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  1. Rashid al-Din was a Muslim intellectual whose history of the world showed the diversity of the peoples and ideas mixing in the Mongol Ilkhanate. Download the Graphic Biography PDF here or click on the image above. Learn for free about math, art, computer programming, economics, physics, chemistry, biology, medicine, finance, history, and more ...

  2. Aug 18, 2015 · The Jāmiʿ al-tavārīkh or ‘Compendium of Chronicles’ is a monumental universal history composed by Rashīd al-Dīn (d. 1317) in Persian at the beginning of the 14th century. It was originally written for the Mongol Ilkhan of Iran Ghazan Khan (d. 1304) but was finally presented to his brother and successor...

  3. But like the introduction of block-printed 12 Blair money in Iran, Rashid al-Din’s program was a failure in the short run, as it does not seem that his artists could keep up with the pace, and the illustrations in the later Ilkhanid copies of the Compendium of Chronicles were never completed.58 Battle scenes like “Ilak Khan putting the ...

    • Sheila Blair
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  5. Artist: Liz Clarke. One of the most powerful advisers of the Mongol Ilkhan Ghazan (who ruled from 1295 to 1304), Rashid Al-Din undertook one of the first written histories, the Jami Al-Tawarikh. In art and text, this book presented the Ilkhan as both the leading Islamic ruler and the inheritor of a vast and diverse tradition from across Eurasia.

  6. The Jami' al-Tawarikh Rashid al-Din Fadlallah (circa 645–718 AH/ 1247–1318 AD) was a Muslim convert from a Jewish family in Hamadan. His father was an apothecary and he himself trained as a physician, entering the service of the Ilkhan Abaqa (r 1265–1282). On Ghazan's accession in 694 AH (1295 AD), he gained an enduring position at the ...

  7. Feb 28, 2021 · Ghazan Khan, the seventh Ilkhanid ruler, ascended the throne on November 10 th, 1295 (23 Dhu al-ḥajja 694) and reigned until May 15 th, 1304 (11 Shawwal 703). At some point during his reign, he ordered his vizier, Rashid al-Din to write the history of the Mongols and their conquests.

  8. The Arabic copy of Rashid al-Din’s Jāmiʿ al-tavārīkh dated 714/1314‒15 and divided between Edinburgh University Library (Or. ms. 20) and the Khalili Collection in London (ms. 727) is of seminal importance as one of the first and most extensively illustrated histories produced in Iran. This article examines four paintings from the ...

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