥusayn Bāyqarā (d. 1506). According to an additional note in the manuscript, it took the calligrapher twelve years to write out the full text, during which time Timurid Herat fell to the Uzbek Shaybanids, and Sulṭān `Alī Mashhadī retired back to Mashhad (in Iran). By the time he finished, the calligrapher’s initial patron prince Badī` al-Zamān Mīrzā (d. 1514) was long dead, and the book was gifted by a Barlas amir (Mīrzā `Alī Beg, son of a Timurid court official) to the Safavid shah Ismā`īl, in 1522-3. A major transformation came in the early seventeenth century, when the book belonged to the commander-in-chief of the Mughal army in India, `Abd al-Raḥīm Khānkhānān (d. 1627). A renowned book-collector, he ordered a dramatic refurbishment of this already highly-regarded manuscript: the artist Mushfiq added exquisite tiny paintings into the blank spaces between the text-columns throughout, and lively gold-stencilled borders of deep colour were added around the original Persian text. This embellishment was completed in 1606-7, and in 1624 the owner presented it to the Mughal ruler Jahāngīr, for the imperial library. Folio, ink, colours and gold on paper, Persian poetry in nasta`liq script, with tiny paintings of monkey and birds (recto) and rabbits and bird (verso) inserted between text-columns, and borders with gold-outlined stencilled designs of birds hunting insects among trees, the Alexandrian Book of Wisdom (Khiradnama-ye Iskandari) with Yusuf and Zulaykhā written diagonally in the margin, from the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj) by `Abd al-Raḥmān Jāmī (d. 1492), text copied by Sultan `Ali Mashhadi, probably starting in Herat (Afghanistan) and completing in Mashhad, Iran, dated 15 Dhu'l-Hijja 920H (signature and date on In 20.46r), 26 November 1520, with the borders and paintings added for later owner `Abd al-Raḥīm Khānkhānān (d. 1627), India, dated 1015H, 1606-1607.
Materyal Paper (material), Pigment (material), Ink (material), Gold
Nesne Adı Folio / Bi-Folio (Codex)
Yazı Tipi Nasta'liq script
Kaynağa git Chester Beatty Chester Beatty

Corner details of monkey, birds and rabbits, folio from the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj) by Jāmī

Yazar Mashhad
Basım Tarihi Calligraphy 1520 (926H), painting and borders 1606-1607 (1015H)
Tür Belge
Dil Farsça
Dijital Evet
Yazma Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar 324 mm x 207 mm (height x width)
Kütüphane Chester Beatty
Kayıt Numarası In 20.105
Lokasyon Indian collection
Tarih Calligraphy 1520 (926H), painting and borders 1606-1607 (1015H)
Notlar Corner details of monkey, birds and rabbits, folio from the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj) by Jāmī (d. 1492). This page of Persian poetry comes from a book entitled the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj), which is also at Chester Beatty (CBL In 20). The Five Treasures in the title are selected from the Seven Thrones (Haft Awrang), an anthology of seven great works composed by the Persian Sufi poet and statesman `Abd al-Raḥmān Jāmī (d. 1492), who lived in Herat (Afghanistan) under the Timurid dynasty. The book has seen two major phases of production, as well as several shifts in political history. The text was written out by the great master calligrapher Sulṭān `Alī Mashhadī in 1520, the final year of his life. His career had overlapped with that of Jāmī, and the two must have known of each other in Herat, where they both served the Timurid ruler Sulṭān Ḥusayn Bāyqarā (d. 1506). According to an additional note in the manuscript, it took the calligrapher twelve years to write out the full text, during which time Timurid Herat fell to the Uzbek Shaybanids, and Sulṭān `Alī Mashhadī retired back to Mashhad (in Iran). By the time he finished, the calligrapher’s initial patron prince Badī` al-Zamān Mīrzā (d. 1514) was long dead, and the book was gifted by a Barlas amir (Mīrzā `Alī Beg, son of a Timurid court official) to the Safavid shah Ismā`īl, in 1522-3. A major transformation came in the early seventeenth century, when the book belonged to the commander-in-chief of the Mughal army in India, `Abd al-Raḥīm Khānkhānān (d. 1627). A renowned book-collector, he ordered a dramatic refurbishment of this already highly-regarded manuscript: the artist Mushfiq added exquisite tiny paintings into the blank spaces between the text-columns throughout, and lively gold-stencilled borders of deep colour were added around the original Persian text. This embellishment was completed in 1606-7, and in 1624 the owner presented it to the Mughal ruler Jahāngīr, for the imperial library. Folio, ink, colours and gold on paper, Persian poetry in nasta`liq script, with tiny paintings of monkey and birds (recto) and rabbits and bird (verso) inserted between text-columns, and borders with gold-outlined stencilled designs of birds hunting insects among trees, the Alexandrian Book of Wisdom (Khiradnama-ye Iskandari) with Yusuf and Zulaykhā written diagonally in the margin, from the Five Treasures (Panj Ganj) by `Abd al-Raḥmān Jāmī (d. 1492), text copied by Sultan `Ali Mashhadi, probably starting in Herat (Afghanistan) and completing in Mashhad, Iran, dated 15 Dhu'l-Hijja 920H (signature and date on In 20.46r), 26 November 1520, with the borders and paintings added for later owner `Abd al-Raḥīm Khānkhānān (d. 1627), India, dated 1015H, 1606-1607.
Materyal Paper (material), Pigment (material), Ink (material), Gold
Nesne Adı Folio / Bi-Folio (Codex)
Yazı Tipi Nasta'liq script
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