Chehel Sotoun

Bagh-e Chehel Sotun
باغ چهل‌ستون
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Interactive map of Bagh-e Chehel Sotun
باغ چهل‌ستون
LocationIsfahan, Isfahan Province, Iran
Part ofThe Persian Garden
CriteriaCultural: (i)(ii)(iii)(iv)(vi)
Reference1372-003
Inscription2011 (35th Session)
Area5.8 ha (620,000 sq ft)
Buffer zone28.92 ha (3,113,000 sq ft)
Coordinates32°39′27″N 51°40′20″E / 32.65750°N 51.67222°E / 32.65750; 51.67222
Chehel Sotoun
Location of Chehel Sotoun in Iran

Chehel Sotoun (Persian: چهل‌ستون, lit.'Forty Columns'[1]) is a 17th century pavilion and garden, in Isfahan, Iran. It was commissioned by Abbas the Great and completed by Shah Abbas II, both Safavid Shahs, mostly for royal entertainment and receptions. Chehel Sotoun Garden, along with eight other gardens all located in Iran, have been inscribed as Persian Gardens World Heritage Sites since 2011.

Early paintings (1647–1666)

As with the Ali Qapu, the palace contains many frescoes and paintings on ceramic. Many of the ceramic panels have been dispersed and are now in the possession of major museums in the West. Four of the major frescoes are thought to have been painted circa 1650, and in any case between 1647 (date of the construction of the Chehel Sotoun) and 1666, based on stylistic grounds, and on the fact that Jean Chardin described the specific paintings as "three royal entertainments and one battle scene" during his visit in 1666.[2][3] They were commissioned by the Safavid ruler Abbas II. They are:[4]

Chehel Sotoun's wall paintings of Safavid historical scenes (painted circa 1650)

Later paintings

There are also more recent paintings, generally dating to Qajar era, such as the infamous Battle of Chaldiran against the Ottoman Sultan Selim I, and Nader Shah's victory against the Indian Army at Karnal in 1739. There are also less historical, but more aesthetic compositions in the traditional miniature style, themed around life, love, and joy.[5]

Architecture

In the pavilion, the combined designs of the walls and ceiling of the hall, which are placed in Lachak Toranj (corner and medallion), and the main lines of the building divisions, which are a combination of painting, tiling, ayeneh-kari, and various other decorations, make the building one of the best examples of Persian architecture during the Safavid era. At present, the mansion operates as a museum; and its central hall displays some works of art from different periods of Iran.[6]

Notes

  1. ^ Landor, Arnold Henry Savage (1902). Across Coveted Lands. London: MacMillan and Co., Limited. p. 323.. The name was likely inspired by the twenty slender wooden columns supporting the entrance pavilion, which, when reflected in the waters of the fountain, appears to be forty.
  2. ^ Babaie, Sussan (1994). "Shah Abbas II, the Conquest of Qandahar, the Chihil Sutun, and Its Wall Paintings". Muqarnas. II: 125. When Chardin visited the palace in 1666 he mentions seeing the four largest of them in the audience hall which he described as depicting three royal entertainments and one battle scene.' The evidence of Chardin's description is to some extent the basis for the common scholarly consensus that the large narrative paintings were added some twenty years after the completion of the building in 1647.
  3. ^ Original description of the paintings by Jean Chardin in Chehel Sotoun, Isfahan, in 1666.
  4. ^ Melville, Charles (25 February 2021). Safavid Persia in the Age of Empires: The Idea of Iran Vol. 10. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 364. ISBN 978-0-7556-3379-1.
  5. ^ Honarfar, Lotfollah (1966). A Treasure of the Historical Monuments of Isfahan; Honarfar L. Isfahan: Saghafi.
  6. ^ "Chehel Sotoun Museum". Retrieved 2024-04-26.

Bibliography

  • M. Ferrante: 'Čihil Sutūn: Etudes, relevés, restauration', Travaux de restauration de monuments historiques en Iran, ed. G. Zander (Rome, 1968), pp. 293–322
  • E. Grube: 'Wall Paintings in the Seventeenth Century Monuments of Isfahan', Studies on Isfahan, ed. R. Holod, 2 vols, Iran. Stud., vii (1974), pp. 511–42
  • S. Babaie: 'Shah Abbas II, the Conquest of Qandahar, the Chihil Sutun, and its Wall Paintings', Muqarnas, xi (1994), pp. 125–42