Showing posts with label Khosrow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Khosrow. Show all posts

22 Paintings, Following The True And Tragic Persian Love Story of Shirin and King Khusrau Parvîz

Unknown artist
Detail; King Khusraw Anushirvan, c. 741 A.H. (A.D. 1341)
Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
1 1/4 x 9 1/2 in. (28.58 x 24.13 cm)
Los Angeles County Museum of Art

King Khusraw Anushirvan Enthroned, Page from a Manuscript of the Shahnama (Book of Kings) of Firdawsi

Khosrow and Shirin is a work of fiction and a tale of love between the Sasanian king Khosrow II and Shirin, the Armenian Princess who went on and became the queen of Persia. 

Unknown artist
King Khusraw Anushirvan, c. 741 A.H. (A.D. 1341)
Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
1 1/4 x 9 1/2 in. (28.58 x 24.13 cm)
Los Angeles County Museum of Art

The love story starts off with the birth and education of Khosrow. Following this, Khosrow is chastised by his father, Hormizd IV for throwing a feast in a farmer’s house. Khosrow begs for his fathers forgiveness and repents for his actions. Once he does this, his father, Hormizd IV, forgives him.

That night, Anushirvan, the grandfather of Khosrow, visits Khosrow in his dreams. Anushirvan tells him about the future, about his future wife Shirin, a riding horse who goes by the name of Shabdiz, Barbad the musician and the great kingdom of Persia.

One fine day, a close friend and painter named Shapur tells Khosrow of a beautiful woman and Armenian princess named Shirin. Apparently, Shirin was the niece of Mahim Banu, the queen of Greece. Not only does Shapur give Khosrow information about Shirin’s whereabouts, but he also goes on and vividly describes her beauty. After listening to it all, Khosrow falls madly in love with Shirin.

Unknown artist
The sculptor Farhad brought before Shirin, ca. 1400
Ink, opaque watercolor and gold on paper
H x W: 27.3 x 16.5 cm (10 3/4 x 6 1/2 in)
Smithsonian Institution

Detached folio from the Khusraw u Shirin by Nizami; text: Persian in black nasta'liq script; heading in gold; recto: illustration: The sculptor Farhad brought before Shirin; verso: text, 4 columns, 23 lines; one of a group of 7 detached folios (F1931-37) from the manuscript (F1931.29) and the book binding (F 1931.30); accessioned separately. More on this work

Unknown artist
Shirin Examines the Portrait of Khusraw, c. 1431
From the manuscript Khamsa by Nizami
Gouache,
23.7 x 13.7 cm
Timurid Dynasty, Iran
Hermitage Museum

Shortly after, Shapur embarks on a journey to Armenia in search of Shirin. Upon finding her, Shapur shows her the picture of Khosrow and she falls in love with him. She grew immensely passionate for Khosrow and fled Armenian to travel to Mada’in, Khosrow’s capital in search of her love Khosrow. Meanwhile, sadly, Khosrow has a falling out with his father, and in an attempt to flee from his father’s anger, Khosrow sets out on a journey of his own to Armenia in search of his love Shirin.

Shaikh Zada,  (Iranian, active 1510–1550)
Khosrow Catches Sight of Shirin Bathing Nude, c. 1524-25
Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
32.1 x 22.2 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Reza Derakshani (Iranian, b. 1952)
A Scene from 'Khosro and Shirin', c. 2007
Oil, encaustic and gold leaf on canvas, in two parts, laid down on canvas
702⁄3 x 783⁄8in. (179.5 x 199cm.)
Private collection

Reza Derakshani (Iran, born 1952)
Khosrow Catches Sight of Shirin Bathing Nude
A Scene from 'Khosrow and Shirin', circa early 2000's
Oil on canvas
160 x 125cm (63 x 49 3/16in).
Private collection

Reza Derakshani is painter, poet, musician and performance artist, born in Sangsar, Iran in 1952. He graduated from the University of Tehran in 1976 and pursued his studies at the Pasadena School of Art in California. He now lives and works between Dubai, UAE and Austin, USA.

