Yazar
Written by al-Istakhri
Basım Tarihi
AH 706 / AD 1306–07
Basım Yeri
Iran, perhaps Isfahan -
Konu
Ilkhanids — ink, gold, silver and opaque watercolour on paper; contemporary leather binding
Tür
kitap
Dil
Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital
Evet
Yazma
Evet
Fiziksel Boyutlar
25cm x 15cm
Kütüphane
Museum With No Frontiers
Demirbaş Numarası
MSS 972
Kayıt Numarası
GalEx6_uk_Mus82_3
Lokasyon
Nasser D. Khalili Collection of Islamic Art
Tarih
AH 706 / AD 1306–07
Notlar
The AH 4th / AD 10th-century Persian geographer al-Istakhri was one of the most important figures in the evolution of Arab cartography. He travelled widely, but his account of Arabia (Hijaz, Yemen and the Gulf) is curiously sketchy, particularly given the importance of the Pilgrimage. This is partly because, as the title of this treatise,Kitabal-masalik wa’l-mamalik(‘the book of postal routes and kingdoms’), suggests, it is based on lists of stations on the postal routes of theAbbasidheartlands and in Iran, which were not available for Arabia and Egypt.In its present state the manuscript is incomplete. It opens with a splendid page of illumination in gold and silver, and on the penultimate page (folio 120a) is a colophon with the date AH 706 / AD 1307, possibly a later addition. It contains the following maps: Arabia (Hijaz, Yemen and the Gulf); Egypt; the Mediterranean (Bahr-i Rum); Iraq (central and upper Mesopotamia); Khuzistan; Fars;Kirman; Sind; lower Mesopotamia and western Iran (‘Iraq-i ‘Ajam); Tabaristan; the Caspian; the central Iranian desert between Fars andKhurasan;Khurasan; Central Asia, from Transcaspia to beyond Bukhara; Ceylon (Sarandib), with Adam’s Peak and the west coast of India. The map of Sind is a later replacement, and a number of maps announced in the text are now missing. They were obviously lost when the original manuscript was unbound, perhaps for repairs, and the remaining folios rebound in the wrong order.
Örnek Metin
dated AH 706 (AD 1306–7).
Bu sayfanın künyesi
Prepared by:Qaisra KHAN
Seçili bibliyografya
Rogers, J.M.,The Arts of Islam. Masterpieces from the Khalili Collection, London: Thames & Hudson, 2010: cat.198, pp. 166-167.