Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Peacock Throne (Hindustani: Mayūrāsana, Sanskrit: मयूरासन, Urdu: تخت طاؤس, Persian: تخت طاووس, Takht-i Tāvūs) was the imperial throne of Hindustan. The throne is named after the dancing peacocks at its rear and was the seat of the Mughal emperors of India from 1635 to 1739.
Peacock Throne, famous golden throne captured from India by the Persians in 1739. Thereafter lost, it (and its reproductions) remained the symbol of the Persian, or Iranian, monarchy. The original throne, built for the Mughal emperor Shāh Jahān in the early 17th century, was reportedly one of the.
Shah Jahan, his son Aurangzeb, and later Mughal rulers of India sat on the glorious seat until 1739, when Nader Shah of Persia sacked Delhi and stole the Peacock Throne.
The iconic Peacock Throne or the Takht-i-taus was the greatest accumulation of precious gemstones in the 17th Century. Commissioned in 1628 by Shah Jahan, this exquisite artifact serves as yet another reminder of the extravagant Mughal era.
That bird was an emblem: In the year this was painted, Shah Jahan ordered up the stupefyingly ornate Peacock Throne, whose jewels are now dispersed. Behind him is a marble screen, called a...
Shah Jahan’s Peacock throne was commissioned at the Diwan-e-Khas of Delhi Red Fort, which further glorified the emperor’s seat. Diwan-e-Khas of Delhi thereafter had housed the throne for more than a century. Eventually, the Peacock throne became a symbol of the wealth and power of the Mughal Empire.
The flared, high-arched back of this tall, statuesque type of chair evokes the canopy-like structure of the 17th-century mayurasana (Peacock Throne) used by Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan. It is...
Discover the incredible story of the Peacock Throne, a symbol of Mughal grandeur, crafted for Emperor Shah Jahan. In 1739, Persian ruler Nader Shah launched ...
Shah Jahan is depicted on a throne called at the time the 'Jewelled Throne' but which later became known as the 'Peacock Throne'. This painting bequeathed by Lady Wantage in 1921 as a genuine painting of his reign was subsequently identified as a later copy of a lost original, probably done in Delhi or Lucknow in about 1800.
In 1634, the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan constructed a throne worthy of his name: the Peacock Throne. Encrusted with the world’s most fabulous jewels, the Peacock Throne was the single most expensive piece of art ever created.