Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-t5tsf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-16T12:18:25.622Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Genealogical Seal of the Mughal Emperors of India1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2009

Extract

The genealogical seal of the Mughal emperors of India was one of the most potent symbols of Mughal imperial authority. The distinctive design of the seal - a central circle containing the name of the ruling emperor, surrounded by a series of smaller circles, like satellites in orbit, containing the names of his ancestors up to Timūr (1336–1405) each preceded by the filiative ibn - was a self-evident masterpiece of imperial symbolism, in which the authority of the ruling emperor was both legitimised and enhanced by the deliberate reference to his illustrious ancestors. The inscription was designed to be read starting with the ruling emperor's name in the middle, then moving into the outer circle to the name of his immediate predecessor (at 1 o'clock) and, continuing clockwise, finishing up at Timur, who always had pride of place at the top of the seal. In this way, each ruler was expressed as the son of his predecessor, while at the same time, from his central position abutting all the smaller circles, the ruling emperor could be read symbolically as the “son” of each of his ancestors.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

In venturing so far from my natural habitat of Southeast Asia, I have benefited greatly from the kind encouragement and support of many friends and colleagues. For invaluable advice and comments on this article I would like to thank Mahmud Haq, Salim Quraishi, Ursula Sims-Williams, Muhammad Isa Waley, Jerry Losty, Venetia Porter, John Seyller, Ulrich Kratz and especially Robert Skelton. I am also most grateful to Colin Baker, Jacob Harskamp, Barry Bloomfield, Michael Spink, Michael Pollock, Sheila Canby and Rosemary Crill for assistance rendered generously in many forms. Any errors remain my sole responsibility. This article is dedicated to the memory of my grandmother, Marjorie D.C. Gallop (1900–92), who was bom in Bhopal, India.

