HILYEH
HILYEH

SIGNED MEHMET SA'DI EF FENDI, OTTOMAN TURKEY, PERIOD OF 'ABD AL-MECID I (R.1839-61)

Details
HILYEH
SIGNED MEHMET SA'DI EF FENDI, OTTOMAN TURKEY, PERIOD OF 'ABD AL-MECID I (R.1839-61)
Arabic manuscript on brown paper, laid down between minor gold-illuminated white borders on wide modern margins with floral design, mounted, glazed and framed
Calligraphy 13 5/8 x 9in. (34.6 x 22.7cm.)

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Sara Plumbly
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Lot Essay

In the cartouche at the bottom of this hilyeh it states that on the basis of this, the calligraphy instructor (hoca-ı meşk) at the Dar al-Ma’arif, founded by the Valide Sultan (the Sultan's mother), gave license to a certain Mehmet Sadi Effendi. The Dar al-Ma’arif was an institution founded on modern educational principles by Bezmialem Valide Sultan, the mother of Abdülmecid I, in 1850, which was intended to prepare students for the Dar al-Funun (today’s Istanbul University). The hilyeh was written probably before Bezmialem Sultan died in 1853 as there are none of the invocations of blessings that usually follow the name of a deceased person. The name of the calligraphy teacher is not given (M. Hüdai Şentürk, “Därülmaârif”, Islam Ansiklopedisi, vol.8, Ankara 1993, pp. 548-549).

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