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The Battle Preceding the Capture of Bundi Fort
Image source: collections.vam.ac.uk

The Battle Preceding the Capture of Bundi Fort

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Support Type: Paper
Paint Type: Gouache
Current Location: Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Location History:Originally created as part of the imperial illustrated manuscript Akbarnama commissioned by Emperor Akbar in the late sixteenth century and later entered museum collections in the United Kingdom.

This Mughal miniature painting illustrates the military campaign that took place before the Mughal capture of Bundi Fort in north-western India in 1577 during the reign of Emperor Akbar. Created by the court artist Tulsi and included in the illustrated manuscript of the Akbarnama, the work reflects the visual culture of Akbar’s imperial atelier and the importance of recording historical events through painting. The composition presents a dynamic battle scene filled with movement and overlapping figures. Soldiers, horses, weapons, and architectural forms are arranged to create intensity while maintaining visual order. Rather than focusing only on a single heroic figure, the artwork shows conflict as a collective event shaped by military organisation and imperial ambition. One of the most striking aspects of the painting is its use of colour and spatial arrangement. Tulsi employs contrasting tones and layered figures to guide the viewer’s eye across the battlefield. The vertical structure of the composition allows multiple actions to occur simultaneously, which is a characteristic feature of Akbari manuscript painting. Like many Mughal miniatures of this period, the painting combines Persian influences with emerging Indian approaches to narrative detail and observation. The artwork functions both as historical documentation and political representation, presenting imperial expansion as organised and visually controlled. Overall, this painting demonstrates how Mughal artists transformed historical records into detailed visual narratives while preserving movement, atmosphere, and courtly aesthetics.

Sources:

Location source: collections.vam.ac.uk
Location History: collections.vam.ac.uk
Information Compiled by Taarina Therese Chandiramani
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