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Maqam (shrine)

A Maqām (Arabic: مقام) is a shrine built on the site associated with a religious figure or saint, typical to the regions of Palestine and Syria. It is usually a funeral construction, commonly cubic-shaped and topped with a dome.

Maqam al-Khidr in al-Bassa

Maqams are associated with Muslim traditions, but many of them are rooted in ancient Semitic, Jewish, Samaritan and Christian traditions.[1][2] During the 19th century, Claude Reignier Conder described maqams as an essential part of folk religion in Palestine, with locals attaching "more importance to the favour and protection of the village Mukam than to Allah himself, or to Mohammed his prophet".[3] The maqams of Palestine were considered highly significant to the field of biblical archaeology, as their names were used in the 18th and 19th centuries to identify much of biblical geography.[4]

Etymology

From Arabic literally "a place" or "station."[5] It is used to denote a "sanctuary", such as a commemorative burial shrine or an actual tomb.[5] Its meaning can be restricted only to built structures that can be entered at such sites.[5] The literal meaning of maqam is "the place where one stands."[5] Such name for a holy tomb is mostly used in Syria and Palestine.

The form Mukam appears in the essays of European travelers of the 19th century; as well as words Waly, Wely (Arabic: ويلي — tomb of a saint), Mazar (mausoleum), Mashhad.

In Maghreb similar tombs are known as Marabout, in Turkic-speaking Muslim countries as Türbe, Dürbe, Aziz and in Iranian-speaking countries — Dargah.

Purpose

Maqams were dedicated to Biblical and Quranic, real or mythical, male and female figures from ancient times to the time of the Arab conquest or even late Ottoman rule.[6] Ali Qleibo, a Palestinian anthropologist, states that this built evidence constitutes "an architectural testimony to Christian/Moslem Palestinian religious sensibility and its roots in ancient Semitic religions."[2] In 1877, the British explorer Claude Reignier Conder wrote that:

It is in worship at these shrines that the religion of the peasantry consists. Moslem by profession, they often spend their lives without entering a mosque, and attach more importance to the favour and protection of the village Мukam than to Allah himself, or to Mohammed his prophet.[7]

Almost every village in Palestine has a wali, a patron saint, whom people, predominantly rural peasants, would call upon for help at his or her associated sanctuary.[8] While wali can refer to both the saint and sanctuary, a sanctuary for a common saint is more precisely known as a maqam.[9]

Construction

The most popular type of maqams is a single chamber square building topped with a dome, in the middle of which there is a stone cenotaph,[10] though the bodies of the revered figures themselves were buried below the ground level. In the south wall of the maqam, there is usually a small mihrab facing Mecca, decorated with inscriptions and floral ornament. The entrance to the chamber is mostly at the north wall. In the other arched walls there are usually small windows. Candelabras and lamps are hanging in an active maqam, a cenotaph is covered by a quilt (usually a green one), praying rugs are spread on the floor in front of the mihrab.

There are also bigger maqams, consisting of two, three or four chambers:[11] prayer chamber, entrance hall, zawiya or a room for pilgrims to have a rest. Big maqams have two or three similar domes. In times of old, the dome was decorated by a metal spire with a crescent, but nowadays such decoration is rare.

The maqams are not always supposed to stand over the tombs of the saints to whom they are dedicated. A cenotaph is indeed almost always to be found there, but often they are regarded merely as "stations."

 
Maqam of Nabi Samit (Samson) in Sar'a, destroyed in the 1950s

The dome is often situated by an ancient carob or oak tree or a spring or rock cut water cistern.[2][12] A sacred tree was planted near maqams, mostly — a palm tree, oak or sycomore. There was also a well or spring. The positioning of maqams on or near these natural features is seen as indicative of ancient worship practices adapted by the local population and associated with religious figures.[13]

As a rule, maqams were built on the top of the hills or at the crossroads, and besides their main function — shrine and prayer place, they also served as a guard point and a guiding landmark for travelers and caravans. Over the years, new burial places appeared near maqams; it was considered as honour to be buried next to a saint. Big cemeteries formed around many Muslim sanctuaries.

History

Early origins

According to Claude Reignier Conder, many maqams are originated in Jewish and Christian traditions from before the advent of Islam in the region.[14] He identified seven types of maqams:[14]

  1. Biblical characters: "These are, no doubt, generally the oldest, and can often be traced back to Jewish tradition"
  2. Christian sites venerated by the Moslem peasantry: "not always distinguishable from the first class, but often traceable to the teaching of the monasteries or to monkish sites"
  3. Other native heroes or deities: "perhaps sometimes the most ancient sites of all"
  4. Later and known historic characters
  5. Saints named from the place where they occur, or having appellations connected with traditions concerning them
  6. Sacred sites not connected with personal names: "Some of these are of the greatest value"
  7. Ordinary Moslem names which may be of any date

Middle ages

In the seventh century, the Arab Rashiduns conquered the Levant; they were later succeeded by other Arabic-speaking Muslim dynasties, including the Umayyads, Abbasids and the Fatimids.[15] Early Islam disapproved worshipping of holy men and their burial places, considering it a sort of idolatry. However, the Shiites built sumptuous tombs for their deceased leaders — imams and sheikhs, and turned those tombs into religious objects. Very soon Sunnis followed their example. Arab travellers and geographers ‘Ali al-Harawi, Yaqut al-Hamawi and others described in their essays many Christian and Muslim shrines in Syria, Palestine and Egypt.

