Lot

43

RASA'IL IKHWAN AL-SAFA, SIGNED BY MUHAMMAD IBN 'UMAR IBN MUHAMMAD AL-KHAZAN AL TASRI, DATED 683 AH/1

In FINE ISLAMIC ART HAMMER AUCTION 22 JUNE 2023

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RASA'IL IKHWAN AL-SAFA, SIGNED BY MUHAMMAD IBN 'UMAR IBN MUHAMMAD AL-KHAZAN AL TASRI, DATED 683 AH/1 - Image 1 of 12
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Hattemerbroek
Arabic manuscript on paper, in 2 volumes, the first 49 leaves, plus 2 fly-leaves, the second 158 leaves, plus 3 flyleaves (2 detached), each 21 lines to the page, written in neat naskh script in dark brown ink, chapter headings written in large thuluth script, Basmallah in muhaqqaq script, keywords picked out in red, vol.1 with illuminated double-page frontispiece with 2 shamsas, f.1 added in the 14th century, title information in large thuluth script against a foliated gold ground, each volume in later bindings, one cloth-covered, the other leather with simple gilt decoration.23 by 30 cm. CATALOGUE NOTE inscriptions f.1b: ‘In his turn, the poor slave Alvan (Elvan) ibn ‘Ali al-Mukhlis ibn al-Shaykh Ilyas, known as Baba, may God be pleased with them and curses of the great fear and terror …[took possession of it]’ 1- The first book : the fourth section in terms of its arrangement with 11 message or articles. a- The first message : Mental principles according to the Pythagoreans, the reason for people's different morals, difference in information perception, the differences in the realization of the effective powers, human senses and how to strengthen them, imagined powers and differences between people in them, the advantages of these powers, principles of argumentation, good and evil in human soul, differences of people's desire etc.. b-The second message: Mental principles according to the authors of the book, ethnological and human sciences in finding the way to Allah, refining the soul and reforming morals.c-The third message: in the belief of Ikhwan al-Safa and the matter of the soul: explains how they look at the human soul, what controls it, the virtues and the souls according to different prophets. d-The fourth message: Passive Intellect, They urge the learners to look closely at all kinds go knowlegde, research all the sciences, and not to neglect one of the chapters of knowledge, they explain also the reference they used, opinions and and the ideas they called for. e-The fifth message: The nature essence of faith and the characteristics of the faithful believer, the types of people in terms of faith, namely: a scholar who is not a believer, a believer who is not a scholar, and he who has lost his lot from the two, and he who is a scholar and a believer. f-The sixth message: Divine law and terms of prophecy. g-The seventh message: Divine and legal sciences in how to call to Allah. h-The eighth message: Actions of the spirituals, they explain the connection between the spheres and the types of souls and the influencing and affected forces between the spheres and spirits. i-The ninth message: Types of policies, reforming the soul and its morals to complete its happiness in this world and the hereafter. j-The tenth message: Physical principles and the purpose of the world: Pythagoras was a wise man of Harran, was very careful to look at the science of numbers and the oneness of Allah. k-The eleventh message: Magic and talismans. f.2a, in the roundel: 'For the treasury of … of earthly beings, the greatest Shah of all creatures, Khwajah Ghiyath al-Dunya (?) …. wa’l-Din, calling upon the aid of The Defender, the Creator’. The second book is the third section in terms of arrangement for the entire letters/articles, starting with the fifth letter until the tenth letter. a-The fifth message: The universes, the meaning of what the philosophers said about spirituality and the planets, races of the angels, and how their powers flow in the world. b-The sixth message: nature, quantity, and types of love, what the philosophers said about the nature of love, the quantity of its types, how it arises and its principle, and what causes it to exist, and the reasons calling for it, and what is its ultimate purpose. c-The seventh message: The nature of the resurrection, the method of the ascension, the reality of the resurrection, and the abode of the Hereafter. e-The eighth message: The nature of movements, the quantity of their types, and the directions, movement is a spiritual image that the soul makes it in the bodies, makes its shapes, images and colors and in it the bodies are pictorial and engraved. f-The ninth message: Causes and Effects, the knowledge of how is before knowledge of quantity. g-The tenth message: borders and compositions, the knowledge of the realities of things is knowledge of their elements and borders, and that all things are of two types, compounds and substances. This manuscript is a rare and early dated copy of an extremely