{"id":8385,"date":"2016-01-21T11:00:10","date_gmt":"2016-01-21T16:00:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=8385"},"modified":"2024-04-11T13:53:50","modified_gmt":"2024-04-11T17:53:50","slug":"the-wonders-of-creation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2016\/01\/21\/the-wonders-of-creation\/","title":{"rendered":"The Wonders of Creation"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Homira Pashai ~
\n<\/em><\/p>\n

The National Library of Medicine holds an important collection<\/a> of over 200 manuscripts dating back to the eleventh century in Arabic, Persian, and Ottoman Turkish relating to health and medicine. Many of them contain colorful illustrations and calligraphy. Among the collection of over 30 Persian manuscripts, there are a few illustrated copies of Kitab-i \u2018Aja\u2019ib al-Makhluqat wa Ghara\u2019ib al-Mawjudat<\/a><\/em> (In English, Marvels of Creatures and Miracles of Things Existing<\/em> or sometimes, The Wonders of Creation<\/em>), written by Abu Yahya Zakariya ibn Muhammad ibn Mahmud al-Qazwini<\/a> (ca. 1202\u20131283 C.E.), whose richness and beauty captivate viewers at first glance.<\/p>\n

\"An<\/a>
Full Map of the World in Zakar\u012by\u0101 ibn Mu\u1e25ammad al-Qazw\u012bn\u012b: \u2018Aj\u0101\u2019ib al-makhl\u016bq\u0101t wa-ghar\u0101\u2019ib al-mawj\u016bd\u0101t<\/a> <\/em>(Marvels of Things Created and Miraculous Aspects of Things Existing<\/em>), circa 1250<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

The Library owns four manuscript copies of al-Qazwini\u2019s \u2018<\/em>Aja\u2019ib<\/em> in Persian translation, and one copy each in the original Arabic and Ottoman Turkish, dating from the 16th to the 18th centuries. One of the most interesting and colorful copies<\/a> is in Persian, dating from the late 1500s and consisting of 335 leaves with more than 150 illustrations, in opaque watercolors and ink, of constellations, mythical figures, and various plants, animals, places and a world map. The paintings have a uniform style in the Indian tradition that offers visual pleasure to trained and untrained eyes. The Persian script is ta\u2019liq<\/a> with elements of naskh<\/a> written with black and red ink. The texts and illustrations are the product of careful and detailed planning and coordination between the scribes and the artists. The two other manuscripts of \u2018Aja\u2019ib<\/em> also are written in Persian naskh and nasta\u2019liq script. The illustrations of one of them attest to the maturation of the Mughal style of painting and refinement in draftsmanship, while the other one can be classified as a manuscript that was produced for a mass market. Although the illustrations of all the manuscripts follow the same genre, one of the copies is unique since the artist took the liberty to add illustrations of the literal and historical anecdotes.<\/p>\n

The Wonders of Creation<\/em>, was first compiled in Arabic in the middle 1200s in Wasit<\/a>, now in Iraq, and is an important encyclopedic text of medieval Islam. It is divided into two sections focusing respectively on celestial phenomena including the planets, stars, angels, and the terrestrial world, including geography, ethnography, anatomy, zoology, mineralogy, botany, prosody, and musicology. The division of the sections is based on a hierarchical arrangement of the phenomena of nature in which \u2018uluwiyyat, the celestial, comes first and sufliyyat , the terrestrial, follows after. Qazwini\u2019s \u2018Aja\u2019ib<\/em> is a constant dialogue between contemplation and exploration; as Qazwini noted by contemplating the creation through the instrument of \u2018ulum (science) and purification of soul one can see the reality of the universe. Therefore, Qazwini\u2019s encyclopedia of natural history was a mirror to represent the divine unity through the multiplicity of the creation.<\/p>\n