During the times of Mamluk dynasty, monumental tombs were built for Muslim holy men, scientists and theologists, some of these tombs have come down to present times. The major part of them is located in Egypt, and some parts are also in Syria and Palestine. These are namely the famous Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem (though the burial place of matriarch Rachel was worshipped even before), the splendid mausoleum of Abu Hurairah in Yavne[16] and the maqam of sheikh Abu ‘Atabi in Al-Manshiyya, Acre.

Ottoman period

In the Ottoman Empire times, maqams were constructed everywhere, and old sanctuaries were taken under restoration. New buildings were not as monumental and pompous as before, and looked quite unpretentious. In Turkish period, maqams had simple construction and almost no architectural décor.

 
Maqam in Northern Palestine (C. Wilson, 1881).

Mosques were uncommon in Palestinian villages until the late 19th century, but practically every village had at least one maqam which served as sites of worship in the Palestinian folk Islam popular in the countryside over the centuries.[8][12] Christians and Jews also held some of the maqams to be holy, such as that of Nabi Samwil.[9] In the period of Ottoman rule over Palestine, most of these sites were visited collectively by members of all three faiths who often travelled together with provisions for a multi-day journey; by the Mandate Palestine period, politicization led to segregation.[6] Some maqams, like Nabi Rubin and Nabi Musa among others, were also the focus of seasonal festivals (mawsims) that thousands would attend annually.

There is, however, in nearly every village, a small whitewashed building with a low dome — the "mukam," or "place," sacred to the eyes of the peasants. In almost every landscape such a landmark gleams from the top of some hill, just as, doubtless, something of the same kind did in the old Canaanite ages.[17]

Modern era

 
Maqam in Judea, 1940s

The period of Mandatory Palestine has become the last time of maqams' prosperity. Dilapidated Muslims shrines were restored and also new ones built. The British built over and donated to Bedouins the Maqam of sheikh Nuran, which was damaged during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign. This maqam was in the battle epicenter during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. After having captured it, Israeli soldiers turned it into a watch and firing point. Since that time the maqam of sheikh Nuran is a memorial of the Israel Defense Forces.

After the State of Israel was formed, numerous shrines were turned into Jewish religious shrines. It concerned the mausoleum of sheikh Abu Hurairah, it which has become the tomb of Rabban Gamaliel II in Yavne;[18] the Maqam with seven domes of Imam ‘Ali in Yazur has turned into a synagogue in Azor; the mazar of Sitt Sakina (Sukeyna) has become Rachel's tomb, the spouse of Rabbi Akiva in Tiberias; the Maqam of sheikh al-Gharbawi — the tomb of Mattathias; the muqam of Nabi Sheman near the Junction Eyal, was identified with the tomb of Simeon (son of Jacob).

In ancient times, all maqams with the domes were coloured in white.[19] Recently Palestinian and Israeli Arabs got used to colour the domes of their shrines in green (the colour of Islam). The battle for one or another shrine resulted in the war of colours, as it was called in press.[20] Religious Jewish paint the dome in blue or white and install Jewish symbols, and Muslims, when coming back, remove Jewish symbols and paint the dome in green.

Notable Maqams

No more than 300 maqams have survived out of 800 existing in Palestine in 1948, the remainder having been demolished. Half of them are in Israel-proper, the remainder in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, both of which have been under Israeli control for most of the period since 1948. According to another source, the number of Palestinian maqams left is 184, with only 70 remaining in Israel-proper.[21]