important and interesting work known as the Rasa’il Ikhwan al-Safa, a medieval Islamic encyclopaedia that represents the landmark legacy of a mystical group of Iraqi scholars and thinkers who aimed to save Islamic teaching from the perceived threat of liberal sciences by means of philosophy. To the best of our knowledge, it is the third earliest copy in existence, dated 683 AH/1284 AD. Of equal interest are the previous owners of the manuscript. It was initially dedicated to Khwajah Jahan (Hace-i Cihan, also known as Hoca Cihan), a Sufi saint, scholar and statesman in the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum. Later, in the fourteenth century, the manuscript entered the possession of Elvan (Alvan) Çelebi (d. after 1358-59 AD), a descendent of Baba Ilyas Khurasani, whose tomb in the dervish lodge he founded remains one of the most visited shrines in Anatolia.The Ikhwan al-Safa was a secret brotherhood thought to have been affiliated to the Ismai'li movement. Their true identity was so thoroughly hidden that scholars can only speculate as to their real associations. The Rasa'il however are considered to be central to Isma'ili doctrine, and have been attributed to the authorship of various different Shi'a imams, and scholars from the eleventh century. Given the esoteric nature of Shi'a Isma'ilism, one can understand why they even referred to themselves (in the fourth Rasa'il) as "sleepers in the cave". Although the Ikhwan remained an anonymous group of scholars, the literary scholar Abu Hayyan al-Tawhidi (d.1023 AD) is thought to have identified three members, all of whom were from Basra: Abu'l-Hasan ‘Ali Ibn Harun al-Zanjani and three of his companions, Abu Sulayman Muhammad Ibn Ma‘shar al-Busti, (called al-Maqdisi), Abu Ahmad al-Nahrajuri and al-‘Awfi.The manuscript to hand represents half of book three and the whole of book four. The four books of the Rasa’il Ikhwan al-Safa are as follows:1. The mathematical sciences 2. The natural sciences 3. The rational sciences 4. The theological sciences Among dated copies of the Rasa’il, the present manuscript only appears to be antedated by the famous copy in the 'Atif Pasha Library, Istanbul (1681), dated 587 AH/1182 AD, and the copy formerly in the British Museum, now in the British Library (Or 6692), dated 646 AH/1248-49 AD. A further copy is in the Majlis-i Shura-yi Milli, Tehran 4707, dated 686 AH/1287 AD. Manuscripts of the Rasa'il al-Safa appear very rarely on the market.A lavishly-illuminated copy comprising only book one of the full work was sold at Sothebys , 20 April 2016, lot 35, and another dated 711 AH/1311 AD on 9 April 2008, lot 28.
Arabic manuscript on paper, in 2 volumes, the first 49 leaves, plus 2 fly-leaves, the second 158 leaves, plus 3 flyleaves (2 detached), each 21 lines to the page, written in neat naskh script in dark brown ink, chapter headings written in large thuluth script, Basmallah in muhaqqaq script, keywords picked out in red, vol.1 with illuminated double-page frontispiece with 2 shamsas, f.1 added in the 14th century, title information in large thuluth script against a foliated gold ground, each volume in later bindings, one cloth-covered, the other leather with simple gilt decoration.23 by 30 cm. CATALOGUE NOTE inscriptions f.1b: ‘In his turn, the poor slave Alvan (Elvan) ibn ‘Ali al-Mukhlis ibn al-Shaykh Ilyas, known as Baba, may God be pleased with them and curses of the great fear and terror …[took possession of it]’ 1- The first book : the fourth section in terms of its arrangement with 11 message or articles. a- The first message : Mental principles according to the Pythagoreans, the reason for people's different morals, difference in information perception, the differences in the realization of the effective powers, human senses and how to strengthen them, imagined powers and differences between people in them, the advantages of these powers, principles of argumentation, good and evil in human soul, differences of people's desire etc.. b-The second message: Mental principles according to the authors of the book, ethnological and human sciences in finding the way to Allah, refining the soul and reforming morals.c-The third message: in the belief of Ikhwan al-Safa and the matter of the soul: explains how they look at the human soul, what controls it, the virtues and the souls according to different prophets. d-The fourth message: Passive Intellect, They urge the learners to look closely at all kinds go knowlegde, research all the sciences, and not to neglect one of the chapters of knowledge, they explain also the reference they used, opinions and and the ideas they called for. e-The fifth message: The nature essence of faith and the characteristics of the faithful believer, the types of people in terms of faith, namely: a scholar who is not a believer, a believer who is not a scholar, and he who has lost his lot from the