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Abbasid architecture

Abbasid architecture developed in the Abbasid Caliphate between 750 and 1227, primarily in its heartland of Mesopotamia (modern Iraq). The great changes of the Abbasid era can be characterized as at the same time political, geo-political and cultural. The Abbasid period starts with the destruction of the Umayyad ruling family and its replacement by the Abbasids, and the position of power is shifted to the Mesopotamian area. As a result there was a corresponding displacement of the influence of classical and Byzantine artistic and cultural standards in favor of local Mesopotamian models as well as Persian.[1][2][3] The Abbasids evolved distinctive styles of their own, particularly in decoration.[4][3] This occurred mainly during the period corresponding with their power and prosperity between 750 and 932.[5]

Abbasid architecture
Top:Great Mosque of Samarra (852);

Middle: Al-Ukhaidir Fortress in Karbala (775);

Bottom: Mustansiriya Madrasa (1233);
Years activec. 750–1250s AD

Abbasid architecture was an important formative stage in wider Islamic architecture. The early caliphate's great power and unity allowed architectural features and innovations, such as minarets and carved stucco motifs, to spread quickly across the vast territories under its control.[6][7] One of the most important architectural activities during this time was the construction of new capital cities or administrative centers (a tradition also continued from earlier Mesopotamian and Persian rulers), such as the Round City of Baghdad, founded in 762, and Samarra, founded in 836.[8] The Abbasids favoured mud brick and baked brick for construction, allowing for enormous architectural complexes to be built at relatively low cost, as most clearly exemplified by Samarra, which was made up of vast palaces and monumental mosques spread across some 40 km (25 mi).[6][3]

While the Abbasids lost control of large parts of their empire after 870, their architecture continued to be copied by successor states in Iraq, Iran, Egypt and North Africa.[4] Later Abbasid caliphs were confined to Baghdad and were less involved in public architectural patronage, which was instead dominated by the Seljuks and other rulers who held de facto political power.[9] As a result, during the 11th to 13th centuries it was difficult to differentiate architectural forms associated with the Abbasids and those associated with other dynasties,[10] and Abbasid architecture of the 12th and 13th centuries was essentially Seljuk architecture built with local Iraqi craftsmanship.[3] Much of Abbasid art and architecture has been lost over time due to the fragile nature of the materials used and due to destruction wrought by conflicts. Very little of Abbasid-era Baghdad, the urban heart of the caliphate, has survived.[11][9]

Historical background Edit

 
Abbasid Caliphate at its greatest extent, around 850

In 750 the Abbasids seized power from the Umayyad rulers of the Arab empire, who lost all their possessions apart from Spain.[3] The Abbasid caliphs based in what is now Iraq ruled over Iran, Mesopotamia, Arabia and the lands of the eastern and southern Mediterranean. The period between 750 and 900 has been described as the Islamic Golden Age.[12] Where the Umayyads had typically reused pre-Islamic buildings in the cities they had conquered, by the Abbasid era many of these structures required replacement. The spread of Muslim beliefs had also brought changes in needs. The Abbasids had to build masjid and palaces, as well as fortifications, houses, commercial buildings and even facilities for racing and polo matches.[13] They upgraded the pilgrim road from Baghdad and Kufa to Mecca, levelled the surface and built walls and ditches in some areas, and built stations for the pilgrims with rooms and a mosque in which to pray.[13]

In 762 the caliph al-Mansur founded a new capital of Baghdad on the Tigris, which soon grew to one of the largest cities in the world. In 836 the caliph al-Mu'tasim transferred the capital to Samarra. The Abbasids began to lose control over the outlying parts of the empire, with local dynasties gaining effective independence in Khorasan (Samanids) in eastern Iran, Egypt (Tulunids) and Ifriqiya (Aghlabids). The caliph al-Mu'tamid, by now the effective ruler only of Iraq, moved his capital back to Baghdad in 889. In 945 the Buyids, followers of Shia Islam, became effective rulers as amirs, while the Abbasid caliphs retained their nominal title.[3] After 1055 the Seljuks controlled Baghdad for the next century and posed as the protectors of the caliphs.[14] With Caliph al-Nasir (1179-1225) the Abbasids once again gained control of Iraq, but the sack of Baghdad by the Mongols in 1258 brought the Abbasid caliphate to an end.[3]

Origins Edit

 
The city of Baghdad between 767 and 912 AD, growing out from the Round city of Baghdad built by the caliph al-Mansur. The original round city was built after the plan of circular Sasanian cities, such as Gur.

Early Abbasid architecture was strongly influenced by the architecture of the earlier Sassanid Empire, as exemplified by the Palace of Ukhaidhir.[3] The former Sassanid capital had been Ctesiphon in present-day Iraq and Sasanian architecture was a heritage shared by both the Mesopotamian lowlands and the Iranian plateau.[13] The Abbasids used the same techniques, such as vaulting made without centring, similar design features, such as buttress towers, and the same materials, such as mud brick, baked brick and rough stone blocks set in mortar.[3] When the caliph al-Mansur built the round city of Baghdad, called Madinat al-Salam, he may have been following earlier traditions such as the round city of Gur built by Ardashir I (r. 224-241) at Firuzabad. It contained the caliphal palace, a Great Mosque and administrative buildings.[13]

Early Abbasid architecture was also influenced by ancient Mesopotamian architecture, whose features continued to be present in the region's structures even after centuries of occupation by Roman, Greek, and Iranian empires. This Mesopotamian influence in Islamic architecture was only diluted in the 10th century, when Abbasid Mesopotamia entered a period of economic decline and the centers of political power in the region shifted east to Iran.[13]

With the conquest of Central Asia, the influence of Soghdian architecture increased. In Samarra the stucco and wall paintings are similar to that of the palaces of Panjakent in what is now Tajikistan. Later, in the 12th and 13th centuries, architecture in the lands ruled by the Abbasids became dominated by Seljuk architecture.[3]

Innovations Edit

 
Fragments of stucco from Samarra, including paintings, carvings and abstract patterns

Abbasid cities were laid out on huge sites. The palaces and mosques of Samarra sprawled along the shores of the Tigris for 40 kilometres (25 mi). To match the scale of the sites, monumental buildings were erected, such as the huge spiral minarets of the Abu Dulaf Mosque and the Great Mosque of Samarra, which had no counterparts elsewhere.[3] While the origins of the minaret are still uncertain, these and several other early 9th-century minarets built within the Abbasid territories are the first true minarets in Islamic architecture.[15][16] The two-centered pointed arch and vault had appeared before the Abbasids took power, but became standard in Abbasid architecture, with the point becoming more prominent.[13] The first fully developed example of the four-centered pointed arch was at the Qasr al-'Ashiq, built between 878 and 882.[17]

Three new types of stucco decoration were developed in Samarra and rapidly became popular elsewhere.[3] The first two styles may be seen as derivative from Late Antique or Umayyad decorative styles, but the third is entirely new. Style C used molds to create repeating patterns of curved lines, notches, slits, and other elements. The fluid designs make no use of traditional vegetal, geometric or animal themes.[18] The stucco work was sometimes colored in red or blue, and sometimes incorporated a glass mosaic.[19] The patterns cut into the stucco surface at an angle. This is the first and purest example of the arabesque.[18] It may represent a deliberate attempt to make an abstract form of decoration that avoids depiction of living things, and this may explain its rapid adoption throughout the Muslim world.[20]