Picture Name Former Location Present Location Coordinates Current state
  ‘Abd an-Nabi Al-Mas'udiyya Tel Aviv 32°05′15″N 34°46′11″E / 32.08750°N 34.76972°E / 32.08750; 34.76972 Object no longer in use
  Hasan ar-Ra‘i Nabi Musa Nabi Musa 31°46′51″N 35°25′29″E / 31.78083°N 35.42472°E / 31.78083; 35.42472 Active shrine
  Maqam al-Khidr Al-Bassa Shlomi, Israel 33°04′41″N 35°08′36″E / 33.07806°N 35.14333°E / 33.07806; 35.14333 Destroyed
  Muadh ibn Jabal
(Sheikh Mu‘alla)
Imwas Canada Park 31°50′08″N 34°59′30″E / 31.83556°N 34.99167°E / 31.83556; 34.99167 Reconstructed
  Nabi ‘Anir Khirbat an-Nabi ‘Anir Gush Talmonim 31°57′20″N 35°06′27″E / 31.95556°N 35.10750°E / 31.95556; 35.10750 Object no longer in use
  Nabi Bulus Khirbat an-Nabi Bulus Beit Shemesh 31°42′51″N 34°58′51″E / 31.71417°N 34.98083°E / 31.71417; 34.98083 Destroyed
  Nabi Kifl Al-Tira, Ramle Tirat Yehuda 32°00′25″N 34°55′35″E / 32.00694°N 34.92639°E / 32.00694; 34.92639 Object no longer in use
  Nabi Shitt Bashshit Aseret 31°49′28″N 34°44′54″E / 31.82444°N 34.74833°E / 31.82444; 34.74833 Object no longer in use
  Sheikh ‘Abdallah Dura al-Qar' Beit El 31°56′57″N 35°13′55″E / 31.94917°N 35.23194°E / 31.94917; 35.23194 Located in area expropriated from Dura al-Qar' for Beit El
  Sheikh ‘Abdallah as-Sahili Balad al-Sheikh Nesher 32°46′18″N 35°02′33″E / 32.77167°N 35.04250°E / 32.77167; 35.04250 Object no longer in use
  Sheikh Abu ‘Atabi Al-Manshiyya, Acre Acre, Israel 32°56′15″N 35°05′30″E / 32.93750°N 35.09167°E / 32.93750; 35.09167 Dwelling house
  Sheikh Abu Ghazala Khirbat as-Sukriyya No'am 31°34′04″N 34°46′47″E / 31.56778°N 34.77972°E / 31.56778; 34.77972 Object no longer in use
  Sheikh Abu Shusha Ghuwayr Abu Shusha Migdal, Israel 32°51′13″N 35°30′26″E / 32.85361°N 35.50722°E / 32.85361; 35.50722 Object no longer in use
  Sheikh Abu az-Zeitun Beitunia Beit Horon 31°53′15″N 35°08′04″E / 31.88750°N 35.13444°E / 31.88750; 35.13444 Object no longer in use
  Sheikh Ahmad al-Hubani Allar, Jerusalem Bar Giora 31°43′31″N 35°04′49″E / 31.72528°N 35.08028°E / 31.72528; 35.08028 Object no longer in use
  Sheikh ‘Ali ad-Dawayimi Al-Dawayima Amatzia, Israel 31°32′09″N 34°53′13″E / 31.53583°N 34.88694°E / 31.53583; 34.88694 Founded in the time of the Abbasids
  Sheikh ‘Amir Jaba', Haifa Subdistrict Mizpe Ofer 32°39′17″N 34°57′46″E / 32.65472°N 34.96278°E / 32.65472; 34.96278 Reconstructed
  Sheikh ‘Awad Hamama Ashkelon 31°41′15″N 34°33′47″E / 31.68750°N 34.56306°E / 31.68750; 34.56306 Founded in the time of the Ottoman Empire
  Sheikh Baraz ad-Din
(Sheikh as-Sadiq)
Majdal Yaba Migdal Afek 32°05′01″N 34°57′28″E / 32.08361°N 34.95778°E / 32.08361; 34.95778 Reconstructed
  Sheikh Bilal Azmut Elon Moreh 32°14′32″N 35°19′40″E / 32.24222°N 35.32778°E / 32.24222; 35.32778 Object no longer in use
  Sheikh Bureik (‘Abreik) Sheikh Bureik Kiryat Tiv'on 32°42′03″N 35°07′43″E / 32.70083°N 35.12861°E / 32.70083; 35.12861 Active shrine
  Sheikh Ghanim Kafr Qallil Mount Gerizim 32°12′05″N 35°16′26″E / 32.20139°N 35.27389°E / 32.20139; 35.27389 Reconstructed
  Sheikh al-Katanani Yazur Holon 32°01′16″N 34°48′17″E / 32.02111°N 34.80472°E / 32.02111; 34.80472 Reconstructed
  Sheikh Marzuk ‘Ulleika, Jaulan Golan Heights 33°03′01″N 35°42′01″E / 33.05028°N 35.70028°E / 33.05028; 35.70028 Object no longer in use
  Sheikh al-Qatrawani 'Atara 'Atara 31°59′36″N 35°11′52″E / 31.99333°N 35.19778°E / 31.99333; 35.19778 Founded in the time of the Mamluk dynasty
  Sheikh as-Salihi Bayt Nattif Givat HaTurmusim, Sokho 31°40′58″N 34°57′59″E / 31.68278°N 34.96639°E / 31.68278; 34.96639 Object no longer in use
  Sheikh ‘Usheish Dayr Nakhkhas Maresha Forest 31°36′39″N 34°56′00″E / 31.61083°N 34.93333°E / 31.61083; 34.93333 Active shrine

