thumb|Two angels turn back and see with alarm that Iblis|Iblīs will not bow down before ʾĀdam. 1388 [[Persian miniature from a manuscript of ʿAjāʾib al-Makhlūqāt ("Wonders of Creation") by al-Ṭūsī Salmānī, century.]]
thumb|Two angels turn back and see with alarm that Iblis|Iblīs will not bow down before ʾĀdam. 1388 [[Persian miniature from a manuscript of ʿAjāʾib al-Makhlūqāt ("Wonders of Creation") by al-Ṭūsī Salmānī, century.]]
thumb|The angels meet Adam, and seem to share, albeit to a lesser degree, the defiant reaction of Iblīs, who stands at the back haughtily turning his head away. According to tradition, God created Iblīs as a beautiful Genie (jinn) called ʿAzāzīl and he is depicted as such here. He is portrayed with his characteristic darker skin to denote his impending fall, but he has wings of an angel and wears the contemporary ‘angelic hairstyle,’ a loop of hair tied on top of the head. Azazil (Arabic: عزازيل ʿAzāzīl, ; also known in Arabic: حارث Ḥārith) is a figure in Islamic tradition, and believed to be the original name of Iblis. According to various Islamic beliefs, ʿAzāzīl was the master of the angels and the strongest and most knowledgeable of them, before his pride led to his downfall.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).