International audienceArchaeological investigations in Ghazni, the ancient capital city of the Ghaznavid dynasty (late 10th-12th c.), delivered a large corpus of monumental inscriptions. Official and religious texts are executed in Arabic, though many occurrences attest to the epigraphic use of Persian. Presented in this paper are some preliminary analyses concerning Ghaznavid inscriptions in Persian, their alleged chronology and function. This overview reveals that, in all likelihood, the tradition of decorating buildings with Persian epigraphy had developed in Ghazni since the early 11th century. Persian seems to be particularly used for inscribing poetic texts, which allow us to highlight the Ghaznavid contribution to the development of ...
Architecture in Iran has a continuous history from at least 5000 BC to the present, and numerous Ira...
International audienceFew traces of the splendour of Medieval Ghazni, capital city of the Ghaznavid ...
The Monuments of Ghaznavids period in Ghazni, Lashkaribazar and Balkh that some of them, were partly...
International audienceArchaeological investigations in Ghazni, the ancient capital city of the Ghazn...
International audiencePresented in this paper are some preliminary analyses concerning Ghaznavid epi...
International audienceThis paper presents some preliminary analyses concerning Persianepigraphic doc...
Persian inscriptions from Ghazni may be regarded as both artistic testimonies and original primary s...
Study of the inscriptions of Ghazni (Afghanistan) which are among the first evidence of the use of P...
International audienceThis paper explores aspects of continuity and change in the content of monumen...
International audienceFifty years have passed since the publication by Alessio Bombaci of a long but...
International audienceEarly monumental inscriptions documented across the Iranian lands and bearing ...
International audienceThe Ghaznavids (977-1186) takes their name from the capital city of the dynast...
Le volume 13 de la revue Eurasian Studies réunit quatre articles résultant d’un panel sur le site de...
After the Mongol period, Persian was the official written language in Iran, Central Asia and India. ...
This paper offers a critical review of the orthography of the most ancient original New Persian text...
Architecture in Iran has a continuous history from at least 5000 BC to the present, and numerous Ira...
International audienceFew traces of the splendour of Medieval Ghazni, capital city of the Ghaznavid ...
The Monuments of Ghaznavids period in Ghazni, Lashkaribazar and Balkh that some of them, were partly...
International audienceArchaeological investigations in Ghazni, the ancient capital city of the Ghazn...
International audiencePresented in this paper are some preliminary analyses concerning Ghaznavid epi...
International audienceThis paper presents some preliminary analyses concerning Persianepigraphic doc...
Persian inscriptions from Ghazni may be regarded as both artistic testimonies and original primary s...
Study of the inscriptions of Ghazni (Afghanistan) which are among the first evidence of the use of P...
International audienceThis paper explores aspects of continuity and change in the content of monumen...
International audienceFifty years have passed since the publication by Alessio Bombaci of a long but...
International audienceEarly monumental inscriptions documented across the Iranian lands and bearing ...
International audienceThe Ghaznavids (977-1186) takes their name from the capital city of the dynast...
Le volume 13 de la revue Eurasian Studies réunit quatre articles résultant d’un panel sur le site de...
After the Mongol period, Persian was the official written language in Iran, Central Asia and India. ...
This paper offers a critical review of the orthography of the most ancient original New Persian text...
Architecture in Iran has a continuous history from at least 5000 BC to the present, and numerous Ira...
International audienceFew traces of the splendour of Medieval Ghazni, capital city of the Ghaznavid ...
The Monuments of Ghaznavids period in Ghazni, Lashkaribazar and Balkh that some of them, were partly...