After experimenting with pure abstraction at the beginning of his artistic career in the 1980's whilst being associated with the Neo-expressionists, Derakshani devised his personal artistic style blending abstract and figurative elements from both Western and Eastern cultures, thereby creating an idiosyncratic oeuvre at the confluence of civilizations. In his work, the artist explores the natural world, as well as emotional states and themes of exile and alienation. He builds up the luminous, textured surfaces of his paintings with a base of roof tar, after which he applies layers of color and other materials such as gold, silver, enamel, and sand.

His work features in many public art collections including The British Museum, London; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art; The Russian Museum in St Petersburg, Russia and the Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz, Germany. In 2016, Derakshani has had two major solo exhibitions at The State Russian Museum in St Petersburg, Russia and at the Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz, Germany. More on Reza Derakshani

Both Shirin and Khosrow have a chance encounter each other midway through their journey. Khosrow happens upon Shirin while she was bathing naked and washing her hair in a stream. Unfortunately, Khosrow disguised himself in peasant clothes which made him unrecognizable for Shirin and Khosrow doesn’t recognize her as well. Upon reaching her kingdom in Armenia, the queen Shamira welcomes him, and he finds out that Shirin is in his capital town of Mada’in in search of him.

Artist unknown
Khusraw at the castle of Shirin, c. 14th century
Ink, gouache and gold on paper
height: 25.7 cm (10.1 in); width: 18.4 cm (7.2 in)
Freer Gallery of Art 

This time too, Shapur is sent to bring Shirin back to Armenia, but due to a tragic turn of events that led to his father’s death, Khosrow had to return to Mada’in immediately. Both lovers kept traveling to opposite places in search of one another and never meet each other. Later on, Khosrow is overthrown by general Bahram Chobin and flees to Armenia.

Unknown artist
THE BATTLE BETWEEN THE SASANIAN KING KHUSRAU PARVIS AND BAHRAM CHUBINEH, TURKISH, c. 1580
Gouache heightened with gold on paper
20 by 19cm. leaf 23.5 by 20cm.
Private collection

Unknown artist
The Night Attack of Bahram Chubina on the Army of Khusraw Parvis, circa 1560
Opaque watercolor heightened with gold and silver on paper
16 11/16 x 10 5/8 in. (42.42 x 26.92 cm); Mat- 30 1/4 x 22 1/4 in. (76.84 x 56.52 cm)
Los Angeles County Museum of Art 

In Armenia, Shirin and Khosrow finally meet and Shirin welcomes him with open arms. However, Shirin declines the invitation to marriage and puts forth a condition. Until and unless Khosrow fights for his motherland and wins it back from general Bahram Chobin, she won’t marry him.

To win Shirin’s heart as well as his kingdom and Mada’in back, Khosrow leaves Armenia and set out to meet the Byzantine emperor Maurice, in Constantinople. The Caesar agrees to help him wage war and overthrow general Bahram Chobinl. Nevertheless, Caesar’s assistance came at a price. The Caesar’s clause was that he’d assist Khosrow only if Khosrow agrees to married Caesar’s daughter Mariam. Khosrow was also made to promise that he wouldn’t marry anyone else as long as his wife Mariam was alive. Khosrow agrees and with the help of Caesar, he overthrows the general Chobin and regains his throne.


Shaikh Zada (Iranian, active 1510–1550)
Khusrau Seated on his Throne, c. A.H. 931/1524–25 CE
Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
Page: H. 12 5/8 in. (32.1 cm), W. 8 3/4 in. (22.2 cm)
Folio 64 from a Khamsa (Quintet) of Nizami of Ganja
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Seated on his throne under a colorful canopy, the king Khusrau Parviz holds court. Toward the middle of the composition, a pair of figures captures our attention. A bearded man holds an inscribed paper in one hand, while a young man applies ink to a seal ring on the other. This action likely identifies the bearded man as a chancery scribe, or courtier, entrusted with writing official correspondence and affixing the ruler’s seal. More on this painting

The Sasanian King Khusraw and Courtiers in a Garden, Page from a manuscript of the Shahnama (Book of Kings) of Firdawsi, late 15th-early 16th century
Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
9 1/2 x 5 7/16 in. (24.1 x 13.8 cm)
Brooklyn Museum

The ruler, dressed in an elaborate headpiece, sits in a garden upon a raised, gilded throne, surronded by attendants courtiers, and musicians. Although the illustration appears to be somewhat generic—it could represent an enthronement setting for any given ruler—the text reveals that it actually illustrates an episode from the reign of the Sasanian king Khusraw (ruled 590–628) as recounted in the Shāhnāma. More on this painting

