Mohammad Reza Emami was a Persian calligrapher in the 17th century. He lived from the era of Abbas I until the era of Suleiman I. He was Ali Reza Abbassi's student and was known as the Imam of calligraphers.[1]

Mohammad Reza Emami was Mohammad Mohsen Emami's father and Ali Naghi Emami's grandfather. All of the three calligraphers were famous for their Thuluth works in the Safavid era. Many inscriptions of the historical buildings in Isfahan, Mashhad, Qom and Qazvin have been created by them.

When Ali Reza Abbassi started to work for Abbas I and became his close friend, Abbas I appointed him as the Thuluth script teacher of some other calligraphers like Mohammad Saleh Esfahani and Abdolbaghi Tabrizi.[2]

He died probably in Mashhad after 50 years working in the field of calligraphy.[3]

Works edit

Most of Emami's inscriptions are in Isfahan, but some of his works are also in Qom, Qazvin and Mashhad. His first inscription in Isfahan dates back to 1629 and his last inscription in Isfahan to 1670. His works from 1673 until 1676 are all in Mashhad, where he spent the last years of his life.

Mohammad Reza Emami's famous works are in the Shah mosque. There is another inscription by Mohammad Reza Emami above the magnificent entrance of this historical mosque under a Thuluth script of Ali Reza Abbassi. An inscription on the southern dome is also Emami's work.[4] Other works of Emami are as follows:

  • in Imam Reza shrine: There are three inscriptions of Emami in the Imam Reza shrine:[5]
    • an inscription on four slabs on the dome (above Ali Reza Abbassi's inscription). The inscription dates back to 1675 and belongs to the era of Suleiman I. The inscription mentions that there was an earthquake and the dome became cracked and some reparations and decorations were carried out on the dome.[6]
    • An inscription in the southern iwan.
    • Baysunghur's inscription (Shah Rukh's son), which was repaired by Emami.
  • in the Goharshad mosque: in the middle of Goharshad mosque.[7]
  • in the Hakim mosque:
    • a white Thuluth script on the ultramarine tiles above the northern entrance. The inscription dates back to 1662.
    • an inscription in the iwan: It shows some sentences from Koran and also Mohammad Reza Emami's name. It dates back to 1660.
    • an inscription on the dome from 1658.
    • an inscription near the mihrab from 1660.
    • an inscriptionin in the eastern shabestan from 1658.
    • an inscription in the northern iwan from 1660.
    • an inscription in the western iwan with some sentences from Koran and Emami's name from 1662.[8]
  • in the Agha Nour mosque: There is an inscription by Emami above the entrance, which dates back to 1629. It is mentioned in the inscription, that the founder of mosque, Nour ed-Din Mohammad Esfahani, was a benefactor and began the construction of mosque during the era of Abbas I, but it was completed in the first year of King Safi's reign.[9]
  • in the Lonban mosque:
    • There are some white Thuluth lines on the ultramarine background of two tiles. The lines date back to 1669.
    • Above the entrance, there are also some poems with white Nastaliq scripts on the ultramarine tiles. They date back also to 1669. According to the inscription, the mosque was repaired in the King Suleiman's era.[10]
  • in the Mesri mosque: An inscription on the marble board with embossed Nastaliq script, which shows some poems and its last hemistich, the date 1651 has been mentioned.[11]
  • in the Maghsoudbeyk mosque: an inscription, which the names of Abbas I and Maghsoudbeyk was mentioned in.[12]

Totally 29 inscriptions from the inscriptions of historical buildings in Isfahan are Mohamamd Reza Emami's works.[13]

References edit

  1. ^ "محمدرضا امامی اصفهانی". aftabir.com. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  2. ^ "خط ، خوشنویسی و تاریخچه ی آن". khatt.blogfa.com. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  3. ^ André Godard: Assār-e Irān (Annales du service archéologiques de l'Iran). Aus dem Französischen von Abolhassan Sarvghad Moghaddam. 3. Auflage. Astana Quds (Hrsg.) Seite 245, Maschhad 1996, Sprache: persisch
  4. ^ مؤسسه ام الکتاب. "ام الکتاب | جستجو". ommolketab.ir. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  5. ^ "مساجد حرم مطهر حضرت معصومه (س)". tebyan.net. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  6. ^ "باستان شناسی - خوشنویس (دوره صفوی)". anahid1.blogfa.com. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  7. ^ Javadzadeh, Hashem (2001). Ketāb e Khorāsān (Das Buch von Khorassan) (in Persian). Kānun e āgahi e Irānzamin. p. 72.
  8. ^ "روزنامه آفرینش - سرفصل". afarineshdaily.ir. Archived from the original on 2008-09-12. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  9. ^ "گل گشت". afarineshdaily.ir. Archived from the original on 2017-10-22. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  10. ^ "آثار تاریخی اصفهان - مسجد لنبان - اصفهان23". esfahan23.persianblog.ir. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  11. ^ "مصری". isfahan.ir. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  12. ^ "Error 404 (Not Found)". satrap.org. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  13. ^ Habibollah Fazael (1983), Atlas e Xat (Kalligrafie-Atlas) (in Persian), Maschal