The past as propaganda: The Mongol ‘World History’ by The British Academy published on 2016-04-05T15:26:03Z Professor Robert Hillenbrand FBA FRSE Thursday 18 November 2010, 7.00pm Royal Society of Edinburgh, 22-26 George Street, Edinburgh EH2 2PQ as part of the British Academy's 'Medieval Week' The fragmentary copy of Rashid al-Din’s World History held in the University of Edinburgh’s Library is of extreme rarity, huge size, lavish illustration and very early date (1314). It is perhaps the world’s most valuable illustrated Islamic manuscript. This lecture will explore its art-historical significance, highlighting its multiracial and multi-confessional flavour, with Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist and shamanistic elements that aptly reflect the largest continuous land empire in world history. The manuscript’s pictorial and textual cycles of Biblical figures, the Prophet Muhammad and the mythical past of Greece, Arabia and Iran break new ground, while its propagandist intent finds expression in courtly and battle scenes galore. About the speaker Robert Hillenbrand is Emeritus Professor History of Art at the University of Edinburgh. His scholarly interests focus on Islamic architecture, painting and iconography with particular reference to Iran and to Umayyad, Syria. Genre Learning