- Collection Overview
- ExhibitionsPast Exhibitions
- Anders Zorn: A European Artist Seduces America
- Gondola Days
- Raphael, Cellini, and a Renaissance Banker
- Making of the Museum
- Cosmè Tura
- Illuminating the Serenissima: Books of the Republic of Venice
- Modeling Devotion
- Journeys East
- The Triumph of Marriage
- Luxury For Export
- A Bronze Menagerie
- Gentile Bellini and the East
- Off the Wall
- Conservation
- Browse Rooms
- Browse Artists
- Angelico, Fra
- Anguissola, Sofonisba
- Bakst, Léon
- Bandinelli, Baccio
- Beckhausen, Jakob
- Bellini, Gentile
- Bellini, Giovanni
- Bellini, Leonardo
- Bermejo, Bartolomé
- Bles, Herri met de
- Bordone, Paris
- Botticelli, Sandro
- Botticini, Francesco
- Boucher, François
- Bourdichon, Jean
- Bulgarini, Bartolommeo
- Bunker, Denis Miller
- Cambodian: Unknown Artist
- Cellini, Benvenuto
- Chinese: Unknown Artist
- Chunosuke, Niiro
- Civitali, Matteo di Giovanni
- Crivelli, Carlo
- Curtis, Ralph
- Daddi, Bernardo
- Degas, Edgar
- Dewing, Thomas Wilmer
- Dürer, Albrecht
- Dyck, Anthony van
- Eriksson, Christian
- Eurasian: Unknown Artist
- Falconetto, Giovanni Maria
- Fiesole, Mino da
- Flemish: Unknown Artist
- Flinck, Govaert
- Fondulis, Giovanni de
- Francesca, Piero della
- Francia, Francesco
- French: Unknown Artist
- French or German: Unknown Artist
- García de Benabarre, Pedro
- Giorgio, Francesco di
- Giambono, Michele
- German: Unknown Artist
- Geubels, Jacques
- Giotto
- Greek: Unknown Artist
- Hassam, Childe
- Helleu, Paul César
- Hidetsugu, Yosai
- Holbein, Hans, the Younger
- Indian: Unknown Artist
- Iranian: Unknown Artist
- Iranian or Central Asian: Unknown Artist
- Italian: Unknown Artist
- Italian or Spanish: Unknown Artist
- Japanese: Unknown Artist
- Javanese: Unknown Artist
- Ken'ya, Miura
- Kronberg, Louis
- Lippi, Filippino
- Macknight, Dodge
- Maiano, Benedetto da
- Mancini, Antonio
- Manet, Edouard
- Manship, Paul
- Mantegna, Andrea
- Martini, Simone
- Master T.° Ve.
- Matisse, Henri
- Mendoza Binder
- Mesopotamian: Unknown Artist
- Mexican: Unknown Artist
- Michelangelo
- Mor, Antonis
- Moroni, Giovanni Battista
- Mosca, Giovanni Maria
- Moyen, Jan van der
- Paolo, Giovanni di
- Pesellino, Francesco
- Piermatteo d’Amelia
- Pinturicchio, Bernardino
- Planche, Raphael de la
- Pollaiolo, Piero del
- Pourbus, Frans, the Younger
- Raphael
- Rembrandt
- Rimini, Giuliano da
- Robbia, Andrea della
- Robbia, Giovanni della
- Roman: Unknown Artist
- Rossetti, Dante Gabriel
- Rubens, Peter Paul
- Ruskin, John
- Ryonyu, Raku
- Sargent, John Singer
- Schongauer, Martin
- Seisai
- Spanish: Unknown Artist
- Taikan, Yokoyama
- Terilli, Francesco
- Tibetan: Unknown Artist
- Tiegen, Jan van
- Tiepolo, Giovanni Domenico
- Tintoretto, Domenico
- Titian
- Tsunenobu, Kano
- Tura, Cosmè
- Turkish: Unknown Artist
- Turner, J.M.W.
- Uccello, Paolo
- Vasari, Giorgio
- Velázquez, Diego
- Vermeer, Johannes
- Veronese, Paolo
- Voerman, Jan I
- Whistler, James McNeill
- Zorn, Anders
- Zurbarán, Francisco de
- Islamic Art
Tombstone
about 1475
View in exploreThe Arabic inscription at the head of this slab informs viewers it marks “the tomb of him whom God has exalted by the glory of martyrdom after a life of abundance in the world through leadership and the caliphate; and he is the sultan…” Although the rest of the inscription, which would presumably have included the name of the deceased, has been effaced, these few lines suffice to introduce his piety and power. The splendid and meticulously handled carving that envelopes the tombstone attests to the aesthetic refinement and achievements of the reign of the Timurid dynasty (1397–1501) in Iran and Central Asia.
Historically, Islamic traditions prescribe simple and egalitarian burial practices. Fearing the temptations of ancestor worship or idolatry, the Prophet Muhammad reportedly discouraged permanent or elaborate tomb structures. A compromise between religious purity, human nature, and pre-Islamic burial practices, this tombstone nevertheless evokes Islamic values and symbols. The decorative program excludes the representation of humans or animals, relying instead on Arabic inscriptions in stately naskh or monumental kufic scripts, and a profusion of arabesques.
Invoking the Day of Judgment, the Koranic phrase “Judgment is to God” (12.66) appears in rectangular panels on three sides of the tombstone. Most beautifully written is the inscription in the smaller of two panels on the main side of the tombstone. Here bold letters with interlacing ascenders trace right angles, in contrast to the diminutive floral scroll in the background.
Lotus and peony blossoms punctuate the border channels, evoking not only the influence of Chinese art so prized by the Timurids, but also the Islamic concept of the after-life as a garden. The notion that the faithful will be rewarded in an eternal garden is perhaps also alluded to by the term rawdat, with which the tombstone refers to itself. Although rawdat may be translated as “tomb,” it literally means “garden.”
A self-contained network of vigorous and intricate arabesques fills a long panel on the front face of the slab. Dominating the panel is an extremely stylized arabesque in which large heads formed of split leaves and spirals branch from elastically curling stems. Around and beneath it glides a secondary arabesque composed of more naturalistic flowers and leaves. Crisply and precisely carved, this multi-layered interlacing perfectly expresses the Timurid delight in complexity and virtuosity.
In the upper fourth of the panel, a continuous, cusping line traces the top of an arch, calling to mind a mihrab – the niche or arch in the wall of a mosque that marks the direction toward Mecca. A fundamental requirement of Islam is that worshipers face toward Mecca for prayer, and the mihrab serves as a directional symbol. Its presence on a tombstone is a reminder that in Islamic burial traditions, the body is aligned with Mecca for its final rest.
Source: Mary McWilliams, "Tombstone," in Eye of the Beholder, edited by Alan Chong et al. (Boston: ISGM and Beacon Press, 2003): 164-165.
Purchased in 1901 from Mihram Sirvadjian, Paris, through Ralph Curtis.






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