The layout of the Fatimid city of Al-Mansuriya in Ifriqiya founded in 946 was circular, perhaps in imitation of Baghdad. The choice of layout may have been a deliberate challenge to the Abbasid Caliphate.[21] The Fatimid architecture of Ifriqiya and Egypt followed Abbasid styles, as shown by the Great Mosque of Mahdiya and the Azhar Mosque in Cairo.[22] Even Umayyad buildings of the Iberian peninsula show Abbasid influence.[12]

Characteristics Edit

General Edit

Typical features of early Abbasid architecture included the use of brick vaulting and stucco decoration. Barrel vaulting, which had already been in use in Umayyad architecture and earlier, was widely employed for formal spaces like reception halls.[23] As mentioned above, the two-centered pointed arch became common in the early Abbasid period, followed by the introduction of the four-centered pointed arch at Samarra.[24] Physical geography also influenced local architecture. Stone was rare in the alluvial plains of central and southern Iraq, which encouraged the use of mud brick, faced with plaster, as construction materials, with fire brick also used at times. In turn, these materials required regular maintenance and restoration.[13] The flatness and openness of the land also made it possible to build on an unprecedentedly vast scale, which the early caliphs frequently did, as exemplified by the new administrative capitals they created.[13] Abbasid architecture had foliate decorations on arches, pendant vaults, muqarnas vaults and polychrome interlaced spandrels that became identified as typical of "Islamic" architecture, although these forms may have their origins in Sassanian architecture.[clarification needed] Thus the fronting arch of the Arch of Ctesiphon was once decorated with a lobed molding, a form copied in the Palace of al-Ukhaidir.[25]

Palaces Edit

 
Vaulted corridors around a courtyard in the al-Ukhaidir Palace (c. 775) in Iraq, one of the earliest surviving examples of Abbasid architecture

The earliest surviving Abbasid palace, built around 775, is the al-Ukhaidir Palace. It has a plan derived from earlier Sasanian and Umayyad palaces.[26] The palace lies in the desert about 180 kilometres (110 mi) to the south of Baghdad.[27] It is rectangular in shape, 175 by 169 metres (574 by 554 ft), with four gates. Three are in half-round towers that protrude from the wall, and one in a rectangular recess in the wall. Inside there is a vaulted entrance hall, a central court, an iwan (hall) open to the court opposite the entrance hall, and residential units.[26] Sasanian techniques persist in the construction of vaults with pointed curves using rubble and mortar faced with brick and stucco, blind arches as decorations for large wall surfaces, and long vaulted halls with recesses behind arches supported by heavy pillars. Verbal descriptions indicate that palaces in Baghdad had similar layout, although on a larger scale.[28]

In 772 Al-Mansur founded a new city called al-Rafiqa on the Euphrates, the site of present-day Raqqa. The city was laid out in the shape of a horseshoe and reportedly copied the Round City of Baghdad. Later, Harun al-Rashid made the city his capital during the later years of his reign and built his residence here between 796 and 808.[5][29] Some of its remains have been excavated, revealing buildings with spacious floor plans similar to other parts of Mesopotamia but lacking the use of iwans.[5] The Baghdad Gate, one of the few old monuments preserved in Raqqa today, was once thought to date from al-Mansur's foundation in the late 8th century, but it has since been attributed to the 11th or 12th century instead, around the time of Numayrid or Zengid rule.[29][30][5]

The palaces of Samarra, founded by al-Mu'tasim in 836, were notable for their enormous size and their well-defined subdivisions.[31] They included vast courtyards around which numerous apartments and halls were arranged. Some of the palaces had multiple monumental gates, arranged in succession, which granted access from one courtyard to another.[31] Al-Mu'tasim's main palace, known as the Dār al-Khilāfa or the Jawsaq al-Khāqānī, was begun around the same time as the city's foundation.[32][33] On its west side was a grand entrance overlooking the Tigris River. It consisted of a grand staircase leading up to a monumental gate in the form of a three iwans, known as Bab al-'Amma.[31][33] At the foot of the staircase was a large rectangular water basin from which a canal led down to a raised pavilion near the river, 300 meters away from the gate. The gate itself had a second story from which the caliph, the palace residents, or the guards were able to survey the landscape. Behind the gate, a series of halls led eastward to a square courtyard. Beyond this was a domed hall with four iwans arranged in a cruciform layout, with each iwan granting access to another courtyard behind it.[31][33] The eastern courtyard beyond this was a vast esplanade measuring 350 by 180 metres (1,150 by 590 ft) which had water channels, fountains, and possibly gardens.[33] Among other excavated and partly reconstructed features visible today is a sunken courtyard with chambers constructed around a large circular water basin, the so-called "Large Serdab" (as named by Ernst Herzfeld) or Birka Handasiyya ("Geometric Basin", a name given by Iraqi archeologists).[34] The courtyard, located to the north of the grand esplanade, was probably designed to be a respite from the heat of summer.[34] In addition to the main palace, Al-Mutawakkil built luxurious palaces for his sons, such as the Balkuwara Palace for his son al-Mu'tazz, which had a style and layout similar to the Dar al-Khilafa.[33] Samarra's extensive facilities also included barracks, stables and racecourses.[34]

Palaces at Samara such as al-'Ashiq and al-Jiss, built around 870, display polylobed moldings carved deeply into the intrados of the arches, giving the appearance of a foliate arch.[35] Floors were sometimes of marble, more often tiled.[17] The reception rooms of palaces at Samarra had carved or molded stucco dados decorating the lower part of the walls, and stucco also decorated door frames, wall-niches and arches, in three distinct styles.[17] Other palaces that have been excavated often have a domed central chamber surrounded by four iwans facing outward.[36]

The only potential Abbasid palace structure left in Baghdad is located in the Al-Maiden neighborhood overlooking the Tigris, in what was formerly the citadel of the city.[37][38] Popularly known as the "Abbasid Palace", the origins and nature of the structure have been debated by scholars, as there are no surviving inscriptions or texts that identify its name or function.[38] The building was erected under Caliph al-Nasir li-Din Allah (r. 1180–1225) or possibly al-Mustansir (r. 1226–1242), in the late Abbasid period.[39][38] It stands two stories high and contains a central courtyard and an iwan with a brick ceiling and façade.[39] One of its most unique features is the series of muqarnas vaults that decorate the inside of its eastern gallery.[38] Its design shares close similarities with the Al-Mustansiriya Madrasa (completed in 1233), which has led some scholars to argue that it was actually a madrasa.[38] These scholars have commonly identified it as most likely being the Madrasa al-Sharabiya, a school for Islamic theology built in 1230 by Sharif al-Din Iqbal,[39][40][41][38] while some have identified it as the Bishiriya Madrasa, built in 1255.[42][43] Another scholar, Yasser Tabbaa, has argued that the building lacks some key features of a madrasa and therefore its identification as a palace remains more plausible.[38] He notes that some historical sources mention the construction of the Dar al‐Masnat ("House by the Breakwater") begun by al-Nasir around this location towards 1184, which could therefore correspond to this structure.[38] Significant parts of the building were reconstructed in the 20th century by the State Establishment of Antiquities and Heritage, including restoration of the great iwan and the adjacent facades.[44][38]

Mosques Edit

 
Great Mosque of Samarra, Iraq, built by al-Mutawakkil in 848–52; the outer wall of the mosque is on the right, the Malwiya minaret is on the left

