KHWAJU KIRMANI (D. AH 725⁄1325 AD): KHAMSA
KHWAJU KIRMANI (D. AH 725⁄1325 AD): KHAMSA
KHWAJU KIRMANI (D. AH 725⁄1325 AD): KHAMSA
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KHWAJU KIRMANI (D. AH 725⁄1325 AD): KHAMSA
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KHWAJU KIRMANI (D.1325): KHAMSA

COPIED BY MUHAMMAD RIZA AL-KATIB AL-BALKHI, ASHTARKHANID BUKHARA, UZBEKISTAN, FIRST TEN DAYS OF DHU'L HIJJA AH 1029/END OF OCTOBER 1620 AD

细节
KHWAJU KIRMANI (D.1325): KHAMSA
COPIED BY MUHAMMAD RIZA AL-KATIB AL-BALKHI, ASHTARKHANID BUKHARA, UZBEKISTAN, FIRST TEN DAYS OF DHU'L HIJJA AH 1029/END OF OCTOBER 1620 AD
Poetry, Persian manuscript on gold-sprinkled cream paper, 155ff. plus two flyleaves, each folio with 21ll. black nasta'liq arranged in four columns with gold intercolumnar rules, headings in red, set within gold rules, opening folio with finely illuminated shamsa dedication to Imam Quli Bahadur Khan, the following folio with 13ll. black nasta'liq beneath a finely illuminated gold and polychrome headpiece, two further finely illuminated headings, the colophon signed and dated, red morocco binding inlaid with black and white leather, the central cartouche with pendants against an arabesque ground, set within a border of black nasta'liq in cartouches, abjad date of AH 1040⁄1630-31 AD, découpé doublures, overall good condition
Text panel 8 1⁄8 x 4 ¾in. (20.5 x 12cm.); folio 11 ¾ x 7in. (29.7 x 17.8cm.)
来源
Anon sale, Christie's London, 23 April 2002, lot 61

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Under Imam Quli Khan (r. 1611-42) the Khanate of Bukhara reached its zenith, encompassing Transoxiana and large parts of Khorassan. A charismatic and cosmopolitan ruler, his court maintained friendly diplomatic contacts with both Shah 'Abbas (r. 1588-1629) and the Emperor Jahangir (r. 1605-27). In addition to the more standard diplomatic mission, the latter records in his memoirs that "the mother of Imam Quli Khan, the ruler of Turan (i.e. Transoxiana), sent a letter filled with expressions of loyalty and friendship to Nurjahan Begam and sent rarities from that land as gifts" (Wheeler Thackston, The Jahangirnama: Memoirs of Jahangir, Emperor of India, Washington D.C., 1999, p. 363). When, towards the end of his life, Imam Quli Khan began to lose his eyesight, he abdicated and undertook the Hajj, dying in Mecca three years later. An illuminated firman made for Imam Quli Khan was sold in these Rooms, 10 October 2013, lot 80.

According to the dedication in the shamsa, the manuscript was completed under the supervision of the librarian Mirak Yadgar, possibly identifiable as the otherwise unknown calligrapher and painter Mirak Munshi, who worked in the scriptorium of 'Abd al-'Aziz Khan, nephew of Imam Quli Khan (M.'A. Karimzadeh-Tabrizi.: The Lives and Art of Old Painters in Iran, London, 1991, p. 1339). The illumination is very fine and crisp and the palette unusual. The manuscript is also notable for containing four illuminated panels. One illuminated panel follows the shamsa page at the beginning and a further three throughout the text. The striking binding is contemporary with the manuscript. A fine copy of the Khamsa of Nizami with paintings made for 'Abd al-'Aziz Khan in AH 1064-6 / 1653-6 AD was sold in these Rooms, 25 April 1997, lot 64.

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