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Talhand Confronts His Brother Gav on the Battlefield, from the Shahnama of Firdausi

Iranian

Artwork Details

Talhand Confronts His Brother Gav on the Battlefield, from the Shahnama of Firdausi
circa 1460
Iranian
ink, opaque watercolor, and gold leaf on paper
10 1/2 in. x 7 in. ( 26.7 cm x 17.8 cm )
Museum Purchase
1963/1.72

Description

The story of the brothers Talhand and Gav is a subplot to the biography of Shah Nushirwan, seen in the previous illustration. Nushirwan was challenged by the King of Hind (India) to a game of chess, to determine who should pay tribute to whom. The Indian ambassador explained that the game originated in a dispute over the throne between two half-brothers, Talhand and Gav. Gav was the elder and sought to avoid warfare. Twice after his victories on the field he allowed Talhand to return home to lick his wounds, but the third battle took place on a field between a river and a moat; there was no place to retreat. Exhausted, Talhand died astride his elephant. Afterward, Gav invented chess to explain to his grieving mother what happens when a king places himself in a position where there is no escape—checkmate.
. . . Those illustrious kings,
All dudgeon and vindictiveness, then saddled
Two elephants, each at his army’s center
Took up his station, and assumed command.
The earth grew pitch-like, heaven azure-dim
With all the spears and silken bannerets,
While air was ebon with the armies’ dust.
While at the thud of battle-ax, of mace,
And sword, a red reek went up from the deep, . . .
. . . the hosts advanced,
Troop after troop, while all the plain was filled
With livers, brains, and hearts.
Warner, VII, 416
Visually, this is one of the most ambitious compositions in the manuscript. It takes a moment to find the brothers amongst the chaos on the battlefield: the elder Gav, dark-complexioned and with a white beard, is seated on his elephant at upper right, while the younger Talhand is at center left, each half-cropped at the picture’s edge. Instead of depicting a symbolic encounter between two individuals—as was the pattern for Iranian heroes and their Turanians enemies—the artist has seized this opportunity to create real movement and drama, capturing the horror of a battle whose outcome is still uncertain.
———
Maribeth Graybill, Senior Curator of Asian Art
Exhibited in "A Medieval Masterpiece from Baghdad: the Ann Arbor Shahnama"
August 14 through December 19, 2004

Subject Matter:

Talhand Confronts His Brother Gav on the Battlefield

...Those illustrious kings, 
All dudgeon and vindictiveness, then saddled
Two elephants, each at his army's centre
Took up his station, and assumed command.
The earth grew pitch-like, heaven azure-dim
With all the spears and silken bannerets, 
While air was ebon with the armies' dust.

While at the thud of battle-ax, of mace, 
And sword, a red reek went up from the deep,

...the hosts advanced,
Troop after troop, while all the plain was filled 
With livers, brains, and hearts.

Physical Description:

This Persian miniature is attributed to the Shiraz and Timurid schools, ca. 1460. The painting is done in ink, opaque watercolor and gold leaf on paper. The scene, Talhand Confronts His Brother Gav on the Battlefield, is part of the Shahnama of Firdausi, the Persian book of kings. 

Usage Rights:

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