Skip navigation links

Art Funded



Tomb cloth

Tomb cloth (© Ashmolean Museum)

Send as an E-Card Enlarge

Iranian

Ashmolean Museum

1710-1711

This Safavid silk cloth is part of a cloth which would have adorned a Shiite cenotaph in Iraq or Iran. It bears an inscription which includes the date 1122 of the Hegira (equivalent 1710-11 AD), and thus dates from the reign of Shah Sultan Husayn Safavi (1694-1722), a ruler noted more for his piety than political acumen. The inscription in oval cartouches reads, 'Oh Imam Husain, the Martyr!' and refers to the prophets grandson who was martyred at the battle of Kerbala in Iraq in 680 AD. The inscription in the smaller cartouches reads 'Oh Mohammad!' referring to the Prophet. Both inscriptions are written in mirror image writing and are deliberately designed to look like faces.

  • Medium: silk
  • Dimensions: 68 x 82cm
  • Art Fund Grant: £8000 ( Total: £19,000)
  • ArtFunded in: 2004
  • Vendor: Sam Fogg

Provenance

Mr Chatol; Bacri Brothers; Sam Fogg.


Add your comments about this artwork Hide this form

Have your say

Sorry, you must be logged in to post a comment.
Click here to login or click here to register

Share this page


 

Other Works by Iranian


Other Works at Ashmolean Museum


Museums in the area