Shaikh Zada (Iranian, active 1510–1550)
Farhad Carves a Milk Channel for Shirin
Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
H. 8 3/8 in. (21.3 cm), W. 5 1/16 in. (12.9 cm)
Folio 74 from a Khamsa (Quintet) of Nizami of Ganja
Metropolitan Museum of Art

When Shirin desires milk from a herd of goats that graze in a distant field, Farhad sets to work cutting a channel from the goats’ mountain pastureland to a pool at the foot of Shirin’s palace. In this painting, Shirin visits Farhad upon his completion of the pool. At the very top of the composition, a goat cavorts in its hillside home. More on this painting

While all this was happening, Farhad, a sculptor fell in love with Shirin and became Khosrow’s love rival. Khosrow couldn’t tolerate this and Farhad was then sent on on an exile to the Behistun mountain. Farhad is assigned a mammoth and impossible task of carving steps out of the cliff rocks. 

Calligrapher: Ali ibn Hasan al-Sultani
Shirin visits the sculptor Farhad at work, ca. 1400
Ink, opaque watercolor and gold on paper
Collection: Freer Gallery of Art

Before beginning, Farhad carves the portraits of Shirin and Khosrow on the surface of the rock. Shirin travels to it to see the carvings, but faints with exhaustion and Farhad takes her back to the castle, carrying her on his back and riding his horse.

Shaikh Zada (Iranian, active 1510–1550)
Copied by Muhammed ibn Mulla Mir al-Hosseini, Iran
Detail; Farhad carrying Shirin and her horse, c. 1591
Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on pape
Calouste Gulbenkian Museum

Later, Khosrow sends false news of Shirin’s death to the sculptor. When Farhad hears this news he is heart broken and decides to commit suicide by throwing himself off a cliff. Soon after Farhad dies, Mariam passes away too.

Though Khosrow is free to propose to Shirin, he first tries romancing a woman who goes by the name of Shekar in Isfahan. After some time goes by, his trials of intimacy with Shekar end and he finally embarks to Shirin’s castle to see her. When he arrives Shirin notices that Khusrow is drunk . Because of this, Shirin refuses his admission into the castle and makes her objects about his affair with Shekar known.

Disappointed and dejected, Khosrow returns to his own palace. Finally, after a few more heroic deeds and maneuvers, Shirin agrees to marry Khosrow.

Shaikh Zada (Iranian, active 1510–1550)
Marriage of Khusrau and Shirin
Ink, opaque watercolor, and gold on paper
H. 7 in. (17.8 cm), W. 4 3/4 in. (12.1 cm)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

This painting depicts their marriage, set within a crystalline architectural composition. Great care is lavished upon the details of the building, suggesting that the artist may have intended to depict a specific structure. Over the heads of the couple appears an invocation to God—"Oh! Opener of Doors!" More on this painting

In 614 C.E., Khosrau II removed part of the true cross as a trophy, when he captured Jerusalem. Thirteen years later, in 628, the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius defeated Khosrau and retook the relic, which he at first placed in Constantinople, and later took back to Jerusalem in March 21, 630. 

After the Byzantines killed Emperor Maurice, Khosrow II began a war in 602 against the Byzantines. Khosrow II's forces captured much of the Byzantine Empire's territories, earning the king the epithet "the Victorious". 

Cenni Di Francesco Di Ser Cenni
Khosrow II Stealing True Cross, Scene from Stories of Cross, c. 1410
Fresco,
Chapel of the Holy Cross, Church of St Francis, Volterra, Tuscany

Cenni di Francesco ( 1369 – 1415 circa) is considered an eclectic painter. His first works are indebted to Orcagna and in general make use of gold backgrounds. According to Boskovits, the artist must have collaborated with Giovanni del Biondo at a time when he was most interested in issues of perspective. Also evident is the influence of Agnolo Gaddi. Cenni di Francesco’s figures have delicate, elegant features and elongated proportions, as evident in The Adoration of the Magi in San Donato in Polverosa, Florence. His work as an illuminator had a profound influence on his style, particularly in his marked sense of narrative, interest in detail and bright colouring. Cenni di Francesco’s late works combine Gothic elements with other, more traditional ones, as can be seen in The Virgin and Child with Saints (ca. 1400) in the Museo d’Arte Sacra di Montespertoli, and in his only signed work, namely the frescoes in the oratory of the church of San Francesco in Volterra of 1410, depicting The Legend of the True Cross. Other late works include the frescoes in San Lorenzo in Ponte, San Gemignano. More on Cenni di Francesco

In 614 C.E., Khosrau II removed part of the true cross as a trophy, when he captured Jerusalem. 