two, and he who is a scholar and a believer. f-The sixth message: Divine law and terms of prophecy. g-The seventh message: Divine and legal sciences in how to call to Allah. h-The eighth message: Actions of the spirituals, they explain the connection between the spheres and the types of souls and the influencing and affected forces between the spheres and spirits. i-The ninth message: Types of policies, reforming the soul and its morals to complete its happiness in this world and the hereafter. j-The tenth message: Physical principles and the purpose of the world: Pythagoras was a wise man of Harran, was very careful to look at the science of numbers and the oneness of Allah. k-The eleventh message: Magic and talismans. f.2a, in the roundel: 'For the treasury of … of earthly beings, the greatest Shah of all creatures, Khwajah Ghiyath al-Dunya (?) …. wa’l-Din, calling upon the aid of The Defender, the Creator’. The second book is the third section in terms of arrangement for the entire letters/articles, starting with the fifth letter until the tenth letter. a-The fifth message: The universes, the meaning of what the philosophers said about spirituality and the planets, races of the angels, and how their powers flow in the world. b-The sixth message: nature, quantity, and types of love, what the philosophers said about the nature of love, the quantity of its types, how it arises and its principle, and what causes it to exist, and the reasons calling for it, and what is its ultimate purpose. c-The seventh message: The nature of the resurrection, the method of the ascension, the reality of the resurrection, and the abode of the Hereafter. e-The eighth message: The nature of movements, the quantity of their types, and the directions, movement is a spiritual image that the soul makes it in the bodies, makes its shapes, images and colors and in it the bodies are pictorial and engraved. f-The ninth message: Causes and Effects, the knowledge of how is before knowledge of quantity. g-The tenth message: borders and compositions, the knowledge of the realities of things is knowledge of their elements and borders, and that all things are of two types, compounds and substances. This manuscript is a rare and early dated copy of an extremely important and interesting work known as the Rasa’il Ikhwan al-Safa, a medieval Islamic encyclopaedia that represents the landmark legacy of a mystical group of Iraqi scholars and thinkers who aimed to save Islamic teaching from the perceived threat of liberal sciences by means of philosophy. To the best of our knowledge, it is the third earliest copy in existence, dated 683 AH/1284 AD. Of equal interest are the previous owners of the manuscript. It was initially dedicated to Khwajah Jahan (Hace-i Cihan, also known as Hoca Cihan), a Sufi saint, scholar and statesman in the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum. Later, in the fourteenth century, the manuscript entered the possession of Elvan (Alvan) Çelebi (d. after 1358-59 AD), a descendent of Baba Ilyas Khurasani, whose tomb in the dervish lodge he founded remains one of the most visited shrines in Anatolia.The Ikhwan al-Safa was a secret brotherhood thought to have been affiliated to the Ismai'li movement. Their true identity was so thoroughly hidden that scholars can only speculate as to their real associations. The Rasa'il however are considered to be central to Isma'ili doctrine, and have been attributed to the authorship of various different Shi'a imams, and scholars from the eleventh century. Given the esoteric nature of Shi'a Isma'ilism, one can understand why they even referred to themselves (in the fourth Rasa'il) as "sleepers in the cave". Although the Ikhwan remained an anonymous group of scholars, the literary scholar Abu Hayyan al-Tawhidi (d.1023 AD) is thought to have identified three members, all of whom were from Basra: Abu'l-Hasan ‘Ali Ibn Harun al-Zanjani and three of his companions, Abu Sulayman Muhammad Ibn Ma‘shar al-Busti, (called al-Maqdisi), Abu Ahmad al-Nahrajuri and al-‘Awfi.The manuscript to hand represents half of book three and the whole of book four. The four books of the Rasa’il Ikhwan al-Safa are as follows:1. The mathematical sciences 2. The natural sciences 3. The rational sciences 4. The theological sciences Among dated copies of the Rasa’il, the present manuscript only appears to be antedated by the famous copy in the 'Atif Pasha Library, Istanbul (1681), dated 587 AH/1182 AD, and the copy formerly in the British Museum, now in the British Library (Or 6692), dated 646 AH/1248-49 AD. A further copy is in the Majlis-i Shura-yi Milli, Tehran 4707, dated 686 AH/1287 AD. Manuscripts of the Rasa'il al-Safa appear very rarely on the market.A lavishly-illuminated copy comprising only book one of the full work was sold at Sothebys , 20 April 2016, lot 35, and another dated 711 AH/1311 AD on 9 April 2008, lot 28.