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ R. Conder, Claude (1877). "The Moslem Mukams". Palestine Exploration Quarterly. 9 (2): 89–91. doi:10.1179/peq.1877.9.2.89. ISSN 0031-0328. In their religious observances and sanctuaries we find, as in their language, the true history of the country. On a basis of polytheistic faith which most probably dates back to pre-Israelite times, we find a growth of the most heterogeneous description: Christian tradition, Moslem history and foreign worship are mingled so as often to be entirely indistinguishable, and the so-called Moslem is found worshipping at shrines consecrated to Jewish, Samaritan, Christian, and often Pagan memories. It is in worship at these shrines that the religion of the peasantry consists. Moslem by profession, they often spend their lives without entering a mosque, and attach more importance to the favour and protection of the village Mukam than to Allah, or to prophet Mohammed... The reverence shown for these sacred spots is unbounded. Every fallen stone from the building, every withered branch of the tree, is carefully preserved.
  2. ^ a b c Dr. Ali Qleibo (28 July 2007). . This Week in Palestine. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-17.
  3. ^ Conder, 1877, pp. 89-90: "In their religious observances and sanctuaries we find, as in their language, the true history of the country. On a basis of polytheistic faith which most probably dates back to pre-Israelite times, we find a growth of the most heterogeneous description: Christian tradition, Moslem history and foreign worship are mingled so as often to be entirely indistinguishable, and the so-called Moslem is found worshipping at shrines consecrated to Jewish, Samaritan, Christian, and often Pagan memories. It is in worship at these shrines that the religion of the peasantry consists. Moslem by profession, they often spend their lives without entering a mosque, and attach more importance to the favour and protection of the village Mukam than to Allah himself, or to Mohammed his prophet... The reverence shown for these sacred spots is unbounded. Every fallen stone from the building, every withered branch of the tree, is carefully preserved. "
  4. ^ Conder, 1877, p. 89: "...the local sanctuaries scattered over the country, a study which is also of no little importance in relation to the ancient topography of Palestine, as is shown by the various sites which have been recovered by means of the tradition of sacred tombs preserved after the name of the site itself had been lost."
  5. ^ a b c d Prochazka 2010, p. 112
  6. ^ a b Pappe 2006, p. 78
  7. ^ Conder, 1877, p. 89
  8. ^ a b Hourani 1993, pp. 470–471
  9. ^ a b Sharon 1999, p. 142
  10. ^ McCown, 1921, p. 50
  11. ^ Canaan, 1927, p. 47: "The more important the holy man, the greater the complexity of the building. Prophets (anbiā) enjoy the largest maqams."
  12. ^ a b Kark 2001, p. 260
  13. ^ "Levant". 1996.
  14. ^ a b Conder, 1877, p. 91
  15. ^ Gil, Moshe (1997). A History of Palestine, 634-1099. Ethel Briodo. Cambridge. ISBN 0-521-59984-9. OCLC 59601193.
  16. ^ Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau describes this monument as follows: "At Yebna we pitched our tent near the wely of Abu Horeira. Inside this we noticed numerous fragments of marble, several stones with the medieval tool-marking, and two marble columns surmounted by their capitals. The outside of the building is rather a picturesque sight, with its lewain of three arches, its cupolas and its courtyard planted with fine trees." —Clermont-Ganneau, 1896, Vol. II. pp. 167–168
  17. ^ Geikie, 1888, vol. I, p. 578
  18. ^ Breger, M. J., Reiter, Y. and Hammer, L. (2010) Holy Places in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: Confrontation and Co-existence. London and N.–Y., 2010. pp. 79–80.
  19. ^ Conder, 1877, p. 90: "The white dome of the Mukam is the most conspicuous object in a Syrian village."
  20. ^
  21. ^ Frantzman, S. J. and Bar, D. (2013) Mapping Muslim Sacred Tombs in Palestine During the Mandate Period // "Levant", 2013, Vol. 45, No 1. P. 109–110.

Sources

  • Benveniśtî, M. (2000). Sacred landscape: the buried history of the Holy Land since 1948 (Illustrated ed.). University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-21154-5.
  • Canaan, T. (1927). Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine. London: Luzac & Co.
  • Clermont-Ganneau, C.S. (1896). [ARP] Archaeological Researches in Palestine 1873-1874, translated from the French by J. McFarlane. Vol. 2. London: Palestine Exploration Fund.
  • Conder, C.R. (1877). "The Moslem Mukams". Quarterly Statement - Palestine Exploration Fund. 9 (3): 89–103. doi:10.1179/peq.1877.9.3.89.
  • Frantzman, S.J. and Bar, D. (2013) Mapping Muslim Sacred Tombs in Palestine During the Mandate Period. // "Levant", 2013, Vol. 45, No 1. P. 96–111.
  • Geikie, J.C. (1888). The Holy Land and the Bible. A Book of scripture illustrations gathered in Palestine. Vol. I. New York.
  • Hourani, A.; Khoury, P.S.; Wilson, Mary Christina (1993). The Modern Middle East: a reader. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520082403.
  • Kark, R.; Oren-Nordheim, Michal (2001). Jerusalem and its environs: quarters, neighborhoods, villages, 1800-1948 (Illustrated ed.). Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-2909-2.
  • Khalidi, W. (1992). All That Remains:The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948. Washington D.C.: Institute for Palestine Studies. ISBN 0-88728-224-5.
  • McCown, C.C. (1921). "Muslim Shrines in Palestine". Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 2–3: 47–79.
  • Pappé, I. (2006-07-31). A history of modern Palestine: one land, two peoples (2, illustrated, revised ed.). Cambridge University Press, 2006. ISBN 9780521683159.
  • Petersen, Andrew (2001). A Gazetteer of Buildings in Muslim Palestine (British Academy Monographs in Archaeology). Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-727011-0.
  • Procházka-Eisl, Gisela; Procházka, Stephan (2010). The Plain of Saints and Prophets: The Nusayri-Alawi Community of Cilicia (Southern Turkey) and Its Sacred Places. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 9783447061780.
  • Sharon, M. (1999). Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum Palaestinae, B-C. Vol. 2. BRILL. ISBN 90-04-11083-6.

