Khamsa of Nizami

Summary

The Khamsa (Persian: خمسه, 'Quintet' or 'Quinary', from Arabic) or Panj Ganj (Persian: پنج گنج, 'Five Treasures') is the main and best known work of Nizami Ganjavi.

Opening of a manuscript of Nizami's Khamsa, British Library

Description edit

The Khamsa is in five long narrative poems:

  • Makhzan-ol-Asrâr (مخزن‌الاسرار, 'The Treasury or Storehouse of Mysteries'[1]), 1163 (some date it 1176)
  • Khosrow o Shirin (خسرو و شیرین, 'Khosrow and Shirin'), 1177–1180
  • Leyli o Majnun (لیلی و مجنون, 'Layla and Majnun'), 1192
  • Eskandar-Nâmeh (اسکندرنامه, 'The Book of Alexander'), 1194 or 1196–1202
  • Haft Peykar (هفت پیکر, 'The Seven Beauties'), 1197

The first of these poems, Makhzan-ol-Asrâr, was influenced by Sanai's (d. 1131) monumental Garden of Truth. The four other poems are medieval romances. Khosrow and Shirin, Bahram-e Gur, and Alexander the Great, who all have episodes devoted to them in Ferdowsi's Shahnameh,[1] appear again here at the center of three of four of Nezami's narrative poems. The adventure of the paired lovers, Layla and Majnun, is the subject of the second of his four romances, and derived from Arabic sources.[1] In all these cases, Nezami reworked the material from his sources in a substantial way.[1]

The Khamsa was a popular subject for lavish manuscripts illustrated with painted miniatures at the Persian and Mughal courts in later centuries. Examples include the Khamsa of Nizami (British Library, Or. 12208), created for the Mughal Emperor Akbar in the 1590s. A Khamsa manuscript created for Prince Aurangzeb, the sixth Mughal emperor, is now in the Khalili Collection of Islamic Art. Its illustrations of Bahram Gur depict the character as Aurangzeb.[2]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d CHARLES-HENRI DE FOUCHÉCOUR, "IRAN:Classical Persian Literature" in Encyclopædia Iranica
  2. ^ "Islamic Art | A Khamsah of Nizami for Prince Awrangzeb". Khalili Collections. Retrieved 2021-12-08.
  3. ^ Bowker. World Religions. p. 165.