FINE ISLAMIC ART HAMMER AUCTION 22 JUNE 2023

Sale Date(s)
Lots: 355
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Hattemerbroek
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Applicable when buying movable property at auction

1 APPLICABILITY

1.1 The present Conditions of Sale are applicable to all parts of the relationship between the Oriental Art Auctions  and the Buyer, which include a particular sale, purchase, intermediary services, appraisals, evaluations, estimates, cataloguing, and custody. The term 'Buyer' includes the 'Intending Buyer' who participates in the auction.
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1.3 Visitors to the auction shall be made aware of the applicability of these Conditions of Sale by means of publication available at the sale room in advance of the auction sale and/or by means of communication made prior to the sale. By participating in the auction sale each person acknowledges the applicability of the present Conditions of Sale and their complete acceptance thereof.

2. DUTY TO INFORM / DUTY TO INSPECT

2.1 Catalogue descriptions and any written or oral information given by the Specialist are to the best of his/her knowledge.
2.2 Prior to the sale the Buyer should satisfy him/herself as to both the condition and the accuracy of the description of any item in the internet catalogue or on the lot list by personally examining said item thoroughly or by having said item inspected carefully and expertly in order to form his/her own opinion as to the degree of correspondence between the item and its description. The Buyer should, where reasonably necessary or desirable, seek the opinion of an independent expert, and should not rely on the illustrations in printed, online or digital transmitted form. In the event that a description makes reference to certain faults or imperfections, Buyers should note that it is an indication which is not intended to be exhaustive and that there may be other faults not expressly referred to from which no rights can be derived.
2.3 Oriental Art Auctions cannot be held liable for the accuracy of the description published or expressed by any other means with respect to materials such as, for instance, types of wood, fabrics, alloys, earthenware, porcelain, and diamonds, all the above with the exception of precious metals. The Specialist accepts liability in case of an erroneous description only insofar as set out in Clause 6 of the present Conditions of Sale.

3. BIDDING

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3.2 Commission bids should be clear and unambiguous and in the opinion of Oriental Art Auctions must be received well in advance of the start of any auction session. In the event that Oriental Art Auctions shall receive several commission bids on a Lot for identical amounts and at auction said commission bids are the highest bids for that Lot, in the above event, the Lot in question shall be knocked down by Oriental Art Auctions to the person whose commission bid (for the relevant amount) was received first.
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6. AUCTIONEER'S LIABILITY TO BUYER

6.1 Unless certain items in the catalogue or on the lot list are expressly excluded - without prejudice to Clauses 2 & 4.2 - the Specialist may be willing to set aside the sale of a Lot sold at auction and to refund an amount corresponding to the original Purchase Price and auction costs in the event that the Seller within a period of three weeks subsequent to the sale has established to the satisfaction of Oriental Art Auctions that the Lot sold at auction has such serious hidden faults or that the description given is shown to be so erroneous that, had the Buyer been aware of said faults or had there been an accurate description at the fall of the hammer, said Buyer would have decided not to proceed with the purchase or would have made the purchase only at a considerably lower price. The above is not applicable to faults that are in relation to the condition of the item (such as, for instance, normal wear and restoration).
6.2 Oriental Art Auctions may refuse to take back a Lot in the event that its description was retracted in advance of or during a sale and the public has been informed of the correct description by means of oral announcements or the posting of notices in the saleroom.
6.3 The Buyer also forfeits any willingness on the part of Oriental Art Auctions to set aside the sale upon failure to return the item sold at auction in the same condition that it was in at the fall of the hammer, the above at the discretion of Oriental Art Auctions.

