A PIERCED-STEEL PROCESSIONAL STANDARD ('ALAM)
A PIERCED-STEEL PROCESSIONAL STANDARD ('ALAM)
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The USA prohibits the purchase by US persons of Ir… Read more
A PIERCED-STEEL PROCESSIONAL STANDARD ('ALAM)

SAFAVID IRAN, 17TH OR 18TH CENTURY

Details
A PIERCED-STEEL PROCESSIONAL STANDARD ('ALAM)
SAFAVID IRAN, 17TH OR 18TH CENTURY
Of drop shape with extending upper panel, with openwork scrolling decoration issuing palmettes and flowerheads, the work in the main body with a benedictory inscription in naskh, a ribbed exterior band issuing dragons' heads, cusped base plate, contemporary metal block base
36 1⁄2in. (92.8cm.) high
Engraved
nasr min Allah wa fath qari, 'Victory from God and victory is near'
Special notice
The USA prohibits the purchase by US persons of Iranian-origin “works of conventional craftsmanship” such as carpets, textiles, decorative objects, and scientific instruments. The US sanctions apply to US persons regardless of the location of the transaction or the shipping intentions of the US person. For this reason, Christie’s will not accept bids by US persons on this lot. Non-US persons wishing to import this lot into the USA are advised that they will need to apply for an OFAC licence and that this can take many months to be granted.

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Barney Bartlett
Barney Bartlett Junior Specialist

Lot Essay

nasr min Allah wa fath qari, 'Victory from God and victory is near'

Military, royal and religious metal standards (‘alam) can be traced back to early times in Iran. They occur for example, among Luristan bronzes and Achaemenid depictions. By the second half of the 14th century a central ornament above a pair of inward facing dragon’s heads was evidently an important, possibly royal, type of military emblem, as seen on some contemporaneous miniatures of the time. In the mid-15th century, however, the design destined to dominate standard styles for the following centuries was introduced – a pear shaped centre, an ornamental point, and a double dragon, with their heads turned outwards rather than inwards, as seen on our example (James Allan and Brian Gilmour, Persian Steel. The Tanavoli Collection, Oxford Studies in Islamic Art XV, Oxford, 200, pp. 254-55). The pictorial evidence available from the 14th to 17th century demonstrate the use of standards in battle and as a indicators of the presence of the sovereign. By the early 17th century, however, standards had assumed a religious role as well. Olearius, amongst other European travellers to Persian in the 17th century, describes a number of examples where alams were used in non-imperial context, supporting their religious importance in the 17th century (Allan and Gilmour, op.cit., p. 259). Our almond shaped ‘alam would have been used in such religious ceremonies in the later Safavid period, and falls into group B of Allan’s different groups of ‘alams (Allan and Gilmour, op.cit., p.268).
Melikian-Chirvani discusses the royal symbolism of dragon heads (A.S. Melikian-Chirvani, ‘Le Shah-Name, la gnose soufie et le pouvoir mongol’, Journal Asiatique, vol.272, nos.1-2, 1984, p.323) whilst contemporary craftsman believe that the dragon’s heads protect the Qur’anic verses through their fiery breath, as seen in our example (Allan and Gilmour, op.cit., p.263). Standard making in contemporary Iran is still an active guild since they are used to commemorate the shia religious mourning rituals around the battle of Karbala.
An impressive pierced steel Safavid alam with similar dragon heads sold in these Rooms, 27 April 2017, lot 93. Another earlier dated example sold at Sotheby’s London, 24 October 2018, lot 139.

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