References

Ahmad, Bashiruddin 1926 Farmāni-i SulṬānī. A rare collection of the royal firmans. Delhi.Google Scholar
Ansari, M.A. 1984 Administrative Documents of Mughal India. Delhi.Google Scholar
Arnold, T.W. & Wilkinson, J.V.S. 1936 The Library of A. Chester Beatty: a Catalogue of Indian Miniatures. 3 vols. London.Google Scholar
Bahura Gopal, Narayan & Singh, Chandramani 1988 Catalogue of Historical Documents in Kapad Dwara, Jaipur. Amber, Jaipur.Google Scholar
Beach Milo, Cleveland 1981 The Imperial Image: Paintings for the Mughal Court. Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Begley, W.E. & Desai, Z.A. 1989 Taj Mahal: the Illumined Tomb. Seattle.Google Scholar
Begley, W.E. & Desai, Z.A. 1990 (ed. & completed) The Shahjahan Nama of ‘Inayat Khan. Delhi.Google Scholar
Beveridge, H. (transl.) 1910 The Akbarnāma of Abu-l-Fazl. Vol. III. Calcutta.Google Scholar
Blochet, E. 1929 Musulman Painting Xllth-XXVIIth century. London.Google Scholar
Blochmann, H. 1870 “Observations on a Sanad, granted by Shāh ‘Alam to Rajah Pityāmbar Mitra Bahāldūr”. Proceedings of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, pp. 69.Google Scholar
Blochmann, H. 1927 The Ā’īn-i Akbarī of Abū ‘l-Fazl ‘Allāmi, tr. H. Blochmann, ed. Phillott, D.C.. Calcutta.Google Scholar
Brand, Michael & Lowry, Glenn 1985 Akbar's India: Art from the Mughal City of Victory. New York.Google Scholar
CHI 1971 The Cambridge History of India. Vol. IV. The Mughul Period, planned by Wolselely Haig, ed. by Burn, Richard. Delhi.Google Scholar
Christie's, 1995 Islamic Art and Indian Miniatures (catalogue of a sale on 17 10 1995). London.Google Scholar
Christie's, 1997 Islamic Art and Indian Miniatures (catalogue of a sale on 14 10 1997). London.Google Scholar
Clarke, C. Stanley 1922 Indian Drawings: thirty Mogul Paintings of the school of jahāngīr. London.Google Scholar
Commissariat, Khan Bahadur M.S. 1940Imperial Mughal farmans in Gujurat”. Journal of the University of Bombay, 1 pp. 156.Google Scholar
Crill, Rosemary 1985 “A lost Mughal miniature rediscovered”. The V&A Album, London.Google Scholar
Desai, Z.A. 1993Some rare seal-bearing Persian manuscripts in the Hazrat P.M. Dargah Library, Ahmadabad.” Indo-Iranica, 46, 1–4 pp. 5273.Google Scholar
Descriptive 1962 A Descriptive List of Farmans, Manshurs and Nishans addressed by the Imperial Mughals to the Princes of Rajasthan. Bikaner.Google Scholar
Durbar 1911 Loan Exhibition of Antiquities: Coronation Durbar, 1911, Delhi Museum of Archaeology. [Delhi].Google Scholar
Ettinghausen, Richard 1961 Paintings of the Sultans and Emperors of India in American Collections. India: Lalit Kala Akademi.Google Scholar
Falk, Toby & Digby, Simon 1979 Paintings from Mughal India. London.Google Scholar
Fekete-Hazai, 1977 Einführung in die persische Paläographie. Fekete, L., ed. Hazai, G.. Budapest.Google Scholar
Felix, , The Rev. Father O.C. 1916a “Mughal Farmāns, Parwānahs and Sanads issued in favour of the Jesuit Missionaries”. Journal of the Panjab Historical Society, 1 pp. 153.Google Scholar
Felix, , The Rev. Father O.C. 1916b “The Mughal seals.” Journal of the Panjab Historical Society, 2 pp. 100–25.Google Scholar
Foster, William (ed.) 1899 The Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe to the Court of the Great Mogul, 1615–1619. London (reprinted 1991).Google Scholar
Fryer, John 1698 A New Account of East-India and Persia. London.Google Scholar
Goswamy, B.N. & Grewal, J.S. 1967 The Mughals and the jogis of jakhbar: some Ma‘ād-i-Ma'ash and other documents. Simla.Google Scholar
Gray, Basil 1978 The World History qfRashid al-Din: a study of the Royal Asiatic Society manuscript. London.Google Scholar
Guy, John & Swallow, Deborah (eds.) 1990 Arts of India: 1550–1900. London.Google Scholar
Habsburg 1987 Sale of Two Giant Gold Mohur Coins. At the Hotel Noga Hilton, Geneva, Monday, November 9, 1987. [Geneva]: Habsburg, Feldman S.A.Google Scholar
Haig, W. (ed. & transl.) 1925 Muntakhabu-’t-Tawārīkh, by ‘Abdul-’l-Qādir ibn-i-Mulūkshāh, known as al-Badāoni. Vol. III. Calcutta.Google Scholar
Herbert, Tho. [Sir Thomas] 1638 Some Yeares Travels into Africa & Asia the Great, especially describing the Famous Empires of Persia and Industani, as also divers other Kingdoms in the Orientall Indies, and I'les Adjacent. London.Google Scholar
Heritage, 1982 The Indian Heritage, ed. Skelton, Robert et al. [London].Google Scholar
Historie 1758 Beknopte historie van het Mogolsche keyzerryk en de zuydelyke aangrensende ryken. Batavia.Google Scholar
Hodivala, Shahpurshah Hormasji 1923 Historical Studies in Mughal Numismatics. (Occasional memoirs of the Numismatic Society of India; II). Calcutta.Google Scholar
Ibn, Hasan 1936 The Central Structure of the Mughal Empire. London.Google Scholar
IGI 1908 The Imperial Gazetteer of India. 24 vols. Oxford.Google Scholar
Irvine, H. 1904The later Mughals”. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, LXXII.i.Google Scholar
Islam, Riazul 1979 A Calendar of Indo-Persian Relations (1500–1750). Tehran and Karachi.Google Scholar
