Battle Scene with Boats on the Ganges
| Support Type: | Paper |
| Paint Type: | Watercolor |
| Current Location: | Victoria and Albert Museum |
This stunning historical miniature masterfully captures a moment of intense human desperation from 1565, when the imperial vizier Asaf Khan unexpectedly withheld captured war treasures from Emperor Akbar and desperately tried to flee across the massive Ganges River with his followers, only to be violently ambushed mid-water by General Shuja’at Khan's imperial forces. Though the painting immortalizes this chaotic, high-stakes river battle from which Asaf Khan miraculously managed to escape into the night, before eventually sending messengers to beg for a pardon that Akbar graciously granted him two years later, the physical page itself tells an equally rich story of creative collaboration and imperial intimacy. Crafted between 1592 and 1595 for the Akbarnama, the official Persian chronicle of Akbar's reign compiled by his close confidant and court historian Abu’l Fazl, this specific leaf belongs to what is widely recognized as the earliest known illustrated edition of the text, a precious cultural artifact now preserved within the Victoria and Albert Museum. The delicate red ink annotations bearing the names of the artists at the bottom of the page, crediting the veteran master Tulsi the Elder for sketching the tense, high-energy composition, and the brilliant painter Jagjivan for pouring lifelike detail, fluid movement, and vivid color into the scene reveal that this was a highly prized volume custom-made for the emperor's personal viewing. It functioned not just as a cold political archive, but as a deeply valued family heirloom that remained within the royal household for generations, safely kept in the private library of Akbar's son Jahangir before being handed down to his grandson, Shah Jahan, transforming this record of a forgotten river rebellion into a sacred token of dynastic legacy.
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