External links

  • Interactive map of Palestinian maqams
  • Muslim shrines in Israel. Guide

maqam, shrine, this, article, about, religious, shrines, levant, other, uses, maqam, maqām, arabic, مقام, shrine, built, site, associated, with, religious, figure, saint, typical, regions, palestine, syria, usually, funeral, construction, commonly, cubic, shap. This article is about religious shrines in the Levant For other uses see Maqam A Maqam Arabic مقام is a shrine built on the site associated with a religious figure or saint typical to the regions of Palestine and Syria It is usually a funeral construction commonly cubic shaped and topped with a dome Maqam al Khidr in al Bassa Maqams are associated with Muslim traditions but many of them are rooted in ancient Semitic Jewish Samaritan and Christian traditions 1 2 During the 19th century Claude Reignier Conder described maqams as an essential part of folk religion in Palestine with locals attaching more importance to the favour and protection of the village Mukam than to Allah himself or to Mohammed his prophet 3 The maqams of Palestine were considered highly significant to the field of biblical archaeology as their names were used in the 18th and 19th centuries to identify much of biblical geography 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Purpose 3 Construction 4 History 4 1 Early origins 4 2 Middle ages 4 3 Ottoman period 4 4 Modern era 5 Notable Maqams 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 External linksEtymology EditFrom Arabic literally a place or station 5 It is used to denote a sanctuary such as a commemorative burial shrine or an actual tomb 5 Its meaning can be restricted only to built structures that can be entered at such sites 5 The literal meaning of maqam is the place where one stands 5 Such name for a holy tomb is mostly used in Syria and Palestine The form Mukam appears in the essays of European travelers of the 19th century as well as words Waly Wely Arabic ويلي tomb of a saint Mazar mausoleum Mashhad In Maghreb similar tombs are known as Marabout in Turkic speaking Muslim countries as Turbe Durbe Aziz and in Iranian speaking countries Dargah Purpose EditMaqams were dedicated to Biblical and Quranic real or mythical male and female figures from ancient times to the time of the Arab conquest or even late Ottoman rule 6 Ali Qleibo a Palestinian anthropologist states that this built evidence constitutes an architectural testimony to Christian Moslem Palestinian religious sensibility and its roots in ancient Semitic religions 2 In 1877 the British explorer Claude Reignier Conder wrote that It is in worship at these shrines that the religion of the peasantry consists Moslem by profession they often spend their lives without entering a mosque and attach more importance to the favour and protection of the village Mukam than to Allah himself or to Mohammed his prophet 7 Almost every village in Palestine has a wali a patron saint whom people predominantly rural peasants would call upon for help at his or her associated sanctuary 8 While wali can refer to both the saint and sanctuary a sanctuary for a common saint is more precisely known as a maqam 9 Construction EditThe most popular type of maqams is a single chamber square building topped with a dome in the middle of which there is a stone cenotaph 10 though the bodies of the revered figures themselves were buried below the ground level In the south wall of the maqam there is usually a small mihrab facing Mecca decorated with inscriptions and floral ornament The entrance to the chamber is mostly at the north wall In the other arched walls there are usually small windows Candelabras and lamps are hanging in an active maqam a cenotaph is covered by a quilt usually a green one praying rugs are spread on the floor in front of the mihrab There are also bigger maqams consisting of two three or four chambers 11 prayer chamber entrance hall zawiya or a room for pilgrims to have a rest Big maqams have two or three similar domes In times of old the dome was decorated by a metal spire with a crescent but nowadays such decoration is rare The maqams are not always supposed to stand over the tombs of the saints to whom they are dedicated A cenotaph is indeed almost always to be found there but often they are regarded merely as stations Maqam of Nabi Samit Samson in Sar a destroyed in the 1950sThe dome is often situated by an ancient carob or oak tree or a spring or rock cut water cistern 2 12 A sacred tree was planted near maqams mostly a palm tree oak or sycomore There was also a well or spring The positioning of maqams on or near these natural features is seen as indicative of ancient worship practices adapted by the local population and associated with religious figures 13 As a rule maqams were built on the top of the hills or at the crossroads and besides their main function shrine and prayer place they also served as a guard point and a guiding landmark for travelers and caravans Over the years new burial places appeared near maqams it was considered as honour to be buried next to a saint Big cemeteries formed around many Muslim sanctuaries History EditEarly origins Edit See also List of burial places of Abrahamic figures According