The Abbasids continued to follow the Umayyad rectangular hypostyle plan with arcaded courtyard (sahn) and covered prayer hall. They built mosques on a monumental scale using brick construction, stucco ornament and architectural forms developed in Mesopotamia and other regions to the east.[4] Massive rounded piers with smaller engaged columns were also typical in Abbasid mosques.[45] The first Friday mosque of Baghdad was built by al-Mansur and expanded at a later period, but it has since disappeared and is now known only from texts. It had a hypostyle form with courtyard.[26][5] The Great Mosque of Samarra (848–852)[5] built by al-Mutawakkil had a rectangular floor plan measuring 256 by 139 metres (840 by 456 ft). It had a flat wooden roof was supported by columns and was decorated with marble panels and glass mosaics.[26] The Abu Dulaf Mosque (859–861)[5] near Samarra also had a rectangular floor plan, an open-air courtyard, and a prayer hall with arcades on rectangular brick piers running at right angles to the qibla wall.[26]

Other surviving Abbasid mosques are the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo (877–879), the Tarikhaneh (or Tārī Khāna) in Damghan, Iran (750–789), and the Nuh Gunbad (Nine Dome) Mosque in Balkh, Afghanistan (9th century).[46][5][47] These mosques all had hypostyle forms with internal courtyards. The Ibn Tulun Mosque is one of the best-preserved Abbasid mosques anywhere and one of the most impressive provincial mosques of this era. Its design is a product of the Samarra style being adapted by local craftsmanship, probably on the instructions of its patron, Ahmad Ibn Tulun, who had spent time in Samarra. It has a nearly square floor plan with a vast interior courtyard surrounded by roofed spaces with rectangular piers and pointed arches. The design of its arcades, in which carved decoration alternates with solid surfaces and the main arches alternate with smaller arched openings in the spandrels, forms a visual rhythmic effect that further exploits the potential of basic Abbasid design.[48][49]

The Tarikhaneh mosque in Damghan, whose structure dates from the 9th century or the second half of the 8th century, is the only early Abbasid mosque in Iran to preserve much of its original form. The 10th-century the Friday Mosque of Nā'īn (also spelled Nain or Nayin), for its part, preserves some of the best Abbasid stucco decoration of its time, covering its pillars, arches, and mihrab.[50][5] The Great Mosque of Isfahan was also first built during the Abbasid period, but little remains of this construction as it was rebuilt and expanded in later centuries.[51] The mosque at Balkh was about 20 by 20 metres (66 by 66 ft) square, with three rows of three square bays, supporting nine vaulted domes.[17] Other nine-domed mosques of this kind have been found in Spain, Tunisia, Egypt and Central Asia.[52]

The first known minarets built as towers appeared under Abbasid rule.[53][15] Four towers were added to the Great Mosque of Mecca during its Abbasid reconstruction in the late 8th century.[16] In the 9th century single minaret towers were built in or near the middle of the wall opposite the qibla wall of mosques.[54] These towers were built across the empire in a height to width ratio of around 3:1.[55] One of the oldest minarets still standing is that of the Great Mosque of Kairouan in Tunisia, built in 836 under Aghlabid rule and still well-preserved today.[56][16][57][58] Other minarets that date from the same period, but less precisely dated, include the minaret of the Friday Mosque of Siraf, now the oldest minaret in Iran, and the minaret opposite the qibla wall at the Great Mosque of Damascus (known as the "Minaret of the Bride"), now the oldest minaret in the region of Syria (though its upper section was probably rebuilt multiple times).[16][57] In Samarra, the Great Mosque of Samarra features a massive helicoidal or "spiral" minaret behind its northern wall, known as the Malwiya. This unique design was repeated once more in the minaret of the nearby Abu Dulaf Mosque, but no other examples were built elsewhere.[59][26][3] A possible exception is the minaret of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun, which has a spiral staircase that seems to imitate the minarets of Samarra (though the current structure was at least partly reconstructed in the late 13th century).[60][16][61] It is the only example of a spiral minaret outside Iraq.[26] Some early scholarly theories proposed that these helicoidal minarets were inspired by ancient Mesopotamian ziggurats, but this view has been challenged or rejected by some later scholars including Richard Ettinghausen, Oleg Grabar, and Jonathan Bloom.[62][63]

Other buildings Edit

 
Qubbat al-Sulaibiyya in Samarra, the oldest surviving Islamic domed mausoleum (c. 862)

Houses were often built in blocks.[36] Most houses seem to have been two story. The lower level was often sunken into the ground for coolness, and had vaulted ceilings. The upper level had a timber ceiling and a flat terraced roof that provided living space in summer nights. Houses were built around courtyards, and had featureless exteriors, although they were often elaborately decorated inside.[19] There are no traces of windcatchers, which later became common Islamic architectural features. Most of the houses had latrines and facilities for cold-water bathing.[36]

The oldest surviving example of a domed tomb in Islamic architecture is the Qubbat al-Sulaibiyya in Samarra, present-day Iraq, dating from the mid-9th century (c. 862).[66][67] It consists of an octagonal structure with a central square chamber covered by a dome. According to Ernst Herzfielf, who first documented the building in modern times, it was the mausoleum of Caliph al-Muntasir (d. 862), after which the caliphs al-Mu'tazz (d. 869) and al-Muhtadi (d. 870) were also buried here.[68] The construction of domed tombs became more common among both Shi'as and Sunnis during the tenth century, although early Sunni mausoleums were mostly built for political rulers, whereas the Shi'as built them especially over the tombs of the Prophet Muhammad's descendants.[69][68] Another important example of the latter is the Samanid Mausoleum in Bukhara, present-day Uzbekistan, built in the tenth century by the Samanids (one of the dynasties that ruled under Abbasid suzerainty).[69] In the early 10th century the Abbasids also built another grand mausoleum for their dynasty on the east bank of the Tigris River in Baghdad, but it was later destroyed.[68]

Some late Abbasid monuments have been preserved in Baghdad, including Mausoleum of Sitta Zubayda (or Zumurrud Khatun), built around 1152 or before 1202, the al-Wastani (or al-Jafariya) Gate, built in 1221, and the Mustansiriya Madrasa, built in 1228–1233. All have been significantly modified or restored in recent times.[70][71][72] The Mausoleum of Sitta Zubayda,[a][73] probably built by Caliph al-Nasir for his mother, exemplifies an original type of mausoleum that was being built in Mesopotamia around this period: a polygonal chamber is covered by a cone-like muqarnas dome.[70][73] The Mustansiriya Madrasa was the first documented madrasa that was built to teach all four Sunni madhhabs.[10] It followed the four-iwan plan common in contemporary Iranian architecture, but it had an unusually elongated form, possibly imposed by the narrow urban site. The courtyard displays a sophisticated combination of vaulting and carved relief decoration. It has two major iwans aligned with its long axis and a two triple-iwan façades aligned with its short axis.[70][71]

The Abbasids also undertook public works that included construction of canals in Samarra and of cisterns in Tunisia and Palestine.[citation needed] The Nilometer at Fustat, near modern Cairo, built in 861, has elaborate and ornate stonework and discharging arches.[74]

Decoration Edit

Under the Abbasids in Iraq stucco decoration developed more abstract motifs, as seen in the 9th-century palaces of Samarra. Three styles are distinguished by modern scholars: "style A" consists of vegetal motifs, including vine leaves, derived from more traditional Byzantine and Levantine styles; "style B" is a more abstract and stylized version of these motifs; and "style C", also known as the "beveled" style, is entirely abstract, consisting of repeating symmetrical forms of curved lines ending in spirals.[76][77][78] The Abbasid style became popular throughout the lands of the Abbasid Caliphate and is found as far as Afghanistan (e.g. the Nine Dome Mosque in Balkh) and Egypt (e.g. Ibn Tulun Mosque).[76][77][3] The three types (Styles A, B, and C) of stucco decoration best exemplified, and perhaps developed, in Abbasid Samarra were quickly imitated elsewhere and Style C, which itself remained common in the Islamic world for centuries, was an important precursor to fully developed arabesque decoration.[79][failed verification] The Tulunids in Egypt built copies of Abbasid buildings in Cairo.[12] The Ibn Tulun Mosque, built in Fustat near Cairo in 876-879, combines Umayyad and Abbasid structural and decorative features.[80]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The mausoleum is attached to the al-Khaffafin Mosque, which was originally founded by Zumurrud Khatun but was completely rebuilt much later under Ottoman rule.

