Abu al-Fath Manuchihr Khan
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Abu al-Fatḥ Manuchihr Khan (d. 1636), was a Safavid official and gholam of Armenian origin. Like his father Qarachaqay Khan, Manuchihr was established at Mashhad as the general and governor of Khorasan under the shahs (kings) Abbas I (r. 1588–1629) and Ṣāfi (r. 1629–1642). His brother became prefect of Qom and head of the library of Abbas I. Manuchihr Khan's son, (d. 1668), became also a governor of Mashhad. All of them were among the Safavid cultural and intellectual elite, known as “men of knowledge and integrity’ (ahl-i fazl u kamāl) and “of illustrious acts and deeds” (ṣāhib-i mu'āṣir u asrār).
His works[]
Manuchihr Khan was a leading art patron, with a strong curiosity and interest in astronomy. He commissioned one of the finest illustrated manuscripts of the period, a Persian translation of 'Abd al-Rahmān ibn 'Umar al-Ṣūfī’s Ṣuwar al-Kawākib al-Thābitah ("the description of the fixed stars"), copied between 1630-1633 and conserved in the New York Public Library collection (Spencer, Pers. Ms. 6), see: Schmitz, 1992, p.122.
In 1632–1633, Manuchihr Khan commissioned , Master , and to produce a celestial globe known later as the Manuchihr Globe.
Sources[]
- Babaie, Sussan (2004). Slaves of the Shah: New Elites of Safavid Iran. I.B.Tauris. pp. 1-256. ISBN 1860647219.
- Schmitz 1992, no.123, p.55 ; Robinson, Sims, Bayani, 2007, p.19.
- The Manuchihr Globe
- 1636 deaths
- Safavid generals
- Ghilman
- Ethnic Armenian Shia Muslims
- Persian Armenians
- Safavid governors of Mashhad
- 17th-century people of Safavid Iran
- Safavid slaves