4th Jun, 2025 11:00

Indian, Islamic, Himalayan and South-East Asian Art and Greek and Roman Antiquities

 
Lot 16
 

16

THE TRIAL BY FIRE OF SIYAVUSH, SUB-IMPERIAL MUGHAL, INDIA, CIRCA 1630

an illustrated page from a Persian manuscript copy of Firdausi's Shahnama, in opaque colours heightened with gold and ink on paper, recto with one line of nasta'liq in black ink in four columns, verso with twenty lines of nasta'liq in black ink arranged in four columns within black and gold ruled margins, inscribed in two places in a nineteenth century hand in ink 'No. 64', the second indecipherable, the folio reduced and housed within a paper mount with further ruled borders, image 16 x 14.6cm., mounted folio 24 x 21.8cm.

Provenance:

Paris, 4th November, 2014, Collection of Francoise et Claude Bourelier

Sir Thomas Phillips (1792-1872), Ms.34738, the sale of his library Biblioteca Phillipica (9th auction), Sotheby's London, 27th November, 1974, lot 789

Frances Mary Richardson Currer, Eshton Hall, Yorkshire (1785-1861)

Thomas Rood

Phillip Augustus Hanrott (1776-1856), The Hanrott sale, London 5th August, 1838, lot 1295

Mrs. Rebekah Bliss of Kensington (1749-1819), the sale of her library Saunders and Hodgson, 26th April 1826.

It is a testimony to the high regard in which pages from this copy of the Shahnameh were held that they passed into the collection of some of the most renowned bibliophiles of nineteenth century England. The early annotations are probably in the hand of one of these great collectors.

Mrs Richardson Currer is frequently referred to as England's first female bibliophile but, as we see in the case of this folio and others, Mrs. Bliss of Kensington preceded her by several years and may more rightly claim this title. The sale of the library of Rebekah Bliss (1749-1819) was held by Saunders & Hodgson in 1826 was entitled Bibliotheca Splendidissima: A Catalogue of a Select Portion of the Library of Mrs. Bliss, Deceased, Removed from her Residence at Kensington. A blog by Dr. Davies explores the collecting activities and influences of Mrs. Bliss: see http://rebekahbliss.blogspot.co.uk

This is one of the two pages from this album that were sold in the Sotheby's sale of the collection of Sir Thomas Phillips in 1974. Two more pages from this manuscript, formerly in the collection of the Hardy family of Chilham Castle, Kent, appeared at auction in India, Saffron Art, 24-25th April 2013, lot 1. Two more are in the collection of the San Diego Museum of Art, formerly with Edwin Binney who had bought them in London at Sotheby's, 11th December, 1961, lot 64. All of the recorded examples have been trimmed but this is the only example that has text on the verso making it unique amongst the surviving pages.

Unsold

 

an illustrated page from a Persian manuscript copy of Firdausi's Shahnama, in opaque colours heightened with gold and ink on paper, recto with one line of nasta'liq in black ink in four columns, verso with twenty lines of nasta'liq in black ink arranged in four columns within black and gold ruled margins, inscribed in two places in a nineteenth century hand in ink 'No. 64', the second indecipherable, the folio reduced and housed within a paper mount with further ruled borders, image 16 x 14.6cm., mounted folio 24 x 21.8cm.

Provenance:

Paris, 4th November, 2014, Collection of Francoise et Claude Bourelier

Sir Thomas Phillips (1792-1872), Ms.34738, the sale of his library Biblioteca Phillipica (9th auction), Sotheby's London, 27th November, 1974, lot 789

Frances Mary Richardson Currer, Eshton Hall, Yorkshire (1785-1861)

Thomas Rood

Phillip Augustus Hanrott (1776-1856), The Hanrott sale, London 5th August, 1838, lot 1295

Mrs. Rebekah Bliss of Kensington (1749-1819), the sale of her library Saunders and Hodgson, 26th April 1826.

It is a testimony to the high regard in which pages from this copy of the Shahnameh were held that they passed into the collection of some of the most renowned bibliophiles of nineteenth century England. The early annotations are probably in the hand of one of these great collectors.

Mrs Richardson Currer is frequently referred to as England's first female bibliophile but, as we see in the case of this folio and others, Mrs. Bliss of Kensington preceded her by several years and may more rightly claim this title. The sale of the library of Rebekah Bliss (1749-1819) was held by Saunders & Hodgson in 1826 was entitled Bibliotheca Splendidissima: A Catalogue of a Select Portion of the Library of Mrs. Bliss, Deceased, Removed from her Residence at Kensington. A blog by Dr. Davies explores the collecting activities and influences of Mrs. Bliss: see http://rebekahbliss.blogspot.co.uk

This is one of the two pages from this album that were sold in the Sotheby's sale of the collection of Sir Thomas Phillips in 1974. Two more pages from this manuscript, formerly in the collection of the Hardy family of Chilham Castle, Kent, appeared at auction in India, Saffron Art, 24-25th April 2013, lot 1. Two more are in the collection of the San Diego Museum of Art, formerly with Edwin Binney who had bought them in London at Sotheby's, 11th December, 1961, lot 64. All of the recorded examples have been trimmed but this is the only example that has text on the verso making it unique amongst the surviving pages.

Auction: Indian, Islamic, Himalayan and South-East Asian Art and Greek and Roman Antiquities, 4th Jun, 2025

Auction Location: London, UK

The sales include sculpture, bronzes, metalwork, textiles and paintings representative of the richly varied styles seen across the Indian subcontinent, from early Buddhist and Jain art to Mughal and European-influenced works of art of the colonial era.

Works of art from all parts of the Islamic world, from Morocco in the west, through the Middle East, Persia and Central Asia to muslim China and South East Asia in the East are included in the sale. Objects range in date from the early centuries of Islam to the early 20th century at a wide range of price levels.

The sales also include Khmer, Thai and Javanese sculpture and bronzes, textiles from the Indonesian islands, Thai ceramics, Burmese lacquer and Buddhist manuscripts. Works of art range from the early Indian-influenced styles from 9th century Java to the elaborate carved and lacquered woodwork from Colonial Burma.

For full details of bibliographic references, see pages 192-193 of the page turning and printed versions of the catalogue.

 

PUBLIC EXHIBITION:

Sunday 1st June 12pm - 4pm

Monday 2nd June 10am - 8pm

Tuesday 3rd June 10am - 5pm

CONTACT US

Lara Defries
lara.defries@olympiaauctions.com

Mr Arthur Millner
arthur.millner@olympiaauctions.com

Nicholas Shaw
nicholas.shaw@olympiaauctions.com

 

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PUBLIC EXHIBITION:

Sunday 1st June 12pm - 4pm

Monday 2nd June 10am - 8pm

Tuesday 3rd June 10am - 5pm

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