A siege of the Byzantine capital of Constantinople in 626 was unsuccessful, and Emperor Heraclius, now allied with Turks, started a risky but successful counterattack deep into Persia's heartland. Supported by the feudal families of the empire, Khosrow II's son Sheroe (Kavad II) imprisoned and killed his father, Khosrow II. This led to a civil war and interregnum in the empire and the reversal of all Sasanian gains in the war against the Byzantines.

Piero della Francesca
Battle between Heraclius and Chosroes, c. 1458 - 1466
The Legend of the True Cross
Fresco
329 x 747 cm
Basilica of San Francesco, Arezzo, Italy

This artwork is a part of The Legend of the True Cross - a series of frescoes painted by Francesca in the Basilica of San Francesco in Arezzo. Not only is it his largest work, but it is also considered one of his finest, as well as one of the finest works of the Early Renaissance period. The theme of the frescoes was derived from a 13th century book on the lives of the Saints, and the Triumph of the True Cross, which was said to be the actual cross on which Christ was crucified. More on this work

Piero della Francesca (1415 – 1492) was an Italian painter of the Early Renaissance. As testified by Giorgio Vasari in his Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, to contemporaries he was also known as a mathematician and geometer. Nowadays Piero della Francesca is chiefly appreciated for his art. His painting was characterized by its serene humanism, its use of geometric forms and perspective. His most famous work is the cycle of frescoes The History of the True Cross in the church of San Francesco in the Tuscan town of Arezzo. More on Piero della Francesca

Netherlands Artist
Emperor Heraclius Slays the King of Persia, c. 1485–1495
Tempera and oil on panel
66.6 × 52.6 cm (26 1/4 × 20 7/8 in.)
Art institute of Chicago

Here Emperor Heraclius defeats a king who is probably meant to be the son of Chosroës. The emperor can be identified by the closed imperial crown that caps his helmet, the double-headed eagle symbol on the trumpet and the trappings of his followers’ horses, and the fact that he is about to behead his opponent. This narrative provides an excuse for a vivid display of armor and weaponry. More on this work

Limbourg brothers
Heraclius Returns with The Cross, Folio 156r
Ink, tempera, and gold leaf on vellum
9 3/8 x 6 5/8 in. (23.8 x 16.8 cm)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Limbourg brothers are the best-known of all late Gothic manuscript illuminators. They were among the first illuminators to render specific landscape scenes (such as the environs and appearance of their patron’s castles) with great accuracy and sensitivity. More on this work

Limbourg brothers
Heraclius Enters Jerusalem, Folio 156v
Ink, tempera, and gold leaf on vellum
9 3/8 x 6 5/8 in. (23.8 x 16.8 cm)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

On Folio 156v, we see Heraclius, dismounted from his chariot, more humbly dressed, and carrying the cross on his back, with the gates of Jerusalem now open to receive emperor and cross. More on this work

But then, in an Oedipus like twist, Shiroy – Khosrow’s son from Mariam, falls in love with Shirin and murders his father, Khosrow, for her. 

Unknown artist
Khusrau Parvîz, his hands bound, is led by two rustics wearing straw hats with high crowns, from a pavilion in a garden where he had taken refuge, 1616 - 1620
Manuscripts, Turkish
 22 x 18.1 cm
The New York Public Library

Unknown artist
The funeral procession of King Khosrow II, c. 1726
From a version of Nizami Ganjavi's 'Khusrau u Shirin', Mughal school

Shiroy then sends her a messenger instructing her that after a week of morning, she then must marry him. Heartbroken and unwilling to marry her son in law Shiroy, Shirin decides to kills herself.