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Hoag, John D. (2004). Islamic architecture. Milan: Electaarchitecture. pp. 7–9. ISBN 978-1-904313-29-8.
  2. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, Architecture (IV. c. 750–c. 900)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Petersen 2002, p. 1.
  4. ^ a b c Ettinghausen 1987, pp. 75–125.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Northedge 2012.
  6. ^ a b Blair & Bloom 2011, p. 94-95.
  7. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, Architecture; IV. c. 750–c. 900.
  8. ^ Blair & Bloom 2011, pp. 95–96, 102.
  9. ^ a b Tabbaa 2017, p. 307.
  10. ^ a b Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 215.
  11. ^ Blair & Bloom 2011, p. 95.
  12. ^ a b c Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 78, Architecture; IV. c. 750–c. 900.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 79, Architecture; IV. c. 750–c. 900.
  14. ^ El-Hibri 2021, pp. 8, 204–232.
  15. ^ a b Petersen 2002, p. 187-188.
  16. ^ a b c d e Bloom & Blair 2009, Minaret
  17. ^ a b c d Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 82, Architecture; IV. c. 750–c. 900.
  18. ^ a b Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 58.
  19. ^ a b Bowen 1928, p. 22.
  20. ^ Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 59.
  21. ^ Yalman, Susan (2001). "The Art of the Fatimid Period (909–1171)". Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2022-06-19.
  22. ^ Ende & Steinbach 2010, p. 839.
  23. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, pp. 78–79, Architecture; IV. c. 750–c. 900.
  24. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, pp. 78–81, Architecture; IV. c. 750–c. 900.
  25. ^ Tabbaa 2002, p. 138.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 80, Architecture; IV. c. 750–c. 900.
  27. ^ Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 53.
  28. ^ Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 54.
  29. ^ a b Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 144, Raqqa.
  30. ^ Moaz, Abd al-Razzaq; Tabbaa, Yasser; Takieddine, Zina; Daiber, Verena; Bakkour, Dina; Hafian, Wa'al; Hasan, Haytham; Mayor, Balázs; Michaudel, Benjamin (2015). The Ayyubid Era. Art and Architecture in Medieval Syria (in Spanish). Museum With No Frontiers, MWNF (Museum Ohne Grenzen). ISBN 978-3-902782-17-5.
  31. ^ a b c d Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 55-56.
  32. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, Samarra.
  33. ^ a b c d e Ruggles 2011, p. 183-184.
  34. ^ a b c Northedge, Alastair (1993). "An Interpretation of the Palace of the Caliph at Samarra (Dar al-Khilafa or Jawsaq al-Khaqani)". Ars Orientalis. 23: 143–170. JSTOR 4629446.
  35. ^ Tabbaa 2002, p. 139.
  36. ^ a b c Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 81, Architecture; IV. c. 750–c. 900.
  37. ^ JPC Inc 1984, p. 47.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i Tabbaa 2017, p. 316-319.
  39. ^ a b c Michell 1978, p. 247.
  40. ^ Al-Janabi 1982, p. 68-71.
  41. ^ Petersen 2002, p. 30.
  42. ^ Hillenbrand 1994, p. 223.
  43. ^ Blair & Bloom 2011, p. 116.
  44. ^ Al-Janabi 1982, p. 68-72.
  45. ^ Petersen 2002, p. 32.
  46. ^ Hoag 1987, pp. 23–31.
  47. ^ Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 105-110.
  48. ^ Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 31-33.
  49. ^ Blair & Bloom 2011, p. 113.
  50. ^ Blair & Bloom 2011, p. 110.
  51. ^ Blair & Bloom 2011, pp. 109–110.
  52. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 83, Architecture; IV. c. 750–c. 900.
  53. ^ Bloom 2013.
  54. ^ Bloom 2013, p. 72-79.
  55. ^ Bloom 2013, p. 79.
  56. ^ Bloom 2013, p. 73-75.
  57. ^ a b Petersen 2002, p. 187-190.
  58. ^ "Minaret of the Great Mosque of Kairouan". Qantara - Mediterranean Heritage. Retrieved 2022-04-26.
  59. ^ Bloom 2013, p. 76.
  60. ^ Petersen 2002, p. 1, 113, 189.
  61. ^ O'Kane, Bernard (2016). The Mosques of Egypt. American University of Cairo Press. p. 9. ISBN 9789774167324.
  62. ^ Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 30.
  63. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, Minaret.
  64. ^ جامع ابو دلف. Masajed Iraq. Retrieved January 4, 2018.
  65. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, Architecture (IV. c. 750–c. 900).
  66. ^ Petersen 2002, p. 240.
  67. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 342, Tomb.
  68. ^ a b c Blair & Bloom 2011, p. 108.
  69. ^ a b Tabbaa, Yasser (2017). "Dome". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam, Three. Brill. ISBN 9789004161658.
  70. ^ a b c Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 215-216.
  71. ^ a b Bloom & Blair 2009, Baghdad.
  72. ^ Tabbaa 2017.
  73. ^ a b Tabbaa 2017, p. 312.
  74. ^ Ettinghausen, Grabar & Jenkins-Madina 2001, p. 55.
  75. ^ Rast 1992, p. 198.
  76. ^ a b Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 193–198, Architecture; X. Decoration; A. Sculpture.
  77. ^ a b Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 235–238, Stucco and plasterwork.
  78. ^ Petersen 2002, p. 267–268.
  79. ^ Bloom & Blair 2009, p. 57-59.
  80. ^ Kuban 1974, p. 20.

Sources Edit

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  • Ettinghausen, Richard (1987). The Abbasid Tradition: In The Art and Architecture of Islam 650-1250. New Haven: Yale UP. pp. 75–125.
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  • Kuban, Dogan (1974). Muslim Religious Architecture. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-03813-4. Retrieved 2013-03-15.
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  • Petersen, Andrew (2002) [1996]. Dictionary of Islamic Architecture. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-20387-3. Retrieved 2013-03-15.
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  • "The Art of the Fatimid Period (909–1171)". Metmuseum.org. Retrieved 11 March 2013.

