Wall paintings depicting aligned guards, Lashkar-i Bazar. (After D. Schlumberger, Lashkari Bazar, fig. 122a) Source: p74, Muqarnas: An Annual on the Visual Culture of the Islamic World, Volume 22 By Gülru Necipoğlu, Julia Bailey |
Les personages 13 à 15. |
A soft headdress resembling a turban in a wall painting from room IV in the same palace. |
Referenced in Elsie Holmes Peck, "The Representation of Costumes in the Reliefs of Taq-i-Bustan" in Artibus Asiae, Vol. 31, No. 2/3, 1969
At the Ghaznavid palace of Lashkari Bazar figures of the Turkish bodyguard of the Sultan on the walls of the Audience Hall wear girdles with long thongs reaching to the hem of the garment forming a decorative pattern on the skirt. The shorter lappets are used for the suspension of small articles, such as money bags, Schlumberger believes that originally the belt came from Chinese Turkestan, and he accounts for its presence here by the fact that the Turkish bodyguard probably imported the fashion from Central Asia and the steppes.