After their deaths, Kushrow and Shirin finally become one and are buried together in a single grave. More on Khosrow and Shirin



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32 Paintings detailing the Persian tragic romance of the Sasanian King Khosrow II and the Syriac Princess Shirin

Amir Khusrau
the last great king of the Sasanian dynasty (590-628)


"Khosrow and Shirin", is the title of the famous Persian tragic romance by the Persian poet Nizami Ganjavi (1141–1209). It tells a highly elaborated fictional version of the story of the love of the Sasanian king Khosrow II for the Syriac princess Shirin, who becomes his queen. The essential narrative is a love story of Persian origin which was already well-known from the great epico-historical poem the Shahnameh and other Persian writers and popular tales, and other works have the same title. 

Persia, learns from a dream that he is finally going to have a son. After the birth of this beautiful son, named Khusraw Parviz, Hurmuz raises him as a noble prince. When Khusraw becomes a young man he spends his time hunting and cavorting with his lovely maidens. 


The Sasanian King Khusraw and Courtiers in a Garden, 
Page from a manuscript of the Shahnama of Ferdowsi, late 15th-early 16th century. Brooklyn Museum.

Kingdom of Persia: Shapur, Khosrow's close friend and a painter, tells Khosrow of the Armenian queen Mahin Banu and her niece princess Shirin. Hearing of Shirin's flawless features, the young prince of Persia falls in love with her. 


The Prince asks Shahpour to paint his portrait and sends him to Armenia

Shapur journeys disguised as a monk. He learns that Shirin lives in seclusion with beautiful virgin maidens. Shirin’s palace has a single window from which she might look occasionally. Shapur secretly goes to the vicinity of the palace. Without being noticed, he places a mirror across from the window and when Shirin’s reflection falls on the mirror, he draws her beautiful image on a piece of paper. He also draws Khusraw’s portrait on the other side of the paper. Suddenly, a swift wind comes up, causing the paper to slip from Shapur’s grasp and float into Shirin’s garden. Shapur then draws another portrait of Shirin from his memory, as a gift for Khusraw. The paper that landed in the garden is discovered by a maiden in Shirin’s residence. When Shirin looks at it and sees an image on each of its sides she becomes deeply affected and immediately falls in love with Khusraw’s image. 


Fig. 9. Shirin looks at Khusraw's image. Fol. 22v of Khusraw va Shirin of Hatifi. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 69.27.
Shirin looks at Khusraw's image
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Shirin looks at the portrait of Khusrau watched by Shapur
British Library

Shirin who falls in love with Khosrow and escapes from Armenia to Khosrow's capital Mada'in. Meanwhile, Khosrow also flees from his father's anger and sets out for Armenia in search of Shirin.


Khosrow hunting

Fig. 8. Khusraw hunting. Fol. 15v of Khusraw va Shirin of Hatifi. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 69.27. (Photograph by Schecter Lee)
Khusraw hunting
Metropolitan Museum of Art


Nizami - Khusraw discovers Shirin bathing in a pool.jpg
Khosrow Parviz's first sight of Shirin, bathing in a pool, in a manuscript of Nezami's poem. This is a famous moment in Persian literature.

On the way, he finds Shirin unclothed, bathing, and washing her flowing hair; Shirin also sees him; but since Khosrow was traveling in peasant clothes, they do not recognize one another.


Shirin Bathes story of the love of the Persian king Khosrow II for the Armenian princess Shirin, who becomes his queen. Illustration depicting Khosrow watching Shirin bathing. Shirin bathing in a pool. From p.96 of MS Browne 1434, the Khamsa of Nizami (Persian, 1540). This story comes from the second part of the Khamsa, ‘Khosrow and Shirin Unknown artist Nezami's Khamseh, 1534 Golestan Palace خسرو دوم و شاهزاده خانم ارمنی شیرین، هنرمند نامعلوم، خمسه نظامی، 954 هجری قمری
Khosrow watching Shirin bathing. Shirin bathing in a pool. From p.96 of MS Browne 1434, the Khamsa of Nizami (Persian, 1540)

Khosrow arrives in Azerbaijan and is welcomed by Shamira the queen of Armenia - yet he finds out that Shirin is in Mada'in. Again, Shapur is sent to bring Shirin. 