External links Edit

abbasid, architecture, developed, abbasid, caliphate, between, 1227, primarily, heartland, mesopotamia, modern, iraq, great, changes, abbasid, characterized, same, time, political, political, cultural, abbasid, period, starts, with, destruction, umayyad, rulin. Abbasid architecture developed in the Abbasid Caliphate between 750 and 1227 primarily in its heartland of Mesopotamia modern Iraq The great changes of the Abbasid era can be characterized as at the same time political geo political and cultural The Abbasid period starts with the destruction of the Umayyad ruling family and its replacement by the Abbasids and the position of power is shifted to the Mesopotamian area As a result there was a corresponding displacement of the influence of classical and Byzantine artistic and cultural standards in favor of local Mesopotamian models as well as Persian 1 2 3 The Abbasids evolved distinctive styles of their own particularly in decoration 4 3 This occurred mainly during the period corresponding with their power and prosperity between 750 and 932 5 Abbasid architectureTop Great Mosque of Samarra 852 Middle Al Ukhaidir Fortress in Karbala 775 Bottom Mustansiriya Madrasa 1233 Years activec 750 1250s ADAbbasid architecture was an important formative stage in wider Islamic architecture The early caliphate s great power and unity allowed architectural features and innovations such as minarets and carved stucco motifs to spread quickly across the vast territories under its control 6 7 One of the most important architectural activities during this time was the construction of new capital cities or administrative centers a tradition also continued from earlier Mesopotamian and Persian rulers such as the Round City of Baghdad founded in 762 and Samarra founded in 836 8 The Abbasids favoured mud brick and baked brick for construction allowing for enormous architectural complexes to be built at relatively low cost as most clearly exemplified by Samarra which was made up of vast palaces and monumental mosques spread across some 40 km 25 mi 6 3 While the Abbasids lost control of large parts of their empire after 870 their architecture continued to be copied by successor states in Iraq Iran Egypt and North Africa 4 Later Abbasid caliphs were confined to Baghdad and were less involved in public architectural patronage which was instead dominated by the Seljuks and other rulers who held de facto political power 9 As a result during the 11th to 13th centuries it was difficult to differentiate architectural forms associated with the Abbasids and those associated with other dynasties 10 and Abbasid architecture of the 12th and 13th centuries was essentially Seljuk architecture built with local Iraqi craftsmanship 3 Much of Abbasid art and architecture has been lost over time due to the fragile nature of the materials used and due to destruction wrought by conflicts Very little of Abbasid era Baghdad the urban heart of the caliphate has survived 11 9 Contents 1 Historical background 2 Origins 3 Innovations 4 Characteristics 4 1 General 4 2 Palaces 4 3 Mosques 4 4 Other buildings 5 Decoration 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Sources 9 External linksHistorical background EditSee also Rashidun Caliphate and Umayyad Caliphate nbsp Abbasid Caliphate at its greatest extent around 850In 750 the Abbasids seized power from the Umayyad rulers of the Arab empire who lost all their possessions apart from Spain 3 The Abbasid caliphs based in what is now Iraq ruled over Iran Mesopotamia Arabia and the lands of the eastern and southern Mediterranean The period between 750 and 900 has been described as the Islamic Golden Age 12 Where the Umayyads had typically reused pre Islamic buildings in the cities they had conquered by the Abbasid era many of these structures required replacement The spread of Muslim beliefs had also brought changes in needs The Abbasids had to build masjid and palaces as well as fortifications houses commercial buildings and even facilities for racing and polo matches 13 They upgraded the pilgrim road from Baghdad and Kufa to Mecca levelled the surface and built walls and ditches in some areas and built stations for the pilgrims with rooms and a mosque in which to pray 13 In 762 the caliph al Mansur founded a new capital of Baghdad on the Tigris which soon grew to one of the largest cities in the world In 836 the caliph al Mu tasim transferred the capital to Samarra The Abbasids began to lose control over the outlying parts of the empire with local dynasties gaining effective independence in Khorasan Samanids in eastern Iran Egypt Tulunids and Ifriqiya Aghlabids The caliph al Mu tamid by now the effective ruler only of Iraq moved his capital back to Baghdad in 889 In 945 the Buyids followers of Shia Islam became effective rulers as amirs while the Abbasid caliphs retained their nominal title 3 After 1055 the Seljuks controlled Baghdad for the next century and posed as the protectors of the caliphs 14 With Caliph al Nasir 1179 1225 the Abbasids once again gained control of Iraq but the sack of Baghdad by the Mongols in 1258 brought the Abbasid caliphate to an end 3 Origins EditFurther information Umayyad architecture nbsp The city of Baghdad between 767 and 912 AD growing out from the Round city of Baghdad built by the caliph al Mansur The original round city was built after the plan of circular Sasanian cities such as Gur Early Abbasid architecture was strongly influenced by the architecture of the earlier Sassanid Empire as exemplified by the Palace of Ukhaidhir 3 The former Sassanid capital had been Ctesiphon in present day Iraq and Sasanian architecture was a heritage shared by both the Mesopotamian lowlands and the Iranian plateau 13 The Abbasids used the same techniques such as vaulting made without centring similar design features such as buttress towers and the same materials such as mud brick baked brick and rough stone blocks set in mortar 3 When the caliph al Mansur built the round city of Baghdad called Madinat al Salam he may have been following earlier traditions such as the round city of Gur built by Ardashir I r 224 241 at Firuzabad It contained the caliphal palace a Great Mosque and administrative buildings 13 Early Abbasid architecture was also influenced by ancient Mesopotamian architecture whose features continued to be present in the region s structures even after centuries of occupation by Roman Greek and Iranian empires This Mesopotamian influence in Islamic architecture was only diluted in the 10th century when Abbasid Mesopotamia entered a period of economic decline and the centers of political power in the region shifted east to Iran 13 With the conquest of Central Asia the influence of Soghdian architecture increased In Samarra the stucco and wall paintings are similar to that of the palaces of Panjakent in what is now Tajikistan Later in the 12th and 13th centuries architecture in the lands ruled by the Abbasids became dominated by Seljuk architecture 3 Innovations Edit nbsp Fragments of stucco from Samarra including paintings carvings and abstract patternsAbbasid cities were laid out on huge sites The palaces and mosques of Samarra sprawled along the shores of the Tigris for 40 kilometres 25 mi To match the scale of the sites monumental buildings were erected such as the huge spiral minarets of the Abu Dulaf Mosque and the Great Mosque of Samarra which had no counterparts elsewhere 3 While the origins of the minaret are still uncertain these and several other early 9th century minarets built within the Abbasid territories are the first true minarets in Islamic architecture 15 16 The two centered pointed arch and vault had appeared before the Abbasids took power but became standard in Abbasid architecture with the point becoming more prominent 13 The first fully developed example of the four centered pointed arch was at the Qasr al Ashiq built between 878 and 882 17 Three new types of stucco decoration were developed in Samarra and rapidly became popular elsewhere 3 The first two styles may be seen as derivative from Late Antique or Umayyad decorative styles but the third is entirely new Style C used molds to create repeating patterns of curved lines notches slits and other elements The fluid designs make no use of traditional vegetal geometric or animal themes 18 The stucco work was sometimes colored in red or blue and sometimes incorporated a glass mosaic 19 The patterns cut into the stucco surface at an angle This is the first and purest example of the arabesque 18 It may represent a deliberate attempt to make an abstract form of decoration that avoids depiction of living things and this may explain its rapid adoption throughout the Muslim world 20 The layout of the Fatimid city of Al Mansuriya in Ifriqiya founded in 946 was circular perhaps in imitation of Baghdad The choice of layout may have