Manuscript
NEP33.366
From: Iran | Shiraz
Curatorial Section: Near Eastern
Object Number | NEP33.366 |
Current Location | Collections Storage |
Culture | Persian |
Provenience | Iran | Shiraz |
Period | 16th Century |
Date Made | 1584 CE |
Section | Near Eastern |
Materials | Paper | Ink | Leather |
Iconography | Nizami Khamsah |
Description | Khamsah (or Quintet), poems written by Jamal al-din Abu Muhammad Ilyas ibn Yusuf ibn Zaki Mu'ayyad, usually know by the pen name, Nizami. The greatest Persian poet, he spent most of his life (b. 575-613H [1141-1146 CE]; d. 575-623H [1180-217CE]) in Ganja, (former Elizabehtpol), present-day Azerbayjan. This copy, without its original cover, comprises 359 folios, with two-double paged illumination interleaved with a double-page frontispiece paingtin showing throne scene, and with a double-page finispiece painting showing a banquet. Every one of the five poems begins with an elaborate title heading, and ends with a carpet page and a place for a colophon. The manuscript is written in nasta'liq script and has twenty-seven paintings. Copied in Shira, Iran, by Qasim Katib (uncertain) in teh months of Muharram to Jumada II, 992 H [1584 CE]. |
Credit Line | Purchased from H. Khan Monif, 1926 |
Other Number | 366a/366b - Other Number |
Report problems and issues to digitalmedia@pennmuseum.org.