Khusraw at the castle of Shirin (from a manuscript of the Khusraw and Shirim by Nizami), early 15th century, Timurid period, ink, opaque, watercolor and gold on paper, Iran
Khusraw at the castle of Shirin 
(from a manuscript of the Khusraw and Shirim by Nizami), early 15th century, Timurid period, ink, opaque, watercolor and gold on paper

Khusrau in Front of the Palace of Shirin

When Shirin reached Armenia again, Khosrow – because of his father's death- has to return to Mada'in. The two lovers keep going to opposite places till finally Khosrow is overthrown by a general named Bahrām Chobin and flees to Armenia.


Shirin receives Khusraw at her palace in Armenia

Khosrow and Shirin | by persian.painting
Khosrow and Shirin, 1539-1543

Khosrow finally meets Shirin and is welcomed by her. Shirin, however, does not agree to marry Khosrow; unless he first claims his country back from Bahram Choobin. 




[Khosrow+and+Bahram+Choubin+in+battle.jpg]
Kasra contracts Byzantine Empire to arrest Bahram Choobin the rebel commander who was hiding in western borders of Persia and successfully defeat him but in return of this help he marries Mary the daughter of eastern Roman emperor

Khosrow leaves Shirin in Armenia and goes to Constantinople.  Ḵosrow appealed to Maurice for help, first as a fellow-ruler who would naturally be disturbed at the sight of a rebel destroying the established order in the neighboring empire, and second on the grounds that the Romans needed the Persians to manage their sector of the outer world lest 'the fierce, malevolent tribes' might take control of Persia and 'thereby in the course of time gain irresistible might, which will not be without great injury to your tributary nations as well'. Caesar agrees to assist him against Bahram Choobin conditioned that he married his daughter Maryam. Khosrow is forced to promise not to marry as long as Maryam is alive. 


Key Khosrow and Iranians cross the sea in pursuit of Afrasiyab, Murshed Ben 'Izz al-Din, miniature, Shiraz, 1482. Collection of Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan, Geneva.
Murshed Ben 'Izz al-Din
Khosrow and Iranians cross the sea in pursuit of Afrasiyab, 1482.

File:Iran, Battle Between Kay Khusraw and Afrasiyab, by Salik b. Sa'id, 1493-1494 AD.jpg
Salik ibn Sa'id, 1493-1494 AD
The Battle of Kay Khusraw and Afrasiyab
Freer Gallery of Art, Smithsonian

Fig. 10. Khusraw battles Bahram Chubin. Fol. 32r of Khusraw va Shirin of Hatifi. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 69.27.
Khusraw battles Bahram Chubin
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Khosrow succeeds in defeating his enemy and reclaims his throne. Maryam, due to her jealousy, keeps Khosrow away from Shirin.



Khosrow Parviz and Shirin in an 18th-century miniature

The sculptor Farhad falls in love with Shirin when he is given the impossible task of opening a channel in the mountains to provide Shirin’s castle with milk. 



 Queen Shirin Visiting the Sculptor Farhad, mid 18th century. Oil on canvas, 36 x 35 in. Brooklyn Museum, Bequest of Irma B. Wilkinson in memory of her husband, Charles K. Wilkinson, 1997.108.5
Queen Shirin Visiting the Sculptor Farhad
Mid 18th century. 
Oil on canvas, 
36 x 35 in. 
Brooklyn Museum

Shirin Presents a Jug of Milk to Farhad, ca. 1500
Opaque watercolor, ink and gold on paper
H: 24.7 W: 14.5 cm 

Hearing of Farhad’s passion for Shirin, Khusraw orders Farhad to be brought to him and tries to discourage him from loving Shirin. Unable to convince Farhad otherwise, Khusraw imprisons him in a deep well on top of a mountain. Farhad digs into this well with a piece of steel and discovers a ruby mine while cutting through the rocks. On each ruby he carves an image of Shirin. When these rubies reach the hands of many, Shirin asks Khusraw to inquire about this. Khusraw calls Farhad to him in order to learn about the secret of the rubies. Khusraw is once again humbled by Farhad’s love for Shirin As a last resort, Khusraw  conjures up a task that he believes Farhad will never be able to complete; opening a passage through her Mount Bisutun for Khusraw’s army—and agrees to  leave Shirin to Farhad if he successfully completes  this assignment. Farhad agrees to the arduous task


Farhad meets Shirin
Persian Miniature from poem “Khosrow and Shirin” of Nizami Ganjavi

Shirin came to see his work but she was tired after her long journey, almost fainting with weakness. Farhad carried her back to the castle: "The tired horse, on the spur of the moment, he raised from the ground, taking him by the mane."