been a deliberate challenge to the Abbasid Caliphate 21 The Fatimid architecture of Ifriqiya and Egypt followed Abbasid styles as shown by the Great Mosque of Mahdiya and the Azhar Mosque in Cairo 22 Even Umayyad buildings of the Iberian peninsula show Abbasid influence 12 Characteristics EditGeneral Edit Typical features of early Abbasid architecture included the use of brick vaulting and stucco decoration Barrel vaulting which had already been in use in Umayyad architecture and earlier was widely employed for formal spaces like reception halls 23 As mentioned above the two centered pointed arch became common in the early Abbasid period followed by the introduction of the four centered pointed arch at Samarra 24 Physical geography also influenced local architecture Stone was rare in the alluvial plains of central and southern Iraq which encouraged the use of mud brick faced with plaster as construction materials with fire brick also used at times In turn these materials required regular maintenance and restoration 13 The flatness and openness of the land also made it possible to build on an unprecedentedly vast scale which the early caliphs frequently did as exemplified by the new administrative capitals they created 13 Abbasid architecture had foliate decorations on arches pendant vaults muqarnas vaults and polychrome interlaced spandrels that became identified as typical of Islamic architecture although these forms may have their origins in Sassanian architecture clarification needed Thus the fronting arch of the Arch of Ctesiphon was once decorated with a lobed molding a form copied in the Palace of al Ukhaidir 25 Palaces Edit nbsp Vaulted corridors around a courtyard in the al Ukhaidir Palace c 775 in Iraq one of the earliest surviving examples of Abbasid architectureThe earliest surviving Abbasid palace built around 775 is the al Ukhaidir Palace It has a plan derived from earlier Sasanian and Umayyad palaces 26 The palace lies in the desert about 180 kilometres 110 mi to the south of Baghdad 27 It is rectangular in shape 175 by 169 metres 574 by 554 ft with four gates Three are in half round towers that protrude from the wall and one in a rectangular recess in the wall Inside there is a vaulted entrance hall a central court an iwan hall open to the court opposite the entrance hall and residential units 26 Sasanian techniques persist in the construction of vaults with pointed curves using rubble and mortar faced with brick and stucco blind arches as decorations for large wall surfaces and long vaulted halls with recesses behind arches supported by heavy pillars Verbal descriptions indicate that palaces in Baghdad had similar layout although on a larger scale 28 In 772 Al Mansur founded a new city called al Rafiqa on the Euphrates the site of present day Raqqa The city was laid out in the shape of a horseshoe and reportedly copied the Round City of Baghdad Later Harun al Rashid made the city his capital during the later years of his reign and built his residence here between 796 and 808 5 29 Some of its remains have been excavated revealing buildings with spacious floor plans similar to other parts of Mesopotamia but lacking the use of iwans 5 The Baghdad Gate one of the few old monuments preserved in Raqqa today was once thought to date from al Mansur s foundation in the late 8th century but it has since been attributed to the 11th or 12th century instead around the time of Numayrid or Zengid rule 29 30 5 The palaces of Samarra founded by al Mu tasim in 836 were notable for their enormous size and their well defined subdivisions 31 They included vast courtyards around which numerous apartments and halls were arranged Some of the palaces had multiple monumental gates arranged in succession which granted access from one courtyard to another 31 Al Mu tasim s main palace known as the Dar al Khilafa or the Jawsaq al Khaqani was begun around the same time as the city s foundation 32 33 On its west side was a grand entrance overlooking the Tigris River It consisted of a grand staircase leading up to a monumental gate in the form of a three iwans known as Bab al Amma 31 33 At the foot of the staircase was a large rectangular water basin from which a canal led down to a raised pavilion near the river 300 meters away from the gate The gate itself had a second story from which the caliph the palace residents or the guards were able to survey the landscape Behind the gate a series of halls led eastward to a square courtyard Beyond this was a domed hall with four iwans arranged in a cruciform layout with each iwan granting access to another courtyard behind it 31 33 The eastern courtyard beyond this was a vast esplanade measuring 350 by 180 metres 1 150 by 590 ft which had water channels fountains and possibly gardens 33 Among other excavated and partly reconstructed features visible today is a sunken courtyard with chambers constructed around a large circular water basin the so called Large Serdab as named by Ernst Herzfeld or Birka Handasiyya Geometric Basin a name given by Iraqi archeologists 34 The courtyard located to the north of the grand esplanade was probably designed to be a respite from the heat of summer 34 In addition to the main palace Al Mutawakkil built luxurious palaces for his sons such as the Balkuwara Palace for his son al Mu tazz which had a style and layout similar to the Dar al Khilafa 33 Samarra s extensive facilities also included barracks stables and racecourses 34 Palaces at Samara such as al Ashiq and al Jiss built around 870 display polylobed moldings carved deeply into the intrados of the arches giving the appearance of a foliate arch 35 Floors were sometimes of marble more often tiled 17 The reception rooms of palaces at Samarra had carved or molded stucco dados decorating the lower part of the walls and stucco also decorated door frames wall niches and arches in three distinct styles 17 Other palaces that have been excavated often have a domed central chamber surrounded by four iwans facing outward 36 The only potential Abbasid palace structure left in Baghdad is located in the Al Maiden neighborhood overlooking the Tigris in what was formerly the citadel of the city 37 38 Popularly known as the Abbasid Palace the origins and nature of the structure have been debated by scholars as there are no surviving inscriptions or texts that identify its name or function 38 The building was erected under Caliph al Nasir li Din Allah r 1180 1225 or possibly al Mustansir r 1226 1242 in the late Abbasid period 39 38 It stands two stories high and contains a central courtyard and an iwan with a brick ceiling and facade 39 One of its most unique features is the series of muqarnas vaults that decorate the inside of its eastern gallery 38 Its design shares close similarities with the Al Mustansiriya Madrasa completed in 1233 which has led some scholars to argue that it was actually a madrasa 38 These scholars have commonly identified it as most likely being the Madrasa al Sharabiya a school for Islamic theology built in 1230 by Sharif al Din Iqbal 39 40 41 38 while some have identified it as the Bishiriya Madrasa built in 1255 42 43 Another scholar Yasser Tabbaa has argued that the building lacks some key features of a madrasa and therefore its identification as a palace remains more plausible 38 He notes that some historical sources mention the construction of the Dar al Masnat House by the Breakwater begun by al Nasir around this location towards 1184 which could therefore correspond to this structure 38 Significant parts of the building were reconstructed in the 20th century by the State Establishment of Antiquities and Heritage including restoration of the great iwan and the adjacent facades 44 38 nbsp Remains of Bab al Amma c 836 the main gate of the Dar al Khilafa or Jawsaq al Khaqani palace in Samarra Iraq founded by Al Mu tasim nbsp Remains partly reconstructed of the Large Serdab or Birka Handasiyya inside the Dar al Khilafa palace in Samarra around or after 836 nbsp Qasr al Ashiq a palace near Samarra The palace was commissioned under the 15th Abbasid caliph Al Mu tamid and construction took place during 877 882 AD citation needed nbsp Muqarnas vaulting in the so called Abbasid Palace in Baghdad tentatively dated to the reign of al Nasir or al Mustansir late 12th or early 13th century Mosques Edit nbsp Great Mosque of Samarra Iraq built by al Mutawakkil in 848 52 the outer wall of the mosque is on the right the Malwiya minaret is on the leftThe Abbasids continued to follow the Umayyad rectangular hypostyle plan with arcaded courtyard sahn and covered prayer hall They built mosques on a monumental scale using brick construction stucco ornament and architectural forms developed in Mesopotamia and other regions to the east 4 Massive rounded piers with smaller engaged columns were also typical in Abbasid mosques 45 The first Friday mosque of