16 yüzyıl Tebriz ve Babür Minyatür Okullarının Yapısal-tipolojik paralelleri

Authors

  • Sabina Namazova Azerbaycan Devlet Kültür ve Güzel sanatlar Üniversitesi, Fen bilimleri ve Doktora Bölüm Başkanı, Bakü, Azerbaycan

Keywords:

miniature, miniature schools, Tabriz, Mughal, Mir Sayyid Ali

Abstract

The creation of miniature art is an important and significant artistic
field and event not only for Azerbaijan, but also for Turkey, India and Iran.
Miniature art, which has an important place and role in the Near and
Middle East, is characterised by a common past and sickle traditions for
many countries, one of which is the Tabriz and Mughal miniature schools.
The Tabriz School of Miniature is a school that dominated in the
XVI-XVII centuries within the Safavid state. The idea and technique of the
Tabriz School of Miniature, founded by Sultan Muhammad, in turn led
to the creation of a number of miniature schools, such as the Baghdad,
Shiraz, Herat, Ottoman and Mongolian miniature schools, and influenced
their development. The main driving force behind this influence on the
Mughal school of miniature painting was Mir Sayyid Ali and another artist
from Tabriz, Abdussamad Shirazi, who, along with him, made outstanding
contributions to the establishment of the Mughal painting workshop.
As a result of this influence, it is possible to identify both structuraltheological
and semantic parallels when looking at the miniatures created
in the workshops of both schools. The aim of the study: The structuraltypological
analysis of samples from the Tabriz and Mughal schools of
miniature painting is to determine their mutual compatibility.

Author Biography

Sabina Namazova, Azerbaycan Devlet Kültür ve Güzel sanatlar Üniversitesi, Fen bilimleri ve Doktora Bölüm Başkanı, Bakü, Azerbaycan

Azerbaycan Devlet Kültür ve Güzel sanatlar Üniversitesi,
Fen bilimleri ve Doktora Bölüm Başkanı, Bakü, Azerbaycan

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Published

2026-02-03