later Cola period and under fhe Pandyas (thirleenth Century) they did not dare to alter the inner shrine because of its extreme holiness, but enclosed it with new shrines, enclosing walls and gate-towers, and the sculpture became elegant again, if still conventional. Atter the Mohammedan Invasion the Emperors of Vijayanagar began a massive building programme. The temples vanished behind still higher walls and gate-towers, the courtyards were covered in and became halls. The pillars were replaced by clustered columns and complicated pilasters covered with reliefs of prancing beasts and mounfed men. The framework of building became mulfi-storied. The wealth of sculpture is inexpressible, but the classical mediaeval tradition dissolves more and more into a most lively populär style. Painting, too, goes over to this populär style between the fourteenth and sixteenth Century. Somewhat later, a similar renaissance began in the re-liberated Hindu States of norfhern India, but died out in the seventeenth Century; in the eighteenth, the Marathas attempted a similar revival of mediaeval arf. Islamic art in the thirteenth Century was an offshoot of the richly- decorated Samanadic-saljuq art of Persia and Turkistan. ln the fourteenth a native style developed independent of Iran, cha- racterised by a fortress style, inclined walls and inlays of coloured stone slabs. ln the fifteenth local slyles appeared, partly adapted from Hindu arf (Kashmir, Gujarat, Bengal), partly inspired by new fashions from Persia and Turkistan (Delhi, Jaunpur, Malwa, Deccan), again with richly-cut Ornament and also glazed tiles. We still, however, know exceptionally little about the small-scale art of this period, and the Situation only changes since the late sixteenth Century. After the greaf vicfory over Vijayanagar in 1565 a new taste appeared in the Sultanates of the Deccan, semi Hindu in form and feeling but varied by influences from Arabia and Turkey. Painting, open to influences from Mughal art, late Persia and Europe, was characterised by a rhythmic line, a romanlic mood and a wealth of gilding. Applied arf (Cat. 688; 693), semi-Hindu in style, loved elaborately incised gold and gilding, ivory, and stuffs (pintados) painfed with flowers or figures. The Great Mughal Emperors were the first to infroduce the Safa- vidic art of Persia, with its architecfure of many-coloured glazed tiles and onion-shaped domes, its miniatures recalüng Chinese calligraphy, and brocades woven with large flowers. The Emperor Akbar (1556—1605) attempted to develop a syncrefist style comprising elemenfs not only of the Persian, but also of all Indian Islamic, even Hindu (Rajpuf) and European styles of his time. The buildings, generally in red sandstone, fused Persian vaulting and domes with Hindu balconies, roofs, columns, etc., covered with mulfi-coloured Indo-Islamic and Persian ornamen- tation. The miniature paintings (Cat. 352 b to 366) remain faithful to fhe Safavidic-Persian bird's-eye perspective but enrich ii with figures in the Rajput style and a European naturalism. This loving study of nature reached its peak under Akbar's son Jahangir (1605—1627). An Imperial style first developed under Shahjahan (1628—1658), exceptionally harmonious, the buildings generally strictly symmetrical in white marble inlaid with precious stones, the forms from Persian, Bengal and fhe Deccan, the painting a mixfure of Rajpuf composition and European detaiied technique, textiles in fragile white, gold and pasfel colours, applied arf preferring jade, silver, crystal, etc., with decoration dominated by flowers from Kashmir (tulips, narcissi, saffron, etc.). In fhe troubied period which followed the building technique became cheap (painted marble and stucco), the forms baroque (the rhythm rounded and dynamically increased), the ornamen- fation cloying and restless, the colours garish. Painting became romantic and stylised, mainly preoccupied with harem scenes. In the field of applied arf appeared the Kashmir shawl, rieh applique and tinsel work, iassels and fringes, long-poinfed shoes, enormous water-pipes. At the same time a new Hindu art came into being in the Hindu States now owing tribute to the Great Mughal Emperors, es- pecially in Rajputana and the Himalayas. If originated from mediaeval Hindu art, but had been simplified to the maximum and then freely re-casf. The early Rajput architecfure (fourteenth to seventeenth Century) is an asymmetric mixture of Islamic arches and vaulting with plain Hindu columns, beams and roofs. Sculpture and painting, originating in populär art, represented figures in strict profile (as in ancient Egypt) and arranged them in ranks; fhe background is only hinted at, the colours are bright, the feeling expressionist. In the seventeenth Century the Rajputs fook over much from Mughal art; in the early eighteenth Century Rajput style becarne a Mughal provincial style, but then Rajput art again went its own way, the Mughal architecfure was re-interpreted as asym- metrical, picked out with figure sculptures and paintings. The painting replaced Mughal naturalism with flowing lines and strongly contrasting colours, and Mughal realism by a romanti-