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Jade dragon cup

Contributed by British Museum

Click on the image to zoom in. Copyright Trustees of the British Museum

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This jade cup from Central Asia would have been valued for its beauty and its protective powers. When this cup was made it was believed that jade would crack if it came into contact with poison. The cup's inscription indicates it was owned by Ulugh Beg, ruler of the Timurid Empire from 1447 to 1449. Ulugh Beg would have owned such a cup to protect himself from assassination by his rivals. However, the cup could not save him from his own son who seized power in 1449 and had Ulugh beheaded.

Who were the Timurids?

Ulugh Beg was the grandson of Timur, known in the west as Tamerlane, or 'Timur the Lame', due to a leg injury sustained in battle. Originally the ruler of a small Turkish tribe, Timur conquered the whole of Iran and Central Asia to create the Timurid Empire. After Timur's death in 1405, the empire began to disintegrate. Ulugh ruled the empire for only two years but despite the political instability it was a golden age for Iranian art. The dragon on this cup reflects Ulugh Beg's taste for Chinese decoration.

Ulugh Beg was an accomplished astronomer and scientist - there is a crater on the moon bearing his name

Local craft or luxury foreign import?

This jade cup is a bit of a mystery in that we cannot be sure where it was made or by whom.

The style is in the shape of a brush washer used by Chinese scholars and bureaucrats to wash ink off their brushes after use. The hornless dragon, which forms the handle, is in the form of a creature depicted by the Chinese in various guises from Neolithic times. We also know that in 1445 an embassy came from China bearing gifts, including jade vessels, to see Ulugh Beg.

Yet if we look at the craftsmanship of the cup it is not as well executed as we would perhaps expect a Chinese jade vessel to be. (The Chinese had been working jade for at least a few thousand years at this time). There are some early Ming vessels which are as simply made, but such jades are not what one might necessarily expect the Chinese court to send as a gift to another ruler.

There is evidence of the peoples of Central Asia working jade, probably deriving the material from the same area of what is now Xinjiang province as the Chinese. Among the fruits of the conquests of Timur, founder of the Timurid dynasty, was the forcible moving of craftsmen from cities as far apart as Delhi and Aleppo to make adornments for his capital at Samarqand in Central Asia. It is possible that some Chinese craftsmen were also inveigled or encouraged to work at the capital.

We know that Ulugh Beg, a highly-educated scholar, particularly of mathematics and astronomy, was attracted to the arts of China. He built a pavilion outside the city of Samarqand, called the Chini Khana, the walls of which were decorated with Chinese porcelains.

He obviously also had a liking for jade as he is known to have brought back a huge slab as booty after his defeat of the ruler of Moghulistan on the Ili River, 1424-5. This was worked into a gravestone commemorating his illustrious predecessor, Timur. He also built the Masjid-I muqatta in Samarqand itself which owed its name to the Chinese decorations of carved and coloured woods coverings its ceilings and walls.

We cannot be sure if Chinese craftsmen were used by Ulugh Beg in Samarqand but it is certainly possible. However the workmanship of this cup suggests perhaps the hand of a mason used to cutting large blocks of jade rather than a skilled lapidary. So perhaps it was made in imitation of a Chinese vessel presented to the Timurid court but crafted by a native Timurid workman rather than a more skilled Chinese jade worker.

And perhaps we will never know.

Carol Michaelson, curator, British Museum

Protection, parties and destiny

When I look at this object there are immediately several thoughts. One of them is the wine parties of that epoch which were held by Babur Shah and by Ulugh Beg himself. Apparently, Ulugh Beg was a ruler in whose court there were musicians, there were singers, there were wine parties: so immediately I think about those parties. On the other hand I can’t resist thinking about poisoning at that time, because many Timurids were poisoned by different adversary parties and jade is an antidote; it was considered to be an antidote. Therefore it’s in a way a protection, because whatever you drink from this jade it was considered that it could be your saviour from any poison.

Also, a third thing, they used to carry them at their belts, because apparently jade was helpful against all kind of kidney problems. In other languages it’s called nephrite because of the kidney. So apparently he was carrying this cup in his belt as well.

The last thought which this cup brings is the dynasty of the Timurids because it belonged to a dynasty of Timurids It went then to India to Shah Jahan, to Jahangir and other many other great statesman of that epoch. And finally it’s here as a fulfilled cup of destiny.

Hamid Ismailov, Uzbek journalist and writer

The Timurid Empire

This jade cup stands for a number of things that I think are interesting about the Timurids. This was a period when Chinese influence was quite strong, in art particularly. The Chinese influence was always felt in Iran – the Silk Road has always gone through Iran – the Mongols however had intensified it very considerably. There was a tremendous amount of back and forth between Iran and China in the Mongol period. This continued under the Timurids.

The Timurid Empire comes out of the Mongol Empire which, at the time Timur rose to power (1370), was in decline but still had enormous prestige. Timur himself lived in Transoxiana, what’s now Uzbekistan – a member of the tribal aristocracy. He was really out to recreate the Mongol empire: he conquered an enormous territory. Starting fairly modestly, fairly close to where he was and then stretching out over much of the Golden Horde. He got close to Moscow at one point, conquered India, Iran, Iraq, and then near the end of his career he headed to Syria. He defeated the Mamluks, and then defeated the great Ottoman Sultan Bayezid, the Thunder bolt. That made him the most prestigious person both in the territory of the former Mongol Empire and in the central Islamic lands.

Beatrice Forbes Manz, Associate Professor of History, Tufts University

Comments are closed for this object

Comments

  • 3 comments
  • 1. At 10:13 on 16 September 2010, VJS wrote:

    Did I really hear the term "cenotaph" used to describe a place where someone was actually buried? If the place in question is already within a mausoleum, I can only suggest "tomb", but a "cenotaph" is, by definition, an empty tomb. I realize that this comment may be seen as pedantic, but I did spend a considerable proportion of my professional life working on terminology.

  • 2. At 20:00 on 16 September 2010, Nick Thomson wrote:

    In reply to VJS, I was in Samarkand a few years ago and visited the tomb of Tamerlane. It was in a high, beautifully decorated mausoleum. At the centre was a long black stone, roughly the size and shape of a normal coffin, on top of Timur's sarcophagus. Other Timurids' tombs (including Uluigh Beg) were on either side, with lighter stone. While we were there, an elderly man entered, sat on the stone bench running round the walls and started to chant. It could have been a lament or a celebration, or maybe just a tourist performance. In any case, it was a remarkable experience.

    Uluigh Beg's observatory is extraordinary. We underestimate these people.

  • 3. At 11:45 on 22 September 2010, treesteve wrote:

    Jade cups are reputed to offer protection from poisonous liquids by splitting.
    Is there any evidence for this?

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Location
Culture
Period

1420-1449

Theme
Size
H:
6.4cm
W:
19.4cm
Colour
Material

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