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7.1 Oriental Art Auctions reserve the following rights:
a. to refuse at its discretion any person as a bidder or Buyer;
b. to change at all times the numerical order of Lots on sale;
c. for items to be withdrawn or added;
d. to combine or divide Lots
e. to withhold or delay the sale of Lots;
f. to rectify erroneous bids and allocations, or to cancel a purchase so that the Buyer is unable to benefit from any such mistake by invoking the formation of a Purchase agreement;
g. to claim upon allocation immediate payment in whole or in part; in case of refusal or inability to pay, Oriental Art Auctions is authorized to cancel the Purchase agreement and subsequently resell the particular Lot and to reject at any future auction any bids made by the defaulting bidder;
h. to set aside the Purchase agreement and to resell the item in the event that the Buyer refuses upon request to supply Oriental Art Auctions with his/her full name and address by presenting valid proof of identity;
i. not to transfer items from the account of the original Buyer to that of a third party;
j. not to release items in the course of an auction;
k. to execute bids for and on behalf of a Buyer or a Seller;
l. to resell at auction any Lot that was subject to a dispute during or shortly after a sale, and to set aside any Purchase agreement pertaining thereto.
m. to request a deposit from registered bidders prior to the sale

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8.3 Title to the property in a Lot shall not pass to the Buyer until full payment of the Purchase Price has been made and in case of overdue payment, not until payment of the Purchase Price including the costs/charges mentioned in Clause 9 has been made in full.

9. OVERDUE PAYMENT

9.1 In case of non-payment Oriental Art Auctions may charge the Buyer interest at a rate equal to that of the statutory interest plus 3%, to be calculated with effect from the date upon which the term for payment expired. All judicial and extrajudicial costs shall be borne by the defaulting Buyer, which costs shall be estimated either at 15% of the Purchase Price plus auction costs or at a minimum of € 250 (two hundred and fifty Euro), without prejudice to the right to recover any costs actually incurred.
9.2 In the event that the Buyer exceeds the term for payment as a consequence of which Buyer is in default by operation of law, Oriental Art Auctions is authorized to give written notice of the setting aside of the Purchase agreement.

10. COLLECTION

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10.2 Failure on the part of the Buyer to take delivery of the property purchased and to collect or arrange collection thereof within the stipulated time period, means that the Buyer is by operation of law in default and the provisions set out in Clause 9 shall apply mutatis mutandi. Oriental Art Auctions is also entitled at the risk and expense of the Buyer to place the property purchased in storage, as a consequence of which all transport costs and any risk inherent therein is likewise for the account of the Buyer.

11. UNSOLD LOTS

11.1 In the event that a Lot remains unsold at auction, Oriental Art Auctions is authorized but not obliged to reoffer the Lot for sale during a period of ten days following the auction, unless otherwise agreed to by the Consignor.
11.2 Oriental Art Auctions shall hold any such post-auction sale ("after sale") only if the sale can be effected at a price equivalent at least to the amount of the net proceeds of sale to which the Seller would have been entitled if the Lot had been sold for the reserve set at auction, unless other arrangements have been agreed to by the Seller.
11.3 Any purchase by a Buyer within the meaning of the present Clause shall incorporate these Conditions of Sale as if sold in the auction and shall be equally binding.

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13. PHOTOGRAPHS AND ILLUSTRATIONS

13.1 Oriental Art Auctions is authorized to make photographs, illustrations, or any other visual representations of all the items offered for sale and to use the above in any way whatsoever, prior to, during or following the auction sale, and shall observe any statutory regulations applicable. Oriental Art Auctions shall retain the copyright in all such visual representations for use at its discretion.

14. MISCELLANEOUS

14.1 Nullification, annulment or the nonbindingness of one the provisions set out in the present General Conditions of Sale shall not affect the validity of the remaining provisions. In the event that one or more provisions is null and void, annulled or nonbinding, Buyer and Specialist and /or Oriental Art Auctions shall agree one or more provisions to replace the above which are valid and which correspond as far as possible in content and purport to the provisions that are null and void, annulled or nonbinding.
14.2 The present Conditions of Sale are governed exclusively by the Laws of the Netherlands.
14.3 All disputes pertaining to, arising from or in connection with any Purchase agreement concluded between Oriental Art Auctions and the Buyer, the formation of a Purchase agreement, or the present Conditions of Sale, shall be submitted to the exclusive jurisdiction of the competent court in Zwolle, except for the right of Oriental Art Auctions to choose to have the dispute adjudicated by the court that has jurisdiction by law.

 

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