TWENTY NIELLOED SILVER AND COPPER-ALLOY MINIATURE BELLS
TWENTY NIELLOED SILVER AND COPPER-ALLOY MINIATURE BELLS
TWENTY NIELLOED SILVER AND COPPER-ALLOY MINIATURE BELLS
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TWENTY NIELLOED SILVER AND COPPER-ALLOY MINIATURE BELLS

KONYA, OTTOMAN TURKEY, 19TH CENTURY AND LATER

Details
TWENTY NIELLOED SILVER AND COPPER-ALLOY MINIATURE BELLS
KONYA, OTTOMAN TURKEY, 19TH CENTURY AND LATER
Each with slightly bulbous flaring end, nine bells with inscriptions in naskh script reading Konya, Yadgar, Mulana, ‘Konya, in the memory of Maulana [Jalal al-Din Rumi]’, on stand
Largest 1 ½in. (3.8cm.) high

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Cosima Stewart
Cosima Stewart

Lot Essay

Konya, a city in central Turkey, is the main centre of sufism of the Mevlevi order and of pilgrimage. Mevlevi sufism is focused on the teaching of its founder the Persian scholar, poet, theologian Jalal al-Din Rumi. Music, expecially percussions, are central to the sufi rituals of worship. Those bells fashioned after the hat the Mevlevi dervishes wear were very likely meant as mementoes to the visitors to Konya and especially to the tomb of Rumi.

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