Deep bowl engraved in the cavetto with a winged
buraq and concentric registers on the sides filled
with abstract motifs and a row of prancing
felines attacking deer.
In the Islamic tradition, the buraq was a creature
said to have transported the Prophet Muhammad
to heaven. Described as a white animal, half-
mule, half-donkey, with wings on its sides, Buraq
was originally introduced into the story of
Muhammad's night journey (isra') from Mecca to
Jerusalem and back, thus explaining how the
journey between the cities could have been
completed in a single night. Sometimes
mistakenly described as Muhammad's horse, the
buraq was a creature described as being part
eagle and horse, thus resembling a pegasus. An
excerpt from a Sahih Muslim hadith describes a
buraq:"I was brought by the Buraq, which is an
animal white and long, larger than a donkey but
smaller than a mule, who would place its hoof at
a distance equal to the range of vision." In
literature and art, often portrayed with the face
of a woman and the tail of a peacock, the buraq
is mostly visible in the sacred manuscripts,
where the creativity of the artist was less
hampered by religious restrictions. In both a leaf
from a copy of the Bustan of Sacdi dated 1514
originally from Uzbekistan and now in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), and a
16th Century manuscript of Khamsa of Nizami in
the British Library (London), narrating the Mi'raj,
or ascension of the Prophet, Muhammad is
depicted on his steed, the buraq. The artist has
painted the legendary creature prancing forward
as about to take a leap into the Seven Heavens,
her human face depicted frontally. Comparable
anthropoid depictions of the buraq are known
also from many engraved metal vessels such as
this basin, dating to the Seljuq period.
Metalwork in the Near East and Central Asia has
always enjoyed a prestige beyond that of other
applied arts such as ceramics and textiles. Major
pieces were specially commissioned and often
bear dedications to the princes and great nobles
for whom they were made, together with the
proudly inscribed names of their makers and
decorators; their very durability and impressive
appearance give them a high standing and
dignity of their own. The best pieces were in
bronze, either engraved, inlaid, overlaid or
beaten in repousse', that is hammered out from
behind of designs to appear in relief on the
surface. The roots of Islamic metalwork are to be
found in Byzantium and Persia. In the early 7th
century the Arabs took over these two great
empires and absorbed local metal techniques and
typologies, and contributed to a new
development in metalwork by adding inscriptions
in kufic script. Not much is known of the art of
metalwork in Persia and Central Asia in the early
Islamic period, with the exception of few large
dishes datable to the Ghaznavids, until the
Seljuq period, when new forms started to appear,
while lavish inlays and incrustation of gold, silver
and copper crept onto the surface.
This basin was probably made of high-tin
bronze, an alloy of copper and about 20 per cent
tin. This alloy was known in early Islamic times
as asfidroy, literally 'white copper' and was used
for bowls, stem bowls, dishes, ewers and
candlesticks. Amongst the particular properties
of high tin bronze is that it can be red-hot
forged, like iron, and if quenched, becomes
reasonably malleable when cold. If permitted to
cool slowly than hammered, it shatters. Three
centres of quarternary bronze manufacture are
recorded in Islamic texts of the 10th-11th
centuries: Rabinjian near Bukhara, Hamadan in
western Persia and Sistan province in eastern
Persia. Transoxiana, i.e. Eastern Persia and
Afghanistan, provided the inspiration for the
Hamadan industry as well and kept on producing
high-tin copper alloy vessel well into the 13th
century, although with less originality than
before. The quality of engraving and the patterns
featured on the cavetto of our basin would seem
to indicate a 12th-13th centuries dating and a
Transoxiana provenance.