Jhaveri, Krishnlal Mohanlal (ed. & transl.) 1928 Imperial Farmans granted to the Ancestors of His Holiness the Tikāyat Mahārāj, A.D. 1577–1805, ed. & transl. into Hindi, Gujarati and English. Bombay.Google Scholar
Leach, Linda York 1995 Mughal and other Indian Paintings from the Chester Beatty Library. Vol. 1. London.Google Scholar
Manucci, Niccolao 1907 Storio do Mogor, or Mogul India 1653–1708. Tr. William Irvine. London.Google Scholar
Meredith-Owens, G.M. 1969 Handlist of Persian manuscripts 1895–1966. London.Google Scholar
Meen, V.B. & Tushingham, A.D. 1968 Crown jewels of Iran. Toronto.Google Scholar
Modi, Jivanji Jamshedji 1904The Parsees at the court of Akbar, and Dastur Meherji Rānā”. Journal of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, pp. 69246.Google Scholar
Modi, ivanji Jamshedji 1920–1921 “A farmān of Emperor Jehangir in favour of two Parsees”. Journal of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, pp. 419–90.Google Scholar
Mohiuddin, Momin 1961A soyurghal of Babur”. Indian Historical Records Commission, XXXVI, pp. 4954.Google Scholar
Mohiuddin, Momin 1971 The Chancellery and Persian Epistolography under the Mughals. Calcutta.Google Scholar
Monserrate, Father 1922 The Commentary of Father Monserrate, S.J. on his Journey to the Court of Akbar. London.Google Scholar
Pal, Pratapaditya (ed.) 1989 Romance of the Taj Mahal, ed. Pal, Pratapaditya et al. Londonand Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Purchas, Samuel 1624 Hakluytus Posthumus or Purchas His Pilgrimes. Vol. 1. London.Google Scholar
Quraishi, Salim 1991Mughal patronage and English nabobs”. Arts & the Islamic world, XX, pp. 1013.Google Scholar
Rabino, H.L. 1945 Coins, Medals and Seals of the Shāhs of Iran, 1500–1941. [S.i.: s.n.]Google Scholar
Rieu, Charles 1883 Catalogue of the Persian Manuscripts in the British Museum. London.Google Scholar
Rieu, Charles 1895 Supplement to the Catalogue of the Persian manuscripts in the British Museum. London.Google Scholar
Robinson, B.W. (ed.) 1976 Islamic Painting and the Arts of the book. London.Google Scholar
Rogers, Michael 1983 Islamic Art and Design. London.Google Scholar
Rogers, Michael 1993 Mughal Miniatures. London.Google Scholar
Rouffaer, G.P. 1906De Hindostansche oorsprong van het ‘negenvoudig’ sultans-zegel van Atjeh”. Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde van Nederlandsche Indie, LIX, pp. 349–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sarawak, 1992 The Sarawak Islamic Museum / Muzium Islam Sarawak, ed. Ariffin, Taha et al. , [Kuching].Google Scholar
Scarcia, Gianroberto 1968Un documento persiano del 946/1539 nell’ Archivo di Stato di Venezia”. Annali, XVIII, PP. 338–43.Google Scholar
Seyller, John 1997 The inspection and valuation of manuscripts in the imperial Mughal library. Artibus Asiae LVII 3/4, pp. 243349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shakeb, M.Z.A. 1977 (ed.) Mughal Archives: a Descriptive Catalogue of the Documents pertaining to the Reign of Shah Jahan (1628–1658). Vol. I. Durbar Papers and a Miscellany of Singular Documents. Hyderabad.Google Scholar
Shakeb, M.Z.A. 1982 A Descriptive Catalogue of Miscellaneous Persian Mughal Documents from Akbar to Bahadur Shah II. London.Google Scholar
Shakeb, M.Z.A. 1990 A Descriptive Catalogue of the Batala Collection of Mughal Documents, 1327–1757 A.D. London.Google Scholar
Skelton, Robert 1972 “A decorative motif in Mughal art”. Aspects of Indian Art, ed. Pal, Pratapaditya, pp. 147–52. Leiden.Google Scholar
Skelton, Robert 1988 “Imperial symbolism in Mughal painting”. Content and Context of Visual Arts in the Islamic World, ed. Soucek, Priscilla P., pp. 177–87. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press.Google Scholar
Sotheby's, 1987 Fine Oriental Manuscripts and Miniatures (catalogue of a sale on 14 12 1987). London.Google Scholar
Sotheby's, 1993 Oriental Manuscripts and Miniatures (catalogue of a sale on 28 04 1993). London.Google Scholar
Soudavar, Abolala 1992 Art of the Persian Courts: Selections from the Art and History Trust Collection, with a contribution by Milo Cleveland Beach. New York.Google Scholar
Spink, 1980 Islamic Art from India. London.Google Scholar
Tavernier, Jean Baptiste 1678 The Six Voyages of John Baptista Tavemier … made English by J.P. London.Google Scholar
Tirmizi, S.A.I. 1960 Indian Seals (Problems and Prospects), ed. Bhargava, K.D.. [S.i.]: National Archives of India.Google Scholar
Tirmizi, S.A.I. 1982 Calendar of Acquired Documents (1402–1719). New Delhi.Google Scholar
Tirmizi, S.A.I. 1989 Mughal Documents (1526–1627). New Delhi.Google Scholar
Valentijn, Francois 1726 Oud en Nieuw Ooost-Indien. 5 vols Dordrecht and Amsterdam, 1724–6.Google Scholar
Welch, Anthony & Welch, Stuart Cary 1982 Arts of the Islamic Book: the Collection of Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan. Ithaca and London.Google Scholar
Welch, Stuart Cary 1985 India: Art and Culture 1300–1900. New York.Google Scholar
Welch, Stuart Cary 1987 The Emperors’ Album: Images of Mughal India, ed. Welch, Stuart Cary et al. New York.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, J.V.S. 1931 The Shah-Namah ofFirdausi. London.Google Scholar