{"title":"Księga Papugi Nechszebiego ze zbiorów Biblioteki Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego","authors":"Magdalena Ginter-Frołow","doi":"10.15804/aoto201209","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Tuti-Nameh (Tales of a Parrot) by Nahsabi (Ms. or I 56) from University Library in Wrocław is one of fourteen Persian manuscripts with miniatures, existing in Polish collections. This poem is modelled on The Thousand and One Nights. In this popular work the parrot tells tales to his mistress in order to prevent her from being unfaithful to her absent husband. Tales are recited by the parrot over 52 nights. This copy includes 97 miniatures illustrating these stories. This copy of “Tales of a Parrot” comes from the library of Count Oppersdorf from Oberglogau (now Głogówek). The history of this library reaches back to the 16th century and the times of Hans Oppersdorff. Successive owners continued to purchase new books and thus at the end of 19th century the collection consisted of dozens of thousands of examples. One of the most important trustees was Count Hans Georg von Oppersdorff, who inherited the library in 1889. He was well-educated and interested in oriental languages. He knew Hebrew, and supposedly spoke seven other languages fluently. The fulfilment of his scholarly interests was possible thanks to growing up amidst one of the largest libraries in Upper Silesia. In 1927 Hans Georg donated TutiNameh, and a few other oriental manuscripts, to the University Library in Wrocław (Staats – und Universitätsbibliothek in Breslau). The miniatures in this manuscript bear a close resemblance to miniatures from Divan of Mirza Khan Kabuli from The State Hermitage in Saint Petersburg. This copy of Divan was made in 1813, probably in Kashmir. The invention, composition, colour scheme, subject matter and details are practically identical in both these books. This proves that Tutiname from Wrocław was also made in Kashmir in the end of the 18th, or beginning of 19th century. Although nowadays many miniatures from Kashmir are in European collections, this school of painting is still almost unrecognised. Tuti-Nameh from University Library in Wrocław can play an important role in research of this field.","PeriodicalId":240161,"journal":{"name":"Art of the Orient","volume":"84 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Art of the Orient","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15804/aoto201209","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
Nahsabi (Ms. or I 56)的《鹦鹉的故事》(Tuti-Nameh)收藏于Wrocław大学图书馆,是波兰收藏的十四份波斯缩微手稿之一。这首诗是以《一千零一夜》为原型创作的。在这部广受欢迎的作品中,鹦鹉向他的情妇讲故事,以防止她对不在身边的丈夫不忠。鹦鹉要在52个晚上里背诵故事。这个副本包括97个微缩图,说明这些故事。这本《鹦鹉的故事》来自奥贝格劳的奥珀斯多夫伯爵图书馆(现在是Głogówek)。这个图书馆的历史可以追溯到16世纪的汉斯·奥珀斯多夫时代。连续的拥有者继续购买新书,因此在19世纪末,收藏包括成千上万的例子。最重要的受托人之一是汉斯·格奥尔格·冯·奥珀斯多夫伯爵,他于1889年继承了图书馆。他受过良好的教育,对东方语言很感兴趣。他懂希伯来语,据说还能流利地说其他七种语言。由于在上西里西亚最大的图书馆之一长大,他的学术兴趣得以实现。1927年,汉斯·格奥尔格(Hans Georg)将《图蒂纳米》和其他一些东方手稿捐赠给了位于Wrocław的大学图书馆(位于布雷斯劳的Staats - and Universitätsbibliothek)。这份手稿中的微缩画与圣彼得堡国立冬宫里米尔扎·汗·卡布里的蒂凡的微缩画非常相似。这幅《迪凡》的复制品创作于1813年,可能是在克什米尔。这两本书的发明、构图、配色方案、主题和细节几乎完全相同。这证明来自Wrocław的Tutiname也是在18世纪末或19世纪初在克什米尔制造的。尽管现在许多来自克什米尔的微缩画被欧洲人收藏,但这一绘画流派仍然几乎不被认可。来自Wrocław大学图书馆的Tuti-Nameh可以在这一领域的研究中发挥重要作用。
Księga Papugi Nechszebiego ze zbiorów Biblioteki Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego
Tuti-Nameh (Tales of a Parrot) by Nahsabi (Ms. or I 56) from University Library in Wrocław is one of fourteen Persian manuscripts with miniatures, existing in Polish collections. This poem is modelled on The Thousand and One Nights. In this popular work the parrot tells tales to his mistress in order to prevent her from being unfaithful to her absent husband. Tales are recited by the parrot over 52 nights. This copy includes 97 miniatures illustrating these stories. This copy of “Tales of a Parrot” comes from the library of Count Oppersdorf from Oberglogau (now Głogówek). The history of this library reaches back to the 16th century and the times of Hans Oppersdorff. Successive owners continued to purchase new books and thus at the end of 19th century the collection consisted of dozens of thousands of examples. One of the most important trustees was Count Hans Georg von Oppersdorff, who inherited the library in 1889. He was well-educated and interested in oriental languages. He knew Hebrew, and supposedly spoke seven other languages fluently. The fulfilment of his scholarly interests was possible thanks to growing up amidst one of the largest libraries in Upper Silesia. In 1927 Hans Georg donated TutiNameh, and a few other oriental manuscripts, to the University Library in Wrocław (Staats – und Universitätsbibliothek in Breslau). The miniatures in this manuscript bear a close resemblance to miniatures from Divan of Mirza Khan Kabuli from The State Hermitage in Saint Petersburg. This copy of Divan was made in 1813, probably in Kashmir. The invention, composition, colour scheme, subject matter and details are practically identical in both these books. This proves that Tutiname from Wrocław was also made in Kashmir in the end of the 18th, or beginning of 19th century. Although nowadays many miniatures from Kashmir are in European collections, this school of painting is still almost unrecognised. Tuti-Nameh from University Library in Wrocław can play an important role in research of this field.