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6.14: Layla and Majnun

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    Layla and Majnun

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    Artist: unknown
    Medium: ink and color on paper Persian literature
    Art Historical Time Period: Safavid period / 16th century

    The story of Layla and Majnun is one of the most famous love tales in Persian literature. It tells of two young lovers who cannot marry because of family and social rules, leading to a tragic separation. Illustrated in Persian miniatures, the story was used as both art and moral lesson, showing the power of love to overwhelm reason. For Islamic culture, the story symbolized both earthly passion and divine longing, as Majnun’s madness from love became a metaphor for spiritual devotion.

    The innovation of these miniatures lies in their poetic style. Artists combined detailed figures, bright colors, and flowing patterns to create dreamlike scenes. The focus was not on realism but on mood, symbolism, and emotion. Unlike European art that emphasized perspective and physical space, Persian painting flattened the scene to highlight spiritual beauty over physical form.

    The influence of Layla and Majnun spread widely across Islamic and even European culture. It inspired poetry, music, theater, and modern novels, keeping the theme of forbidden love alive. From Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet to Bollywood films, the story continues to shape how cultures express the intensity of love that defies social rules.

    Vocabulary

    • devotion deep love or loyalty
    • miniature a very detailed small painting often in books

    Student Authors

    • Giancarlo Martinez ’27 and Dion Pearce ‘27

    References and Image Attribution

    • Blair, S. S., & Bloom, J. M. (1995). The art and architecture of Islam: 1250–1800. Yale University Press.

    • Gruber, C. J. (2010). The Islamic manuscript tradition: Ten centuries of book arts in Iran and India. Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

    • Simpson, M. S. (1997). The illustration of an epic: The earliest Shahnama manuscripts. In J. Raby (Ed.), Islamic art in the Ashmolean Museum (pp. 45–67). Oxford University Press.

    • Image: “Layla and Majnun2” via Wikimedia Commons by Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin, uploaded under CC BY-SA 4.0. Modified from original.

       

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