The Dragon in Medieval East Christian and Islamic Art by Sara Kuehn, Sebastian Günther, et al - HTML preview

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EPILOGUE

a East-west exchange and the metamorphosis

pendium of Chronicles”) produced in 714/1314–

of dragon imagery

5, bear eloquent witness to this phenomenon

Temüjin, the leader of a small Mongol tribe,

The first part of the Epilogue explores the dragon

became a conqueror of the eastern part of Mon-

imagery as potent symbol of cross-cultural con-

golia by defeating the Kereit ruler Ong Khān in

nection and artistic exchange during the Mongol

1203 Having been proclaimed Supreme Chief of

era in general and the Ilkhanid period in par-

al Mongols in 1206, Genghis Khān and his armies

ticular In the Mongol visual arts, including coin-

swiftly vanquished a vast area of the Asian con-

age, sculptural and architectural elements, as well

tinent which included most of Eurasia from the

as in manuscript il ustrations, the dragon appears

China Sea to the banks of the Dnieper Central

in different stylistic guises as elements of Chinese

Asia, in the widest geographic interpretation of

and Western Asian derivation combine, testifying

the term, was thus for the first time united under

to the meeting and merging of cultural elements

a single ruler and Genghis Khān was said to have

from east and west and providing evidence of

carried out God’s will as decreed by divine rev-

early acculturation in the development of an

elation in becoming master of the world 4 When

Ilkhanid idiom The breadth of the emerging

Genghis died in 1227, the Great Mongol Empire

dragon iconography is illustrated in the text and

(Mong yeke mongghul ulus) was divided into

illustrations of Ilkhanid manuscripts

various khānates (appanages) ruled over by his

More than any other creature, the dragon is

descendants The Great Khāns (qaghan s ), Möngke

identified with China,1 also known as the land of

(r 1251–1260) and Qubilay (r 1260–1294), both

Chīn (al-Sīn in the Arabised form), Khitay or

descendants of Genghis Khān’s youngest son

Cathay 2 One consequence of the Mongol inva-

Toluy, ruled Mongolia and northern China as the

sions and subsequent Mongol hegemony was a

yuan dynasty (1271–1368) from their capitals,

westward movement of the arts that led to the

first at Qaraqorum in Mongolia and later at

introduction of stylistic aspects of East Asian

Khānbāliq (lit “City of the Khāns,” Chin Dadu,

(mostly Chinese and Chinese-inspired Mongol)

now known as Beijing) in China They were sup-

derivation,3 which include the motif of the dragon

ported by three collateral principalities: the

Surviving portable and monumental art from the

Golden Horde, descended from Genghis Khān’s

Ilkhanid realm, in particular the tile decoration

eldest son Juchi in most of Russia; the Chagha-

of the royal residence at Takht-i Sulaimān and

tayids, descended from Genghis’s second son

the grand illustrated copy of the most important

Chagatay, in the region from the Aral Sea to the

single historical source for the Mongol empire,

Altai mountains; and the Ilkhans descended from

Rashīd al-Dīn Ṭabīb’s Jāmiʿ al-tawārīkh (“Com-

Hülegü/Hūlāgū, in Western Asia

1 The definition of what “China” entails has been a sub-

“Constable of the Turks” (Sepahdār-i Torkān) ( idem, p 142,

ject of scholarly debate in the field of history of Chinese art,

l 1630)

3

see Thorp and Vinograd, 2001; Hay, 1999, pp 120–62

For a discussion of the influence of so-called “conquest

2 For a discussion of the geographical boundaries of

dynasties” on the social and cultural history of China and

the various names related to China and the East, see

the often repeated associated concept of a one way “sinici-

Thackston in his translation of Rashīd al-Dīn Ṭabīb, Jamiʿuʾt-

sation” which necessarily leads to a one-sided interpretation

tawarikh, vol 1, 1998–9, p 24, n 2 As Melikian-Chirvani

of this socio-cultural phenomena, see Wittfogel and Fêng,

(1997a, pp 127 and 164, n 33) has shown, the descrip-

1949, pp 14–5; Bol, 1987, pp 461–538; and Crossley, 1990,

tions of the land of Chīn in the Shāh-nāma refer to eastern

pp 1–34

4

Turkestan, the area of Khotan and Kāshghar (sometimes

This premise is evident throughout Mongol rule and

going as far west as the Samarqand area), the land of the

exemplified, for instance, in Hülegü’s letter addressed to the

Turk Afrāsīyāb (tr and ed Mohl, 1838–1878, vol 3, p 390,

French king Louis IX which expresses the Mongolian world-

l 1155), whose son Pīrān is referred to as “Constable of

view, namely that Mongol commands represent God’s will

Chīn” (Sepahdār-i Chīn) ( idem, p 44, l 491) as well as

on earth Meyvaert, 1980, p 249

210