al-Mam’un Proposes Marriage, 1431, Baysunghur school, 8 3/4 x 5 3/4 in. ( x cm), Ink, colors, and gold on paper, Iran, Timurid dynasty (1370–1506), The poem Chahar Maqaleh, or Four Discourses (c. 1156), falls into the Persian literary genre known as the 'mirror of the princes.' The text provides a series of anecdotes to describe the four advisers every Islamic prince required: a scribe, a poet, an astrologer, and a physician. This scene recounts the story of the Abbasid caliph (Islamic leader) al-Mam’un (786–883 CE), depicted here in his resplendent palace as he falls in love
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