to Claude Reignier Conder many maqams are originated in Jewish and Christian traditions from before the advent of Islam in the region 14 He identified seven types of maqams 14 Biblical characters These are no doubt generally the oldest and can often be traced back to Jewish tradition Christian sites venerated by the Moslem peasantry not always distinguishable from the first class but often traceable to the teaching of the monasteries or to monkish sites Other native heroes or deities perhaps sometimes the most ancient sites of all Later and known historic characters Saints named from the place where they occur or having appellations connected with traditions concerning them Sacred sites not connected with personal names Some of these are of the greatest value Ordinary Moslem names which may be of any dateMiddle ages Edit See also Ziyarat In the seventh century the Arab Rashiduns conquered the Levant they were later succeeded by other Arabic speaking Muslim dynasties including the Umayyads Abbasids and the Fatimids 15 Early Islam disapproved worshipping of holy men and their burial places considering it a sort of idolatry However the Shiites built sumptuous tombs for their deceased leaders imams and sheikhs and turned those tombs into religious objects Very soon Sunnis followed their example Arab travellers and geographers Ali al Harawi Yaqut al Hamawi and others described in their essays many Christian and Muslim shrines in Syria Palestine and Egypt During the times of Mamluk dynasty monumental tombs were built for Muslim holy men scientists and theologists some of these tombs have come down to present times The major part of them is located in Egypt and some parts are also in Syria and Palestine These are namely the famous Rachel s Tomb in Bethlehem though the burial place of matriarch Rachel was worshipped even before the splendid mausoleum of Abu Hurairah in Yavne 16 and the maqam of sheikh Abu Atabi in Al Manshiyya Acre Ottoman period Edit In the Ottoman Empire times maqams were constructed everywhere and old sanctuaries were taken under restoration New buildings were not as monumental and pompous as before and looked quite unpretentious In Turkish period maqams had simple construction and almost no architectural decor Maqam in Northern Palestine C Wilson 1881 Mosques were uncommon in Palestinian villages until the late 19th century but practically every village had at least one maqam which served as sites of worship in the Palestinian folk Islam popular in the countryside over the centuries 8 12 Christians and Jews also held some of the maqams to be holy such as that of Nabi Samwil 9 In the period of Ottoman rule over Palestine most of these sites were visited collectively by members of all three faiths who often travelled together with provisions for a multi day journey by the Mandate Palestine period politicization led to segregation 6 Some maqams like Nabi Rubin and Nabi Musa among others were also the focus of seasonal festivals mawsims that thousands would attend annually There is however in nearly every village a small whitewashed building with a low dome the mukam or place sacred to the eyes of the peasants In almost every landscape such a landmark gleams from the top of some hill just as doubtless something of the same kind did in the old Canaanite ages 17 Modern era Edit Maqam in Judea 1940sThe period of Mandatory Palestine has become the last time of maqams prosperity Dilapidated Muslims shrines were restored and also new ones built The British built over and donated to Bedouins the Maqam of sheikh Nuran which was damaged during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign This maqam was in the battle epicenter during the 1948 Arab Israeli War After having captured it Israeli soldiers turned it into a watch and firing point Since that time the maqam of sheikh Nuran is a memorial of the Israel Defense Forces After the State of Israel was formed numerous shrines were turned into Jewish religious shrines It concerned the mausoleum of sheikh Abu Hurairah it which has become the tomb of Rabban Gamaliel II in Yavne 18 the Maqam with seven domes of Imam Ali in Yazur has turned into a synagogue in Azor the mazar of Sitt Sakina Sukeyna has become Rachel s tomb the spouse of Rabbi Akiva in Tiberias the Maqam of sheikh al Gharbawi the tomb of Mattathias the muqam of Nabi Sheman near the Junction Eyal was identified with the tomb of Simeon son of Jacob In ancient times all maqams with the domes were coloured in white 19 Recently Palestinian and Israeli Arabs got used to colour the domes of their shrines in green the colour of Islam The battle for one or another shrine resulted in the war of colours as it was called in press 20 Religious Jewish paint the dome in blue or white and install Jewish symbols and Muslims when coming back remove Jewish symbols and paint the dome in green Notable Maqams EditSee also Tomb of Benjamin Sar a Sheikh Bureik Sheikh Abreik shrine Kaukab Abu al Hija Shrine of Abu al Hija Ed Dahi History Atara Sanctuary of Sheikh al Qatrawani Ar ara Maqam Shaykh Khalaf and Sharafat East Jerusalem Mamluk era No more than 300 maqams have survived out of 800 existing in Palestine in 1948 the remainder having been demolished Half