The frontispiece of this six book manuscript depicts a lively scene in which mounted hunters use swords, bows, and arrows to pursue their prey. Other paintings of receptions and feasts provide further insight into the courtly life of the Timurid period. An inscription in the colophon and on two other folios give the date of completion of this manuscript as 894 (A.D. 1488–89), although four of the 355 folios were added at a later date. The text by Jalal al-Din Rumi teaches moral philosophy and mysticism.
Inscription: Definition: colophon Location: fol. 355v Style: Arabic naskh Translation: This compilation was finished ...... in the year 894 Notes: the colophon is set in a triangle below the four columns of text. Same date appears at fols. 58r and 108r
Marking: Nasta'liq calligraphy; colophon and dated memorandums of ownership
Muhammad Shah, Iran (in 1844); Alexander Smith Cochran, Yonkers, NY (until 1913; gifted to MMA)
New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. "Making the Invisible Visible," April 2, 2013–August 4, 2013, no catalogue.
Jackson, A. V. Williams, and A. Yohannan. Catalogue of the Collection of Persian Manuscripts, Including also some Turkish and Arabic, Presented to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York by Alexander Smith Cochran. Columbia University Indo Iranian Series, vol. 1. New York: Columbia University Press, 1912. no. 12, pp. 95-98, ill. (b/w).
Valentiner, William Reinhold. "The Cochran Collection of Persian Manuscripts." Museum of Metropolitan Art Bulletin, old series, vol. 8 (1913). pp. 80-86.
Dimand, Maurice S., ed. "Dated Specimens of Mohammedan Art in the Metropolitan Museum of Art." MMA Studies 1, pt.2 (1929). p. 212.
Artist: Written by Hatifi Date: dated A.H. 904/A.D. 1498–99Medium: Main support: ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper; binding: leatherAccession: 69.27On view in:Gallery 460