Siyer-i Nebi
Siyer-i Nebi | |
---|---|
Information | |
Religion | Islam |
Author | Mustafa of Erzurum |
Language | Turkish |
Period | Era of Transformation |
The Siyer-i Nebi (Ottoman Turkish: سیر نبی) is a Turkish epic about the life of Muhammad, completed around 1388, written by Mustafa son of Yusuf of Erzurum, known as al-Darir, a Mevlevi dervish on the commission of Sultan Berkuk, the Mamluk ruler in Cairo. The text is based on a 13th-century Arabic sira by al-Bakri of the original Biography of the Prophet by al-Waqidi (748-822).[citation needed]
Ottoman manuscript[]
The Ottoman ruler Murad III (1574–1595) commissioned a lavish illustrated copy of the work, which has been described as "the largest single cycle of religious painting in Islamic art" and "the most complete visual portrayal of the life of the prophet Muhammad".[1] The famous calligrapher Lutfi Abdullah (Lütfi Abdullah) was in charge of the workshop at the royal palace, and completed the work under Murad's successor Mehmed III, on 16 January 1595. The completed work contained 814 miniatures in six volumes, which include many depictions of Muhammad, who is always shown with a veiled face, as was the convention by this date; he is also surrounded by flames, in the Eastern equivalent of a halo. The style of the miniatures is distinctive, and owes nothing to earlier treatments of these subjects, as well as being "strikingly different" to the normal realist style of Ottoman miniatures; its origins remain unclear. There are few figures in each scene, no extensive landscapes, and a "suppression of detail".[2]
Volumes I, II and VI are in the Topkapı Museum (Hazine 1221-1223); Volume III is in the New York Public Library; Volume IV is (mostly) in the Chester Beatty Library in Dublin (MS T 419),[3] and Volume V is missing, as are about 200 of the miniatures in total. About two dozen of the miniatures are in the hands of private collectors. Four were sold at the Hôtel Drouot auction house in Paris in March 1984.[citation needed] Two folios from Volume IV are in the Khalili Collection of Islamic Art.[4]
A 17th century copy of the fourth volume, made in the court atelier, is in the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts, Sultanahmet, Istanbul. It was donated to a mosque library in Aksaray, Istanbul, by the Sultan's mother in 1862-63.[5]
Images gallery[]
Muhammad at the Kaaba
Muhammad removes a dragon from the Kaaba
Muhammad at Mount Hira
Muhammad at the Battle of Badr
Ali beheading Nadr ibn al-Harith in the presence of Muhammad and his companions
Muhammad advancing on Mecca, with the angels Gabriel, Michael, Israfil and Azrail
Death of Muhammad
A caravan, headed by ‘Abdallah ibn Jahsh, returns to Medina from a raid by the Companions of the Prophet.
‘Ubayd ibn Harith and Hamza ibn ‘Abd al-Muttalib lead troops against Abu Jahl
Notes[]
- ^ Fisher, 75
- ^ Blair & Bloom, pp. 245 (quoted) - 247
- ^ Page from Chester Beatty
- ^ "Islamic Art | Two Folios from the Siyer-i Nebi". Khalili Collections. Retrieved 2021-08-11.
- ^ Discover Islamic Art, Museum with no Frontiers
References[]
- Antika, The Turkish Journal of Collectible Art, June 1986
- Blair, Sheila, and Bloom, Jonathan M., The Art and Architecture of Islam, 1250-1800, 1995, Yale University Press Pelican History of Art, ISBN 0-300-06465-9
- Fisher, Carol Garrett, "A Reconstruction of the Pictorial Cycle of the "Siyar-i Nabī" of Murād III", Ars Orientalis, Vol. 14, (1984), pp. 75–94, Freer Gallery of Art and University of Michigan, JSTOR
External links[]
Media related to Siyer-i Nebi at Wikimedia Commons
- Biographies of Muhammad
- Turkish books
- 16th-century illuminated manuscripts
- Illuminated histories
- Islamic illuminated manuscripts
- Manuscripts in the Chester Beatty Library
- Manuscripts in the New York Public Library