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Country of Origin:
Mughal India
Date of Origin
CIRCA 1595-1600
Use:
JBOC Comments:
Auction Catalogue Description:
ARTS
OF THE ISLAMIC WORLD
Sale L04220 lot 55
THE PROPERTY OF A NOBLEMAN
A MEMBER OF THE BARMAKID FAMILY OFFERING GIFTS TO
THE CALIPH, FROM THE AKHBAR-I BARMAKYAN, INDIA,
MUGHAL, CIRCA 1595-1600
London, New Bond Street 70,000100,000 GBP
Session 1
28 Apr 04 10:30 AM
Lot Sold. Hammer Price with Buyer's Premium:
84,000 GBP
measurements note
miniature 24.2 by 16.5cm. leaf 39.6 by 27.2cm.
gouache heightened with gold, paper laid down on
stout cream paper, one text panel containing two
lines of fine nasta'liq in black ink reading
"After having seen all the goods; the old
and the young unanimously said that they had
never seen such gifts and presents, and gold and
golden objects brought to the Caliph, and that no
king among the Arabs and non-Arabs had ever
imagined such wealth, and even among those who
had seen the world none remembered such
things", borders in colours and gold,
reverse with 9 lines of nasta'liq calligraphy in
Arabic and Persian, some evidence of worming
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PROVENANCE
A number of illustrated leaves from this manuscript are
thought to have been brought to Britain by John Montagu,
4th Earl of Sandwich (1718-1792). Sandwich served in the
Cabinet - twice as Secretary of State and three times as
first Lord of the Admiralty - and played a pivotal role
in the War of Austrian Succession and the American War of
Independence. A widely travelled man, he was a keen
explorer and a notable polymath: "linguist,
classicist and orientalist of more than common
achievements and considerable influence". An account
of his travels, "A Voyage by the Late Earl of
Sandwich round the Mediterranean in the years 1738 and
1739, written by himself" was published posthumously
in London in 1799.
CATALOGUE NOTE
A previously unknown illustration from the Akhbar-i
Barmakyan of exceptional quality and provenance.
The following miniature is one of a series dating from a
late sixteenth-century Mughal manuscript entitled
Akhbar-i Barmakiyan, a work believed to have been written
in the 10th/11th centuries A.D. and translated from
Arabic into Persian by the fourteenth-century translator
Ziya ud-Din Barani. The work concerns the history of the
Barmakid dynasty, and chronicles "the generosity and
clerical efficacy" of a family that rose to
considerable power during the early years of the Abbasid
Caliphate.
It is largely due to the Mughal Emperor Akbars
interest in instructive histories that the Akhbar-I
Barmikyan was illustrated. Although the artists that
worked on the manuscript are thought not to have been the
major artists in Akbars atelier it is likely to
have been made for the royal library by the artists
working in the taswir khaneh. It is striking that the
artists have attempted to evoke an 'Arab' atmosphere by
keeping certain features such as the figures' clothing as
close to an 'Arab' type as possible. This page is an
exceptional illustration from the manuscript with its
unusually vigorous and engaging composition.
16 illustrated leaves from this manuscript were sold in
these rooms, 1st July 1969, lots 83-98. Two others were
in the Warren Hastings Album (subsequently Phillipps
MS.14170) sold 26th November, 1968 lots 376 and 377. Two
illustrated leaves were sold in our New York rooms 15-16
April 1985, lot 445, and 21-22 March 1990, lot 8, the
latter formerly in the collection of Ed. Binney, 3rd.
Leaves from this manuscript are found in the collection
of Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan as published in Welch and
Welch, 1982 and Canby 1998.
The history of the barmakids:
Khalid bin Barmak, who was born in A.H. 87/A.D. 705, was
believed to be the son of an Arab commander. His mother,
a Persian slave girl, had been taken into the harem after
the seizure of Balkh by the Arab armies, and the boy was
later to be integrated into the Abbasid court and
"adopted" by the Caliphal family. Whether or
not this is historical fact, it is recognised that royal
favour at the Abbasid court was often expressed in the
form of "adoption" into the Abbasid household.
This was the true path to power and prestige regardless
of racial origins, and the Barmecide family is a peerless
example of the tradition.
Khalid bin Barmak played an important role in the
formation of the Abbasid Empire. He is chronicled in The
History of al-Tabari rallying together the disparate
Shia groups of Iran, fostering support for the
revolutionary movement and leading armies into battle
alongside the legendary commanders of the age. Later,
once Abbasid power was firmly established, Khalid was to
play a key role in the government of the Empire. In the
year A.H. 132/A.D. 749 he was made chief of the Landtax
Bureau, remaining in that position for at least three
years. He was directly involved in the founding of
Baghdad, and is famous for protesting against the
demolition of Meda'in to provide building materials for
the new capital city. He is reputed to have said,
"The great Iwan of the Chosroes is one of the
wonders of the world", to which the Caliph al-Mansur
is reputed to have replied, "It is naught but thine
old love for the Persians!" (Muir 1984, p.455).
It was after the founding of the city of Baghdad that
Khalid al-Barmaki became the "righthand man" of
the Caliph. He was promoted to Governor of Mosul, the
previous commander being deliberately deposed by
al-Mansur to make way for al-Barmaki. Khalid was later
entrusted with the protection of the young Harun
al-Rashid. At Harun's first campaign to the Bosphorus in
A.H 156/A.D. 772, it was Khalid al-Barmaki who
accompanied the youthful prince.
Harun al Rashids continued reliance upon the
Barmaki family would eventually lead to their downfall,
but for many years Khalids heirs basked in the
glory of the Caliph's favour. Khalids son Yahya was
tutor to the young Prince Harun, whilst his grandson
al-Fadhl was even suckled simultaneously with Harun by
the Caliphs consort. Later Yahya was to be made
wazir, a position he retained for seventeen years, a
period sometimes referred to as "the reign of the
Barmakids." Even the office of the seal was soon
under Yahyas control. In the year A.H. 176/A.D.
792, al-Fadhl, who also proved to be a consummate
politician, was made governor of Khurasan whilst his
brother Djafar was made governor of the Western
provinces. Thus control of the vast Abbasid Empire was
effectively divided between the two Barmakid brothers.
The rapid collapse of Barmakid authority astonished their
contemporaries, and no satisfactory explanation has been
suggested for their fall from grace and subsequent
execution. It is highly likely, however, that the extent
of their power troubled the Caliph who may have come to
resent and fear their influence.
Seen on www.Sothebys.com
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