Featured on PDR in the collection Illustrations from the Lights of Canopus (1847)

The Anvār-i Suhaylī or Lights of Canopus — commonly known as the Fables of Bidpai in the West — is a Persian version of an ancient Indian collection of animal fables called the Panchatantra. The tales follow the Persian physician Burzuyah on a mission to India, where he finds a book of stories collected from the animals who live there. Much like in the Arabian Nights (which actually uses several of the Panchatantra stories), the fables are inter-woven as the characters of one story recount the next, with up to three or four degrees of narrative embedding. Many of the fables offer insightful glimpses into human behaviour, and emphasise the power of teamwork and loyalty: one passage describes how a hunter catches a group of…

Date

1847

From

Anvār-i Suhaylī


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights


Image Size

643 x 917 Higher res available?

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