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The Brooklyn Museum

Collections: Islamic Art




Plate

Plate. Iran, possibly Nishapur, Samanid period, late 9th–early 10th century. Buff earthenware with white engobe, brown-black slip, and transparent colorless glaze, 4 9/16 in. (11.5 cm) high x 14 in. (35.5 cm) diameter. Brooklyn Museum, Gift of the Ernest Erickson Foundation, Inc., 86.227.19

With its elegant Arabic inscription in kufic script, this bowl exemplifies the "black-and-white" wares unearthed at the sites of Nishapur and Samarqand in the 1930s and 1940s. The inscriptions on these types of vessels are the first extant examples of Arabic proverbs to appear in the Islamic world, and thus are central to Arabic literary history. This one reads, "Peace is that which is silent and the inner [thoughts] of the man with faults will only be revealed through his speech."

A central trading town since its establishment in the third century, Nishapur had become the chief cultural and political center in northeastern Iran during the ninth through twelfth centuries. During the Samanid period (819–1005), it was occupied by various cultural groups including the native Persian-speaking population as well as a recent influx of Arab elites and merchants, among whom might have been the owner of this bowl.

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