of them are in Israel proper the remainder in the West Bank and Gaza Strip both of which have been under Israeli control for most of the period since 1948 According to another source the number of Palestinian maqams left is 184 with only 70 remaining in Israel proper 21 Picture Name Former Location Present Location Coordinates Current state Abd an Nabi Al Mas udiyya Tel Aviv 32 05 15 N 34 46 11 E 32 08750 N 34 76972 E 32 08750 34 76972 Object no longer in use Hasan ar Ra i Nabi Musa Nabi Musa 31 46 51 N 35 25 29 E 31 78083 N 35 42472 E 31 78083 35 42472 Active shrine Maqam al Khidr Al Bassa Shlomi Israel 33 04 41 N 35 08 36 E 33 07806 N 35 14333 E 33 07806 35 14333 Destroyed Muadh ibn Jabal Sheikh Mu alla Imwas Canada Park 31 50 08 N 34 59 30 E 31 83556 N 34 99167 E 31 83556 34 99167 Reconstructed Nabi Anir Khirbat an Nabi Anir Gush Talmonim 31 57 20 N 35 06 27 E 31 95556 N 35 10750 E 31 95556 35 10750 Object no longer in use Nabi Bulus Khirbat an Nabi Bulus Beit Shemesh 31 42 51 N 34 58 51 E 31 71417 N 34 98083 E 31 71417 34 98083 Destroyed Nabi Kifl Al Tira Ramle Tirat Yehuda 32 00 25 N 34 55 35 E 32 00694 N 34 92639 E 32 00694 34 92639 Object no longer in use Nabi Shitt Bashshit Aseret 31 49 28 N 34 44 54 E 31 82444 N 34 74833 E 31 82444 34 74833 Object no longer in use Sheikh Abdallah Dura al Qar Beit El 31 56 57 N 35 13 55 E 31 94917 N 35 23194 E 31 94917 35 23194 Located in area expropriated from Dura al Qar for Beit El Sheikh Abdallah as Sahili Balad al Sheikh Nesher 32 46 18 N 35 02 33 E 32 77167 N 35 04250 E 32 77167 35 04250 Object no longer in use Sheikh Abu Atabi Al Manshiyya Acre Acre Israel 32 56 15 N 35 05 30 E 32 93750 N 35 09167 E 32 93750 35 09167 Dwelling house Sheikh Abu Ghazala Khirbat as Sukriyya No am 31 34 04 N 34 46 47 E 31 56778 N 34 77972 E 31 56778 34 77972 Object no longer in use Sheikh Abu Shusha Ghuwayr Abu Shusha Migdal Israel 32 51 13 N 35 30 26 E 32 85361 N 35 50722 E 32 85361 35 50722 Object no longer in use Sheikh Abu az Zeitun Beitunia Beit Horon 31 53 15 N 35 08 04 E 31 88750 N 35 13444 E 31 88750 35 13444 Object no longer in use Sheikh Ahmad al Hubani Allar Jerusalem Bar Giora 31 43 31 N 35 04 49 E 31 72528 N 35 08028 E 31 72528 35 08028 Object no longer in use Sheikh Ali ad Dawayimi Al Dawayima Amatzia Israel 31 32 09 N 34 53 13 E 31 53583 N 34 88694 E 31 53583 34 88694 Founded in the time of the Abbasids Sheikh Amir Jaba Haifa Subdistrict Mizpe Ofer 32 39 17 N 34 57 46 E 32 65472 N 34 96278 E 32 65472 34 96278 Reconstructed Sheikh Awad Hamama Ashkelon 31 41 15 N 34 33 47 E 31 68750 N 34 56306 E 31 68750 34 56306 Founded in the time of the Ottoman Empire Sheikh Baraz ad Din Sheikh as Sadiq Majdal Yaba Migdal Afek 32 05 01 N 34 57 28 E 32 08361 N 34 95778 E 32 08361 34 95778 Reconstructed Sheikh Bilal Azmut Elon Moreh 32 14 32 N 35 19 40 E 32 24222 N 35 32778 E 32 24222 35 32778 Object no longer in use Sheikh Bureik Abreik Sheikh Bureik Kiryat Tiv on 32 42 03 N 35 07 43 E 32 70083 N 35 12861 E 32 70083 35 12861 Active shrine Sheikh Ghanim Kafr Qallil Mount Gerizim 32 12 05 N 35 16 26 E 32 20139 N 35 27389 E 32 20139 35 27389 Reconstructed Sheikh al Katanani Yazur Holon 32 01 16 N 34 48 17 E 32 02111 N 34 80472 E 32 02111 34 80472 Reconstructed Sheikh Marzuk Ulleika Jaulan Golan Heights 33 03 01 N 35 42 01 E 33 05028 N 35 70028 E 33 05028 35 70028 Object no longer in use Sheikh al Qatrawani Atara Atara 31 59 36 N 35 11 52 E 31 99333 N 35 19778 E 31 99333 35 19778 Founded in the time of the Mamluk dynasty Sheikh as Salihi Bayt Nattif Givat HaTurmusim Sokho 31 40 58 N 34 57 59 E 31 68278 N 34 96639 E 31 68278 34 96639 Object no longer in use Sheikh Usheish Dayr Nakhkhas Maresha Forest 31 36 39 N 34 56 00 E 31 61083 N 34 93333 E 31 61083 34 93333 Active shrineSee also EditDargah Datuk Keramat Imamzadeh Khanqah Maqbara Mazar Marabout Na Tuk Kong Qubba Sidna Ali Mosque and shrine WaliReferences EditCitations Edit R Conder Claude 1877 The Moslem Mukams Palestine Exploration Quarterly 9 2 89 91 doi 10 1179 peq 1877 9 2 89 ISSN 0031 0328 In their religious observances and sanctuaries we find as in their language the true history of the country On a basis of polytheistic faith which most probably dates back to pre Israelite times we find a growth of the most heterogeneous description Christian tradition Moslem history and foreign worship are mingled so as often to be entirely indistinguishable and the so called Moslem is found worshipping at shrines consecrated to Jewish Samaritan Christian and often Pagan memories It is in worship at these shrines that the religion of the peasantry consists Moslem by profession they often spend their lives without entering a mosque and attach more importance to the favour and protection of the village Mukam than to Allah or to prophet Mohammed The reverence shown for these sacred spots is unbounded Every fallen stone from the building every withered branch of the tree is carefully preserved a b c Dr Ali Qleibo 28 July 2007 Palestinian Cave Dwellers and Holy Shrines The Passing of Traditional Society This Week in Palestine Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 2007 08 17 Conder 1877 pp 89 90 In their religious observances and sanctuaries we find as in their language the true