Bootes | Cepheus | Sagittarius |
Perseus | Serpens & Serpentarius | Auriga |
Orion | Andromeda | Aquarius |
Conclusion
Different angles of research suggest that the British Library al-Ṣūfī manuscript was produced in the Īl-Khānid observatory at Marāghā, in north-west Iran, between 1260 and 1280AD.
Main Source: Moya Catherine Carey, Painting the Stars in a Century of Change: A Thirteenth-Century Copy of Al-Ṣūfī’s Treatise on the Fixed Stars (British Library Or. 5323) (Thesis University of London, 2001).
An illustrated description by ‘Abd al-Raḥmān al-Ṣūfī of the 48 classical constellations discussed by Ptolemy in his Almagest. The text contains labelled illustrations of the 48 constellations as viewed on a celestial globe and as viewed in the sky, along with supporting tables of individual stars within each constellation listing their Arabic names, celestial coordinates and magnitudes.
Source: Qatar National Library
Other manuscripts of the 'Book of Fixed Stars' (Kitāb suwar al-kawākib al-ṯābita) by ‛Abd al-Rahman ibn ‛Umar al-Ṣūfī
Seljuk Illustrations of Costume and Soldiers
Other 13th Century Illustrations of Costume & Soldiers