Khamsa of Nizami (British Library, Or. 12208)

Detail of the added miniature by Daulat showing him (left) painting the calligrapher of the manuscript, Abd al-Rahim

The illuminated manuscript Khamsa of Nizami British Library, Or. 12208 is a lavishly illustrated manuscript of the Khamsa or "five poems" of Nizami Ganjavi, a 12th-century Persian poet, which was created for the Mughal Emperor Akbar in the early 1590s by a number of artists and a single scribe working at the Mughal court, very probably in Akbar's new capital of Lahore in North India, now in Pakistan. Apart from the fine calligraphy of the Persian text, the manuscript is celebrated for over forty Mughal miniatures of the highest quality throughout the text; five of these are detached from the main manuscript and are in the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore as Walters Art Museum MS W.613.[1] The manuscript has been described as "one of the finest examples of the Indo-Muslim arts of the book",[2] and "one of the most perfect of the de luxe type of manuscripts made for Akbar".[3]

  1. ^ Walters database entry
  2. ^ Schimmel & Waghmar, 264
  3. ^ Losty & Roy, 49