Astronomical
and Astrological Studies during Adil Shahs
Astronomical
and Astrological Studies Work
(dated AD 1575), which was commissioned by ‘Ali’
Adil Shah II of Bijapur
Meaning of the
above couplet by Allama Dr.Sir Mohammad Iqbal
Those Pearls of Wisdom , Pearls of our race
Seeing them overseas makes my heart ache
ia_1.htm
One
of the many treasures from the Wellcome Library’s
London U.K. celebrated Asian Collections is
a rare example of an astrological work entitled
Nujum al-'Ulum 'Stars of Sciences'. The Wellcome
manuscript is a fragment copied from an earlier
work (dated AD 1575), which was commissioned
by ‘Ali’ Adil Shah II of Bijapur
in India.
Lavishly illuminated, this manuscript it is
a rare example of the school of painting from
the Deccan sultanates of central and southern
India. The style characteristic of this school
is a sensitive, highly integrated blend of indigenous
and foreign art forms, possibly related to Vijayanagar
wall paintings and reflecting Persian influence.
Deccani art also had an effect on the development
of miniature painting in the Hindu courts of
Rajasthan and central India.
Among the illustrations in this text are representations
of planets, some of which are shown as personifications.
The planet Mercury, for example, is represented
as a scribe. Particularly striking are the tiny
miniatures, encapsulated in medallions, representing
the thirty degrees of each of the zodiacal signs.
Illustrated texts – such as the ‘Stars
of Sciences’ – were produced as
manuals that set out the cosmological order
of the heavens and explained their astrological
significance.
Although we have has not digitised every page
of the manuscript for this Turning the Pages
version (the complete manuscript can be consulted
in the Wellcome Library), the pages selected
form a major part of the volume. They are as
visually striking as they are factually interesting,
providing insight into Islamic astrology and
astronomy of the period in India.
References
1. Wellcome
Library’s celebrated Asian Collections.
2.
Book hand written manuscript Najmus-Saqeeb
3. Couplet from Iqbal