File:Karna, one of the Kauravas, slays the Pandavas' nephew Ghatotkacha with a weapon given to him by Indra, the king of the gods, from a manuscript of the Razmnama.jpg

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Captions

Captions

During the Kurukshetra war, Karna kills Ghatotkacha with divine weapon "Vasavi-shakti" - from Razmnam (the Mahabharata in Persian)

Summary edit

Karna, one of the Kauravas, slays the Pandavas' nephew Ghatotkacha with a weapon given to him by Indra, the king of the gods, from a manuscript of the Razmnama
Title
Karna, one of the Kauravas, slays the Pandavas' nephew Ghatotkacha with a weapon given to him by Indra, the king of the gods, from a manuscript of the Razmnama
Description

This painting shows an incident in the Mahabharata, a Hindu epic telling of the great battle between the Pandava brothers and their cousins the Kaurava brothers. Though the incident illustrated here was minor, it had profound repercussions for the outcome of the war. Karna uses a weapon given to him by Indra to kill the powerful Ghatotkacha, who falls from atop an elephant. Ghatotkacha’ s death is a blow to the Pandavas, but Indra’ s powerful weapon could only be used once; it was meant to destroy the hero Arjuna. Therefore, Arjuna lives— and he later kills Karna.

The Razmnama is a Persian translation of the Mahabharata (the epic is widely revered in parts of Asia beyond its origins and was much translated). The important government official ‘ Abd al-Rahim (1556– 1626), known by the title Khan-i Khanan, commissioned this translation and manuscript as well as Persian versions of other Indian stories.

Had we not known the manuscript from which this painting came, in examining its style we might take it to be decades earlier in date. It lacks the delicate refinement of the contemporaneous painting to the left, which was an imperial commission.

Nevertheless, the range of colors is vibrant and the line animated.
Date between 1616 and 1617
date QS:P571,+1616-00-00T00:00:00Z/8,P1319,+1616-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1326,+1617-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
Medium Ink, opaque watercolors and gold on paper
Dimensions H. 13 in x W. 9 in, H. 33.0 cm x W. 22.9 cm
Asian Art Museum
Current location
San Francisco
Accession number
2003.6
Object history Place of Origin: India; perhaps Burhanpur; Madhya Pradesh state
Credit line Gift of the Connoisseurs' Council with additional funding from Fred M. and Nancy Livingston Levin, the Shenson Foundation, in memory of A. Jess Shenson
Notes Style or Ware: Mughal
Source/Photographer

Licensing edit

Public domain
This work is in the public domain in India because its term of copyright has expired.

The Indian Copyright Act applies in India to works first published in India. According to the Indian Copyright Act, 1957, as amended up to Act No. 27 of 2012 (Chapter V, Section 25):

  • Anonymous works, photographs, cinematographic works, sound recordings, government works, and works of corporate authorship or of international organizations enter the public domain 60 years after the date on which they were first published, counted from the beginning of the following calendar year (i.e. as of 2024, works published prior to 1 January 1964 are considered public domain).
  • Posthumous works (other than those above) enter the public domain after 60 years from publication date, counted from the beginning of the following calendar year.
  • Any kind of work other than the above enters the public domain 60 years after the author's death (or in the case of a multi-author work, the death of the last surviving author), counted from the beginning of the following calendar year.
  • Text of laws, judicial opinions, and other government reports are free from copyright.
The Indian Copyright Act, 1957 is not retroactive, so any work in which copyright did not subsist when it commenced did not have its copyright restored, and is in the public domain per the Copyright Act 1911.

You must also include a United States public domain tag to indicate why this work is in the public domain in the United States. Note that this work might not be in the public domain in countries that do not apply the rule of the shorter term and have copyright terms longer than life of the author plus 60 years. In particular, Mexico is 100 years, Jamaica is 95 years, Colombia is 80 years, Guatemala and Samoa are 75 years, and Switzerland and the United States are 70 years.


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current12:03, 22 November 2011Thumbnail for version as of 12:03, 22 November 20111,072 × 1,600 (333 KB)Sridhar1000 (talk | contribs)

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