Baghdad was built by al Mansur and expanded at a later period but it has since disappeared and is now known only from texts It had a hypostyle form with courtyard 26 5 The Great Mosque of Samarra 848 852 5 built by al Mutawakkil had a rectangular floor plan measuring 256 by 139 metres 840 by 456 ft It had a flat wooden roof was supported by columns and was decorated with marble panels and glass mosaics 26 The Abu Dulaf Mosque 859 861 5 near Samarra also had a rectangular floor plan an open air courtyard and a prayer hall with arcades on rectangular brick piers running at right angles to the qibla wall 26 Other surviving Abbasid mosques are the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo 877 879 the Tarikhaneh or Tari Khana in Damghan Iran 750 789 and the Nuh Gunbad Nine Dome Mosque in Balkh Afghanistan 9th century 46 5 47 These mosques all had hypostyle forms with internal courtyards The Ibn Tulun Mosque is one of the best preserved Abbasid mosques anywhere and one of the most impressive provincial mosques of this era Its design is a product of the Samarra style being adapted by local craftsmanship probably on the instructions of its patron Ahmad Ibn Tulun who had spent time in Samarra It has a nearly square floor plan with a vast interior courtyard surrounded by roofed spaces with rectangular piers and pointed arches The design of its arcades in which carved decoration alternates with solid surfaces and the main arches alternate with smaller arched openings in the spandrels forms a visual rhythmic effect that further exploits the potential of basic Abbasid design 48 49 The Tarikhaneh mosque in Damghan whose structure dates from the 9th century or the second half of the 8th century is the only early Abbasid mosque in Iran to preserve much of its original form The 10th century the Friday Mosque of Na in also spelled Nain or Nayin for its part preserves some of the best Abbasid stucco decoration of its time covering its pillars arches and mihrab 50 5 The Great Mosque of Isfahan was also first built during the Abbasid period but little remains of this construction as it was rebuilt and expanded in later centuries 51 The mosque at Balkh was about 20 by 20 metres 66 by 66 ft square with three rows of three square bays supporting nine vaulted domes 17 Other nine domed mosques of this kind have been found in Spain Tunisia Egypt and Central Asia 52 The first known minarets built as towers appeared under Abbasid rule 53 15 Four towers were added to the Great Mosque of Mecca during its Abbasid reconstruction in the late 8th century 16 In the 9th century single minaret towers were built in or near the middle of the wall opposite the qibla wall of mosques 54 These towers were built across the empire in a height to width ratio of around 3 1 55 One of the oldest minarets still standing is that of the Great Mosque of Kairouan in Tunisia built in 836 under Aghlabid rule and still well preserved today 56 16 57 58 Other minarets that date from the same period but less precisely dated include the minaret of the Friday Mosque of Siraf now the oldest minaret in Iran and the minaret opposite the qibla wall at the Great Mosque of Damascus known as the Minaret of the Bride now the oldest minaret in the region of Syria though its upper section was probably rebuilt multiple times 16 57 In Samarra the Great Mosque of Samarra features a massive helicoidal or spiral minaret behind its northern wall known as the Malwiya This unique design was repeated once more in the minaret of the nearby Abu Dulaf Mosque but no other examples were built elsewhere 59 26 3 A possible exception is the minaret of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun which has a spiral staircase that seems to imitate the minarets of Samarra though the current structure was at least partly reconstructed in the late 13th century 60 16 61 It is the only example of a spiral minaret outside Iraq 26 Some early scholarly theories proposed that these helicoidal minarets were inspired by ancient Mesopotamian ziggurats but this view has been challenged or rejected by some later scholars including Richard Ettinghausen Oleg Grabar and Jonathan Bloom 62 63 nbsp Abu Dulaf Mosque approximately 15 kilometres 9 3 mi north of Samarra 64 commissioned by Al Mutawakkil in 859 nbsp Friday Mosque of Damghan 2nd half of 8th century or 9th century nbsp Mosque of Ibn Tulun 876 9 in Cairo is an example of Abbasid architecture built by the autonomous Abbasid governor Ahmad ibn Tulun 65 nbsp The Nine Dome Mosque in Balkh 9th century nbsp Stucco decoration near the mihrab of the Friday Mosque of Nain 10th century Other buildings Edit nbsp Qubbat al Sulaibiyya in Samarra the oldest surviving Islamic domed mausoleum c 862 Houses were often built in blocks 36 Most houses seem to have been two story The lower level was often sunken into the ground for coolness and had vaulted ceilings The upper level had a timber ceiling and a flat terraced roof that provided living space in summer nights Houses were built around courtyards and had featureless exteriors although they were often elaborately decorated inside 19 There are no traces of windcatchers which later became common Islamic architectural features Most of the houses had latrines and facilities for cold water bathing 36 The oldest surviving example of a domed tomb in Islamic architecture is the Qubbat al Sulaibiyya in Samarra present day Iraq dating from the mid 9th century c 862 66 67 It consists of an octagonal structure with a central square chamber covered by a dome According to Ernst Herzfielf who first documented the building in modern times it was the mausoleum of Caliph al Muntasir d 862 after which the caliphs al Mu tazz d 869 and al Muhtadi d 870 were also buried here 68 The construction of domed tombs became more common among both Shi as and Sunnis during the tenth century although early Sunni mausoleums were mostly built for political rulers whereas the Shi as built them especially over the tombs of the Prophet Muhammad s descendants 69 68 Another important example of the latter is the Samanid Mausoleum in Bukhara present day Uzbekistan built in the tenth century by the Samanids one of the dynasties that ruled under Abbasid suzerainty 69 In the early 10th century the Abbasids also built another grand mausoleum for their dynasty on the east bank of the Tigris River in Baghdad but it was later destroyed 68 Some late Abbasid monuments have been preserved in Baghdad including Mausoleum of Sitta Zubayda or Zumurrud Khatun built around 1152 or before 1202 the al Wastani or al Jafariya Gate built in 1221 and the Mustansiriya Madrasa built in 1228 1233 All have been significantly modified or restored in recent times 70 71 72 The Mausoleum of Sitta Zubayda a 73 probably built by Caliph al Nasir for his mother exemplifies an original type of mausoleum that was being built in Mesopotamia around this period a polygonal chamber is covered by a cone like muqarnas dome 70 73 The Mustansiriya Madrasa was the first documented madrasa that was built to teach all four Sunni madhhabs 10 It followed the four iwan plan common in contemporary Iranian architecture but it had an unusually elongated form possibly imposed by the narrow urban site The courtyard displays a sophisticated combination of vaulting and carved relief decoration It has two major iwans aligned with its long axis and a two triple iwan facades aligned with its short axis 70 71 The Abbasids also undertook public works that included construction of canals in Samarra and of cisterns in Tunisia and Palestine citation needed The Nilometer at Fustat near modern Cairo built in 861 has elaborate and ornate stonework and discharging arches 74 nbsp The Nilometer in Cairo built in 861 nbsp Abbasid period buildings being excavated at the Givati Parking Lot dig Jerusalem Palestine was neglected by the Abbasids and was mainly a society of peasant farmers 75 nbsp Zumurrud Khatun Mausoleum built around 1152 for Zumurrud Khatun Sitta Zubayda the mother of Caliph Al Nasir and wife of Caliph Al Mustadi nbsp Interior of the muqarnas dome of Zumurrud Khatun Mausoleum nbsp Mustansiriya Madrasa in Baghdad 1228 1233 nbsp The Talsam tower part of Baghdad s Abbasid fortificationsDecoration EditUnder the Abbasids in Iraq stucco decoration developed more abstract motifs as seen in the 9th century palaces of Samarra Three styles are distinguished by modern scholars style A consists of vegetal motifs including vine leaves derived from more traditional Byzantine and Levantine styles style B is a more abstract and stylized version of these motifs and style C also known as the beveled style is entirely abstract consisting of repeating symmetrical forms of curved lines ending in spirals 76 77 78 The Abbasid style became popular throughout the lands of the Abbasid Caliphate and is found as far as Afghanistan e g the Nine Dome Mosque in Balkh and Egypt