A SAMARKAND POTTERY CALLIGRAPHIC BOWL
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A SAMARKAND POTTERY CALLIGRAPHIC BOWL

TRANSOXIANA, 10TH CENTURY

Details
A SAMARKAND POTTERY CALLIGRAPHIC BOWL
TRANSOXIANA, 10TH CENTURY
Of conical form on short foot, the cream coloured interior painted with an outer band of elegant kufic, a further similar band of red slip kufic inside, repaired clean breaks, very slight disolouration
10.3/8in. (26.4cm.) diam.
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus buyer's premium.

Lot Essay

The black inscription reads:
al-hurr wa in massahu al-durr (The noble man will always be noble even if hit by harm), a saying attributed to 'Ali.
The inner red inscription reads:
al-hirs 'alama[t al-]faqr (Greed is a sign of poverty).

A very similar bowl in the National Museum, Teheran (formerly the Iran Bastan Museum) has not only the two bands of red and black inscription, but the outer black band contains the same motto with the addition of the extra word al-yumn (good fortune) at the end (Gouchani, A.: Inscriptions on Nishapur Pottery, Tehran, 1986, no.1, p.22). That both bowls are probably by the same hand is indicated by the fact that both appear mis-spell the word massahu with a sad rather than a sin. In both cases there are three dots under the letter, normally an indication of a sin, despite its unusual epigraphy.

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