history of the country On a basis of polytheistic faith which most probably dates back to pre Israelite times we find a growth of the most heterogeneous description Christian tradition Moslem history and foreign worship are mingled so as often to be entirely indistinguishable and the so called Moslem is found worshipping at shrines consecrated to Jewish Samaritan Christian and often Pagan memories It is in worship at these shrines that the religion of the peasantry consists Moslem by profession they often spend their lives without entering a mosque and attach more importance to the favour and protection of the village Mukam than to Allah himself or to Mohammed his prophet The reverence shown for these sacred spots is unbounded Every fallen stone from the building every withered branch of the tree is carefully preserved Conder 1877 p 89 the local sanctuaries scattered over the country a study which is also of no little importance in relation to the ancient topography of Palestine as is shown by the various sites which have been recovered by means of the tradition of sacred tombs preserved after the name of the site itself had been lost a b c d Prochazka 2010 p 112harvnb error no target CITEREFProchazka2010 help a b Pappe 2006 p 78harvnb error no target CITEREFPappe2006 help Conder 1877 p 89 a b Hourani 1993 pp 470 471harvnb error no target CITEREFHourani1993 help a b Sharon 1999 p 142 McCown 1921 p 50 Canaan 1927 p 47 The more important the holy man the greater the complexity of the building Prophets anbia enjoy the largest maqams a b Kark 2001 p 260harvnb error no target CITEREFKark2001 help Levant 1996 a b Conder 1877 p 91 Gil Moshe 1997 A History of Palestine 634 1099 Ethel Briodo Cambridge ISBN 0 521 59984 9 OCLC 59601193 Charles Simon Clermont Ganneau describes this monument as follows At Yebna we pitched our tent near the wely of Abu Horeira Inside this we noticed numerous fragments of marble several stones with the medieval tool marking and two marble columns surmounted by their capitals The outside of the building is rather a picturesque sight with its lewain of three arches its cupolas and its courtyard planted with fine trees Clermont Ganneau 1896 Vol II pp 167 168 Geikie 1888 vol I p 578 Breger M J Reiter Y and Hammer L 2010 Holy Places in the Israeli Palestinian Conflict Confrontation and Co existence London and N Y 2010 pp 79 80 Conder 1877 p 90 The white dome of the Mukam is the most conspicuous object in a Syrian village The War of colors on the shrine of Sheikh Simeon in arabic Frantzman S J and Bar D 2013 Mapping Muslim Sacred Tombs in Palestine During the Mandate Period Levant 2013 Vol 45 No 1 P 109 110 Sources Edit Benvenisti M 2000 Sacred landscape the buried history of the Holy Land since 1948 Illustrated ed University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21154 5 Canaan T 1927 Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine London Luzac amp Co Clermont Ganneau C S 1896 ARP Archaeological Researches in Palestine 1873 1874 translated from the French by J McFarlane Vol 2 London Palestine Exploration Fund Conder C R 1877 The Moslem Mukams Quarterly Statement Palestine Exploration Fund 9 3 89 103 doi 10 1179 peq 1877 9 3 89 Frantzman S J and Bar D 2013 Mapping Muslim Sacred Tombs in Palestine During the Mandate Period Levant 2013 Vol 45 No 1 P 96 111 Geikie J C 1888 The Holy Land and the Bible A Book of scripture illustrations gathered in Palestine Vol I New York Hourani A Khoury P S Wilson Mary Christina 1993 The Modern Middle East a reader University of California Press ISBN 9780520082403 Kark R Oren Nordheim Michal 2001 Jerusalem and its environs quarters neighborhoods villages 1800 1948 Illustrated ed Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0 8143 2909 2 Khalidi W 1992 All That Remains The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948 Washington D C Institute for Palestine Studies ISBN 0 88728 224 5 McCown C C 1921 Muslim Shrines in Palestine Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research 2 3 47 79 Pappe I 2006 07 31 A history of modern Palestine one land two peoples 2 illustrated revised ed Cambridge University Press 2006 ISBN 9780521683159 Petersen Andrew 2001 A Gazetteer of Buildings in Muslim Palestine British Academy Monographs in Archaeology Vol 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 727011 0 Prochazka Eisl Gisela Prochazka Stephan 2010 The Plain of Saints and Prophets The Nusayri Alawi Community of Cilicia Southern Turkey and Its Sacred Places Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 9783447061780 Sharon M 1999 Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum Palaestinae B C Vol 2 BRILL ISBN 90 04 11083 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Palestinian maqams Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jordanian maqams Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tombs of Muslim saints in Egypt Interactive map of Palestinian maqams Muslim shrines in Israel Guide Portals Religion Islam Education Psychology Art Architecture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maqam shrine amp oldid 1131153998, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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