An abridged version of Khusrau u Shirin by Nizami. Sixty-three miniatures. - caption: 'Farhad carrying Shirin and her horse.' | by The British Library
Anon
Farhad carrying Shirin and her horse, 1726
Opaque watercolour. 
Mughal style.

Farhad Carries Shirin and her Horse on his Shoulders
Farhad Carries Shirin and her Horse on his Shoulders
The Khamsa by Nizami
Miniatures, Gouache, 23.7x13.7 cm
Iran, 1431-1431

Khosrow cannot bide Farhad, so he sends him on an exile to Behistun mountain with the impossible task of carving stairs out of the cliff rocks. Farhad begins his task hoping that Khosrow will allow him marry Shirin. Then, Khosrow sends a messenger to Farhad and gives him false news of Shirin's death. Hearing this false news, Farhad throws himself from the mountaintop and dies. 

Khosrow writes a letter to Shirin, expressing his regret for Farhad's death. Soon after this incident, Maryam also dies. According to Ferdowsi's version, it was Shirin who secretly poisoned Miriam. Shirin replies Khosrow's letter with another satirical letter of condolences.


An illustrated and illuminated leaf from a manuscript of Amir Khosrow's Khamsa-i Dihlavi: Khosrow and Shirin Meet in a Hunting Pavilion, Persia, Safavid, Herat, circa 1610<br /> | Lot | Sotheby's
Khosrow and Shirin Meet in a Hunting Pavilion, Persia, Safavid, Herat, circa 1610
gouache heightened with gold on paper, text in 4 columns above and below the painting, written in black nasta'liq script, the reverse with a heading in red ink and 24 lines of text, ruled in colours and gold
painting: 25 by 15cm. max.
leaf: 27.5 by 16cm.

Before proposing marriage to Shirin, Khosrow tries to have intimacy with a woman named Shekar in Isfahan; this further delays the lovers' union. 

An abridged version of Khusrau u Shirin by Nizami. Sixty-three miniatures. - caption: 'Gifts and palanquins sent by Khusrau to Shirin.' | by The British Library
Anon
Gifts and palanquins sent by Khusrau to Shirin, 1726
Provenance:
Opaque watercolour
Mughal style

Finally, Khosrow goes to Shirin's castle to see her. Shirin, seeing that Khosrow is drunk, does not let him in the castle. She particularly reproaches Khosrow for his intimacy with Shekar. Khosrow, sad and rejected, returns to his palace.


An abridged version of Khusrau u Shirin by Nizami. Sixty-three miniatures. - caption: 'Khusrau and Shirin playing polo.' | by The British Library
Anon
Khusrau and Shirin playing polo, 1726
Opaque watercolour
Mughal style

Shirin eventually consents to marry Khosrow after several romantic and heroic episodes. 


Fig. 12. Shirin and Khusraw's marriage. Fol. 67v of Khusraw va Shirin of Hatifi. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 69.27.
Shirin and Khusraw's marriage
Metropolitan Museum of Art


Khosrow et Shirin en compagnie du marchand de poissons, artiste anonyme, miniature, Meched, 1556-1565. Freer Art Gallery, Washington.
Mashhad
Khosrow and Shirin in the company of fish merchant, 1556-1565.

Khusraw and Shirin in the Marriage-Bed
Khusraw and Shirin in the Marriage-Bed
Miniatures, Gouache, 23.7x13.7 cm
Origin: Iran, 1431-1431, Timurid Dynasty
Album: The Khamsa by Nizami

Yet, Shiroyeh, Khosrow's son from his wife Maryam, is also in love with Shirin. Shiroy finally murders his father Khosrow and sends a messenger to Shirin conveying that after one week, she would have to marry him. Shirin, in order to avoid marrying Shiroy, kills herself. Khosrow and Shirin were buried together in one grave. More

Khusraw Murdered by Son,
by Ganjavi Nizami. 
From The Romance of Khusraw and Shirin.
Iran, 17th century

Khusraw Murdered
Khusraw Murdered


Khosrow II
Khosrow II, coin, ad 590–628


Acknowledgment: Wikipedia, BritannicaIslamic Arts and Architecture