This collection of essays brings together codicological, historiographical and art-historical studies of Medieval Persian history manuscripts. The main subject is Rashīd al-Dīn’s Jāmiʿ al-tavārīkh (Compendium of Chronicles). Considered the first ‘world history’, it was originally written in Persian in the early fourteenth century, when vast areas of the Eurasian continent were under Mongol rule. There is also a particular focus on Persian manuscripts preserved in India, which have heretofore been largely ignored. Though developed and sophisticated, Japanese studies on the Jāmiʿ al-tavārīkh remain mostly unknown outside of Japan due to the language barrier. In this volume, Japanese scholars offer their East Asian perspective on this and other West Asian histories for the first time in English, using not only Persian but also Chinese and Sanskrit sources. Through a comparative analysis of a number of manuscripts, the volume tackles various questions concerning the production of texts during the Ilkhanid and Timurid periods. It reveals valuable clues regarding the sources used in historical writings, the process of writing, revising and illustrating the manuscripts, and the production of copies and recensions in the Persianate realms under Mongol rule. This is an interesting collection of papers produced by Japanese scholars on the medieval historiography of Iran that will help to make their long tradition in Persian studies better known in the west. The papers deal with a good range of topics, centring the analysis on the works of Rashid al-Din but including also some very useful comparisons with authors such as Banakati. The core of the text is based on the Rampur corpus of manuscripts of the Jāmiʿ al-tavārīkh and focuses on aspects of manuscript studies, art history and history. -- Bruno De Nicola, Austrian Academy of Sciences Tomoko Masuya is Professor of Islamic Art History at the Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia at The University of Tokyo. Her research covers Islamic art produced in the vast area from Islamic Spain to Central Asia. She is the author of several books in Japanese and numerous book chapters and articles in both Japanese and English, most recently 'Archaeological Sources: The Ilkhanate' in Biran & Hodong (eds), The Cambridge History of the Mongol Empire , vol. 2 (Cambridge University Press, 2023). Osamu Otsuka is Associate Professor of Asian and African History at The University of Tokyo. He is the author of numerous books, chapter and articles in Japanese and English, including a jointly authored chapter, The Dustur a'l-Munajjimin as a Source of Early Ismaili History', in Orthmann & Schmidl (eds), Sciences in the City of Fortune: The Dustur al-Munajjimin and Its World (EB-Verlag, 2017) and articles in Journal of Persianate Studies , Studia Iranica , The Journal of Oriental Researchers and Bulletin of the Society for Near Eastern Studies in Japan . Masatomo Kawamoto is Professor of West Asian History at Nara University. His numerous publications include articles in Bulletin of the Society for Western and Southern Asiatic Studies , The Journal of Oriental Researches, Orient and Bulletin of the Society for Near Eastern Studies in Japan .