e g Ibn Tulun Mosque 76 77 3 The three types Styles A B and C of stucco decoration best exemplified and perhaps developed in Abbasid Samarra were quickly imitated elsewhere and Style C which itself remained common in the Islamic world for centuries was an important precursor to fully developed arabesque decoration 79 failed verification The Tulunids in Egypt built copies of Abbasid buildings in Cairo 12 The Ibn Tulun Mosque built in Fustat near Cairo in 876 879 combines Umayyad and Abbasid structural and decorative features 80 nbsp Panel of carved stucco wall decoration from Samarra 9th century in Style A with more naturalistic motifs from the Iraq Museum nbsp Panel of carved stucco wall decoration from Samarra 9th century in Style A with vine leaf motif from the Museum of Islamic Art Berlin nbsp Panel of carved stucco wall decoration from Samarra 9th century in Style B from the Museum of Islamic Art Berlin nbsp Carved stucco panel from Samarra 9th century in Style B from the Iraq Museum nbsp Carved stucco panels from Samarra 9th century in Style C or beveled style showing flatter and more abstract motifs at the Museum of Islamic Art Berlin nbsp Abbasid Geometric arch decorations in the Ibn Tulun Mosque in Cairo 9th century See also EditAghlabid architectureNotes Edit The mausoleum is attached to the al Khaffafin Mosque which was originally founded by Zumurrud Khatun but was completely rebuilt much later under Ottoman rule References EditCitations Edit Hoag John D 2004 Islamic architecture Milan Electaarchitecture pp 7 9 ISBN 978 1 904313 29 8 Bloom amp Blair 2009 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Petersen 2002 p 1 a b c Ettinghausen 1987 pp 75 125 a b c d e f g h i Northedge 2012 a b Blair amp Bloom 2011 p 94 95 Bloom amp Blair 2009 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 Blair amp Bloom 2011 pp 95 96 102 a b Tabbaa 2017 p 307 a b Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 215 Blair amp Bloom 2011 p 95 a b c Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 78 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 a b c d e f g h Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 79 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 El Hibri 2021 pp 8 204 232 a b Petersen 2002 p 187 188 a b c d e Bloom amp Blair 2009 Minaret a b c d Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 82 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 a b Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 58 a b Bowen 1928 p 22 Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 59 Yalman Susan 2001 The Art of the Fatimid Period 909 1171 Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 2022 06 19 Ende amp Steinbach 2010 p 839 Bloom amp Blair 2009 pp 78 79 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 Bloom amp Blair 2009 pp 78 81 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 Tabbaa 2002 p 138 a b c d e f g Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 80 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 53 Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 54 a b Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 144 Raqqa Moaz Abd al Razzaq Tabbaa Yasser Takieddine Zina Daiber Verena Bakkour Dina Hafian Wa al Hasan Haytham Mayor Balazs Michaudel Benjamin 2015 The Ayyubid Era Art and Architecture in Medieval Syria in Spanish Museum With No Frontiers MWNF Museum Ohne Grenzen ISBN 978 3 902782 17 5 a b c d Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 55 56 Bloom amp Blair 2009 Samarra a b c d e Ruggles 2011 p 183 184 a b c Northedge Alastair 1993 An Interpretation of the Palace of the Caliph at Samarra Dar al Khilafa or Jawsaq al Khaqani Ars Orientalis 23 143 170 JSTOR 4629446 Tabbaa 2002 p 139 a b c Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 81 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 JPC Inc 1984 p 47 a b c d e f g h i Tabbaa 2017 p 316 319 a b c Michell 1978 p 247 Al Janabi 1982 p 68 71 Petersen 2002 p 30 Hillenbrand 1994 p 223 Blair amp Bloom 2011 p 116 Al Janabi 1982 p 68 72 Petersen 2002 p 32 Hoag 1987 pp 23 31 Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 105 110 Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 31 33 Blair amp Bloom 2011 p 113 Blair amp Bloom 2011 p 110 Blair amp Bloom 2011 pp 109 110 Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 83 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 Bloom 2013 Bloom 2013 p 72 79 Bloom 2013 p 79 Bloom 2013 p 73 75 a b Petersen 2002 p 187 190 Minaret of the Great Mosque of Kairouan Qantara Mediterranean Heritage Retrieved 2022 04 26 Bloom 2013 p 76 Petersen 2002 p 1 113 189 O Kane Bernard 2016 The Mosques of Egypt American University of Cairo Press p 9 ISBN 9789774167324 Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 30 Bloom amp Blair 2009 Minaret جامع ابو دلف Masajed Iraq Retrieved January 4 2018 Bloom amp Blair 2009 Architecture IV c 750 c 900 Petersen 2002 p 240 Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 342 Tomb a b c Blair amp Bloom 2011 p 108 a b Tabbaa Yasser 2017 Dome In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Three Brill ISBN 9789004161658 a b c Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 215 216 a b Bloom amp Blair 2009 Baghdad Tabbaa 2017 a b Tabbaa 2017 p 312 Ettinghausen Grabar amp Jenkins Madina 2001 p 55 Rast 1992 p 198 a b Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 193 198 Architecture X Decoration A Sculpture a b Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 235 238 Stucco and plasterwork Petersen 2002 p 267 268 Bloom amp Blair 2009 p 57 59 Kuban 1974 p 20 Sources Edit Al Janabi Tariq Jawad 1982 Studies In Mediaeval Iraqi Architecture Baghdad Republic of Iraq Iraq Ministry of Culture and Information State Organization of Antiquities and Heritage Blair Sheila Bloom Jonathan M 2011 Iraq Iran and Egypt The Abbasids In Hattstein Markus Delius Peter eds Islam Art and Architecture h f ullmann pp 90 123 ISBN 9783848003808 Bloom Jonathan M 2013 The minaret Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0748637256 OCLC 856037134 Bloom Jonathan M Blair Sheila 2009 The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art amp Architecture Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 530991 1 Retrieved 2013 03 15 Bowen Harold 1928 The Life and Times of ʿAli Ibn ʿIsa The Good Vizier Cambridge Cambridge University Press OCLC 386849 El Hibri Tayeb 2021 The Abbasid Caliphate A History Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 18324 7 Ende Werner Steinbach Udo 2010 04 15 Islam in the World Today A Handbook of Politics Religion Culture and Society Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 6489 8 Retrieved 2013 03 16 Ettinghausen Richard 1987 The Abbasid Tradition In The Art and Architecture of Islam 650 1250 New Haven Yale UP pp 75 125 Ettinghausen Richard Grabar Oleg Jenkins Madina Marilyn 2001 Islamic Art and Architecture 650 1250 Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08869 4 Retrieved 2013 03 16 Hillenbrand Robert 1994 Islamic Architecture Form function and meaning New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231101332 Hoag John 1987 Abbasid Architecture Islamic Architecture NY Rizzoli JPC Inc 1984 usafa Study on Conservation and Redevelopment of Historical Centre of Baghdad City Republic of Iraq Amanat al Assima Japan Kuban Dogan 1974 Muslim Religious Architecture BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 03813 4 Retrieved 2013 03 15 Michell George 1978 Architecture of the Islamic World Its History and Social Meaning London London Thanes amp Hudson Northedge Alastair E 2012 ʿAbbasid art and architecture In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Three Brill ISBN 9789004161658 Petersen Andrew 2002 1996 Dictionary of Islamic Architecture Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 20387 3 Retrieved 2013 03 15 Rast Walter E 1992 11 01 Through the Ages in Palestinian Archaeology An Introductory Handbook Continuum International Publishing Group p 198 ISBN 978 1 56338 055 6 Retrieved 2013 03 16 Ruggles D Fairchild 2011 Islamic Gardens and Landscapes University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812207286 Tabbaa Yasser 2002 The Transformation of Islamic Art During the Sunni Revival I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 85043 392 7 Retrieved 2013 03 15 Tabbaa Yasser 2017 The Resurgence of the Baghdad Caliphate In Flood Finbarr Barry Necipoglu Gulru eds A Companion to Islamic Art and Architecture Wiley Blackwell pp 307 326 ISBN 9781119068662 The Art of the Fatimid Period 909 1171 Metmuseum org Retrieved 11 March 2013 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abbasid architecture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abbasid architecture amp oldid 1155031325, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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