View full screen - View 1 of Lot 131. A rare Timurid footed pottery flask, Persia or Central Asia, 15th or early 16th century.

A rare Timurid footed pottery flask, Persia or Central Asia, 15th or early 16th century

Auction Closed

October 29, 03:22 PM GMT

Estimate

15,000 - 25,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

the compressed globular body with a translucent turquoise glaze and blue and black underglaze painting, on short unglazed foot, with two lug handles and spout, decorated with petals in segments

25cm. max. diam., 18cm. height

Please note that the spout of this flask is original and not a replacement as stated in the printed catalogue.

The form of this unusual pottery flask bears a close resemblance to a blue-and-white vessel sold in these rooms, 28 April 2004, lot 121. Although that vessel is fitted with a bull’s head spout and has a secondary flared ring on the top so that it can be positioned up-side-down, it is otherwise the only other known Timurid vessel of this peculiar form. An earlier, more globular jug with similarly positioned lug handles and a bull's head spout was published in Fehérvári and Safadi 1981, pp.160-1, no.98. The presence of bull's head spouts on the other two vessels has led to the suggestion that these unusual vessels served a ceremonial function, possibly for wine libations used on the occasion of Nowruz: the wine flowing from the animals mouth substituting the blood of sacrifice.


A cryptic inscription on the top of the vessel appears to read 912 AH (1506-07), but damage and restoration to this part of the vessel complicate a definitive reading.