The “survey” was a regular ritual of Our Sultan’s bimonthly visits to the
miniaturists’ atelier during that exciting time when His Excellency had intently
followed what transpired at the workshop。 Under the auspices of Haz?m; the
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Head Treasurer; Lokman; the Head Poetic Chronicler and Master Osman; the
Head Illuminator; Our Sultan would be apprised of which pages in which
books the masters were working on at any given moment: who did which
gilding; who colored which picture; and one by one; how the colorists; the
page rulers; the gilders and the master miniaturists; whose talent allowed
them to acplish miracles; were engaged。 It saddened me that they were
holding a fake ceremony in place of the one that was no longer performed
because age and ill health bound the Head Poetic Chronicler Lokman Effendi;
who wrote most of the books which were illustrated; to his home; because
Master Osman often disappeared in a cloud of indignation and wrath; because
the four masters known as Butterfly; Olive; Stork and Elegant worked at home;
and because Our Sultan no longer waxed enthusiastic like a child in the
workshop。 As happened to many miniaturists; Nuri Effendi had grown old in
vain; without having fully experienced life or bee a master of his art。 Not
in vain; however; did he spend those years over his worktable being
hunchbacked: He always paid close attention to what happened in the
workshop; to who made which exquisite page。
And so I eagerly beheld for the first time the legendary pages of the Book of
Festivities; which recounted the circumcision ceremonies of Our Sultan’s
prince。 When I was still in Persia; I heard stories about this fifty…two…day
circumcision ceremony wherein people from all occupations and all guilds; all
of Istanbul; had participated; indeed at a time when the book that
memorialized the great event was yet being prepared。
In the first picture placed before me; fixed in the royal enclosure of late
Ibrahim Pasha’s palace; Our Sultan; the Refuge of the World; gazed upon the
festivities in the Hippodrome below with a look that bespoke His satisfaction。
His face; even though not so detailed as to permit one to distinguish Him from
others by features alone; was drawn adeptly and with reverence。 As for the
right side of the double…leaf picture showing Our Sultan on the left; there were
viziers; pashas; Persian; Tatar; Frankish and Veian ambassadors standing in
the arched colonnades and windows。 Because they were not sultans; their eyes
were drawn hastily and carelessly and focused on nothing in particular besides
the general motion in the square。 Later; I noticed in other pictures that the
same arrangement and page position repeated—even though the wall