Abu Taher (family)
The Persian Abū Ṭāher family of Kāšān produced four generations of potters active between 1205 and 1333 (AH 602–734) whose signatures appear on surviving works, especially the tiled meḥrābs of mosques.[2]
Members
- Bū Ṭāher Ḥosayn, known through a single mīnāʾī ware bowl which bears his name and is dated to the late 12th century on stylistic grounds;
- Moḥammad ibn Abī Ṭāher (fl. 1205–1215), collaborated with Abū Zayd ibn Moḥammad ibn Abī Zayd in tiling parts of the shrine of Fāṭema at Qom and the shrine of Imam Reżā at Mašhad;
- ʿAlī (fl. 1242), Moḥammad's son;
- Yūsof (fl. 1305–1334), ʿAlī's son;
- Abu'l-Qāsem (fl. 1303–1325), Yūsof's brother, an historian under the Mongol Il-khan Olǰāytū; his ʿArāʾes al-ǰawāher wa nafāʾes al-aṭāʾeb includes a short study of the science of ceramics.[2]
See also
References
- Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Watson 2011 [1983], pp. 385–7.
Sources
- Watson, O. (21 July 2011) [1983]. "Abū Ṭāher". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. I/4 (online ed.). pp. 385–7.
- "Tile from an Inscriptional Frieze, dated 734 AH/1334 CE". The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Further reading
- Aga-Oglu, Mehmet (1935). "Fragments of a Thirteenth Century Miḥrāb at Nedjef". Ars Islamica. 2 (1): 128–9.
- Allan, J. W. (1973). "Abū'l-Qāsim's Treatise on Ceramics". Iran. 11: 111–20.
- Donaldson, Dwight M. (1935). "Significant Miḥrābs in the Ḥaram at Mashhad". Ars Islamica. 2 (1): 120–7.
- Ettinghausen, Richard (1936). "Evidence for the Identification of Kā͟s͟hān Pottery". Ars Islamica. 3 (1): 66, fig. 25.
- Pope, Arthur Upham (1965). Persian Architecture: The Triumph of Form and Color. New York: George Braziller. pp. 154, 156–7, fig. 190.
- Watson, Oliver (1975). "The Masjid-i ʿAlī, Quhrūd: An Architectural and Epigraphic Survey". Iran. 13: 62–3, pl. VIIIb.
- Wiet, Gaston (1935). L'Epigraphie arabe de l'exposition d'art persan du Caire. Cairo: Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale. pp. 6, no. 10, pl. III.
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