Battle of Babur with Shaibaq Khan in May 1509
Image source: commons.wikimedia.org

Battle of Babur with Shaibaq Khan in May 1509

Support Type: Paper
Paint Type: Mixed Media
Current Location: Christie\'s Auction House

In 1589 CE, Haider Kashmiri, an artist in the imperial workshop of Akbar created this painting. Akbar had commissioned the first illustrated Persian translation of the Baburnama (autobiography of the first Mughal emperor, Babur). This is one of the many paintings in the Baburnama and is made using opaque pigments and gold on paper. Originally part of a single volume, the manuscript was later dispersed. This painting depicts a battle between Zahir-ud-din Muhammad Babur, founder of the Mughal Empire, and Muhammad Shaybani Khan (also known as Shaibaq Khan), the Uzbek ruler who held significant power in Central Asia, for control of the city of Samarkand. During this period, Babur repeatedly attempted to reclaim his ancestral Timurid territories but suffered a series of defeats at the hands of Shaybani Khan. The event is significant because Babur's failure to defeat Shaybani ultimately forced him to abandon Central Asia and establish himself in Kabul, which later led to the foundation of the Mughal Empire in the Indian subcontinent in 1526. The focus of the painting is on the dense concentration of soldiers depicted in a violent and chaotic battle. The fortified city in the background is probably the city of Samarkand, the reason for the battle between the two rulers. The scenes in the painting are organized vertically, from the fortified city in the top, to the landscape, and down to the soldiers and the horses. Babur is identified as the figure in the center mounted on a white horse. The decorative gold floral margins surrounding the image are a characteristic of Mughal manuscripts intended for royal audiences. The text in the panel reads- ‘they were with him and instantly they dispersed’. The text in the right margin reads- 'the painter of this painting (is) Haydar Kashmiri, the most humble, disciple of Shah ‘Alam Panah’. It is also important to note that the painting is not a documentary record of a battle but instead an interpretation of Babur's memoirs produced under Akbar nearly eighty years after the events occurred. In commemorating Babur's struggles against Shaybani Khan, the painting shows how adversity can lead to eventual success. Thus, the painting can be interpreted as a story of resilience, destiny, and the origins of the Mughal Empire.

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Location source: christies.com

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Information Compiled by Rupashi Kandpal
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