At the time of
his death in 1227, Genghis Khan
had unified the Mongol people, organized a nearly invincible
army of fearless nomadic warriors, and set into motion the
first stage in the conquest of an enormous territory that
would be completed by his sons and grandsons. With
extraordinary speed and devastating ruthlessness the Mongols
[more
information on the Mongols] created the world’s
largest empire, stretching at its greatest extent from Korea
to Hungary. But the legacy of Genghis Khan extends well beyond
the battlefield. The Mongols’ promotion of pan-Asian
trade, their avid taste for luxury goods, and their practice
of relocating artists combined to produce an unprecedented
cross-fertilization of artistic ideas throughout Eurasia.
This exhibition examines the important artistic and cultural
achievements that occurred in the Iranian world in the aftermath
of the Mongol invasions. It was a period of brilliant cultural
flowering as the Mongol masters sought to govern their disparate
empire, and in the process they sponsored the creation of
a remarkable new visual language. By uniting eastern and western
Asia for over a century, the Mongols produced a unique occasion
for cultural exchange that forever changed the face of art
in Iran, making it a focal point of innovation and synthesis
for the next three hundred years. As the lively manuscript
illustrations, opulent decorative arts, and splendid architectural
elements assembled for this exhibition all reveal, this too
was Genghis Khan’s legacy.
[click on the image of Shah Zav
Enthroned to learn more about the Detail Zoomer tool]
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