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Description |
Interior of the palace of Shauh Shujah Ool Moolk, Late King of Cabul
This lithograph is taken from plate 3 of 'Afghaunistan' by Lieutenant James Rattray.
This scene shows Shah Shuja in 1839 after his enthronement as Emir of Afghanistan in the Bala Hissar (fort) of Kabul. Rattray wrote: "The Shah was a man of great personal beauty, and so well got up, that none could have guessed his age." He continued: "the wild grandeur of the whole pageantry baffles description."
The population watched Shuja's grand entry in absolute silence. He was then seated on a white and reputedly ancient marble throne. From here he could be seen by the court in the quadrangle below. The wooden arches and pillars surrounding him were carved and painted and the ceiling richly decorated. A year later the sanctity of the scene was bloodily violated: Shah Shuja was murdered and "the sacred throne, [became] a lounge, a pitch-and-toss table."
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Source |
The British Library
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Date |
1839
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Author |
Lieutenant James Rattray
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Permission
(Reusing this image) |
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This UK photograph or other artistic work (e.g. painting), of which the author is known, is in the public domain because the author died prior to 1st January 1938.
This tag does not apply to engravings nor to musical works.
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File history
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| Date/Time | Dimensions | User | Comment |
current | 13:01, 4 June 2008 | 968×712 (349 KB) | Executioner | |
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