The Death of Syavush, Piandjikent


A larger image of the original Sogdian mural of 'The Death of Syavush', Piandjikent.




Referenced as illustration 86, p.103 in Tamara Talbot Rice, Ancient Arts of Central Asia, 1965
86 Reconstruction of a wall-painting from the south wall of the main hall at Piandjikent. It shows the death of the god Syavush and his rebirth in the spring (not shown), a symbolic interpretation of the birth of the new year. Persia's Nu Ruz. In it the dead youth is seen through the rounded arches of the bier which is being carried by pall bearers and surrounded by weeping mourners. Other mourners appear in the foreground, and it is possible that some of the men are Turks and others Soghdians. Piandjikent, building XI, south wall, seventh-eighth century. State Hermitage Museum, Leningrad.
86 Wall-painting (reconstruction) the death of Syavush. Piandjikent, building XI, south wall, seventh-eighth century. State Hermitage Museum, Leningrad
Soghdian Murals at Piandjikent, an extract from ANCIENT ARTS OF CENTRAL ASIA by Tamara Talbot Rice



More Sogdian murals from Piandjikent, (Panjakent, Panjīkant), 6th-8th Centuries







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