The Mughal Empire from Jahangir to Shah Jahan : art, architecture, politics, law and literature

Bibliographic Information

The Mughal Empire from Jahangir to Shah Jahan : art, architecture, politics, law and literature

edited by Ebba Koch in collaboration with Ali Anooshahr

(Marg, vol. 70, nos. 2 and 3)

Marg Foundation, c2019

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

"This volume has its origin in the international workshop "The Mughal Empire under Shah Jahan", that took place on May 26 and 27, 2014 at the Institute of Iranian Studies of the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna"--Preface and acknowledgements

Includes bibliographical references and index

"Vol. 70 nos. 2 and 3 December 2018-March 2019"

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The reign of Shah Jahan (1628-58) is widely regarded as the golden age of the Mughal empire, yet it is one of the least studied periods of Mughal history. In this volume, 14 eminent scholars with varied historical interests-political, social, economic, legal, cultural, literary and art-historical-present for the first time a multidisciplinary analysis of Shah Jahan and his predecessor Jahangir (r. 1605-27). Corinne Lefevre, Anna Kollatz, Ali Anooshahr, Munis Faruqui and Mehreen Chida-Razvi study the various ways in which the events of the transition between the two reigns found textual expression in Jahangir's and Shah Jahan's historiography, in subaltern courtly writing, and in art and architecture. Harit Joshi and Stephan Popp throw light on the emperor's ceremonial interaction with his subjects and Roman Siebertz enumerates the bureaucratic hurdles which foreign visitors had to face when seeking trade concessions from the court. Sunil Sharma analyses the new developments in Persian poetry under Shah Jahan's patronage and Chander Shekhar identifies the Mughal variant of the literary genre of prefaces. Ebba Koch derives from the changing ownership of palaces and gardens insights about the property rights of the Mughal nobility and imperial escheat practices. Susan Stronge discusses floral and figural tile revetments as a new form of architectural decoration and J.P. Losty sheds light on the changes in artistic patronage and taste that transformed Jahangiri painting into Shahjahani. R.D. McChesney shows how Shah Jahan's reign cast such a long shadow that it even reached the late 19th- and early 20th-century rulers of Afghanistan. This imaginatively conceived collection of articles invites us to see in Mughal India of the first half of the 17th century a structural continuity in which the reigns of Jahangir and Shah Jahan emerge as a unit, a creative reconceptualization of the Mughal empire as visualized by Akbar on the basis of what Babur and Humayun had initiated. This age seized the imagination of the contemporaries and, in a world as yet unruptured by an intrusive colonial modernity, Shah Jahan's court was regarded as the paradigm of civility, progress and development.

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