the islamic world
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THE ISLAMIC
WORLD
GARDNER CHAPTER 13-1
PP. 341-349
THE ISLAMIC WORLD BACKGROUND
Religion of Islam arose among the peoples
of the Arabian Peninsula in the 7th century
ISLAM = Arabic word meaning “submission to
God”
Arabs were desert nomads and caravan
merchants -> on the margins of the
Byzantine and Persian empires
In a little over one century Islam and the
Arabs conquer the Middle East, Egypt,
Persia, N. Africa, and moved into Spain -> in
732 Charles Martell stops the Muslim
advance in France
Sophisticated culture is established w/Arab
scholars making great contributions in math,
astronomy, medicine, and the natural
sciences
EARLY ISLAMIC ART
Like Islam itself, Islamic art spread rapidly
eastward and westward from the lands of
the ancient Near East
In the Middle East and N. Africa Islamic
art replace Late Antique art
From the Iberian Peninsula Islamic art will
influence Western medieval art
South Asia will also be center of Islamic
art
in the early centuries of Islamic history the
political and cultural center of the Muslim
world is the Fertile Crescent
ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE – THE DOME
OF THE ROCK
Aerial view of the Dome of the Rock,
Jerusalem, 687-692
The first great Islamic is the Dome of the
Rock in Jerusalem
A domed octagon resembling San Vitale
in Ravenna -> double-shelled wooden
dome sixty feet across & seventy-five feet
high dominates the elevation as to
reduce the octagon to function merely
as its base
Tiling now replaces the original mosaic on
exterior ->vivid, colorful patterning that
wraps the walls like a textile is typical of
Islamic ornamentation.
The interior’s rich mosaic ornament has
been preserved and provides insight into
how the exterior was once decorated.
Sacred rock where Adam was buried, Abraham nearly
sacrificed Isaac, Temple of Jerusalem was located, and
Muhammad ascended to heaven
MUHAMMAD AND ISLAM
MUHAMMAD = founder of Islam
Born in the city of Mecca -> received revelations from
God/Allah in 610
Muhammad is forced to flee Mecca and escape to
Medina in 622 = “the Hijra”
Eight years later Muhammad conquers and converts
Mecca -> the symbolic center of the Islamic world is
Mecca -> the Kaaba/the cube
Essential meaning of Islam is acceptance and submission
to Allah’s will
THE KORAN = Islam’s sacred book
THE FIVE PILLARS OF WISDOM
1. faith in one God, Allah
2. pray 5 times a day facing Mecca
3. give alms to the poor
4. fast during the month of Ramadan
5. once in a lifetime make pilgrimage to Mecca
GREAT MOSQUE, DAMASCUS
Aerial view of the Great Mosque, Damascus, Syria, 706715
The UMMAYADS (r. 661-750) were the first Islamic dynasty
and ruled from their capital in Damascus
CALIPH = “successors” -> title of the Muslim rulers
Great Mosque owes much to Roman and Early Christian
architecture -> builders incorporate stone blocks,
columns and capitals from earlier structures
Pier arcades like Roman aqueducts frame the courtyard
Minarets -> two at southern corners and one at the
northern side
Grand prayer hall -> taller than the rest of structure ->
façade with pediment and arches -> façade faces
courtyard like a Roman forum temple
Figure 13-4 Detail
of a mosaic in the
courtyard arcade
of the Great
Mosque,
Damascus, Syria,
706–715.
Islamic mosaics
avoid any
zoomorphic forms =
no people or
animals
THE MOSQUE
Muslim religious architecture is
closely related to Muslim prayer,
an obligation laid down in the
Quran for all Muslims
Prayer as a private act requires
neither prescribed ceremony nor a
special locale. But prayer is also a
communal act and the mosque
developed with that in mind.
All mosques, wherever they are
built and whatever their plan, are
oriented/facing towards Mecca
and the faithful worship facing the
qibla wall thus facing Meccas
The QIBLA the direction (towards Mecca)
Muslims face while praying -- is important.
The IMAM, or leader of a collective worship,
stands on a stepped pulpit known as a MINBAR
near the qibla wall which faces Mecca
Another key feature is the MIHRAB , a
semicircular niche usually set into the qibla wall,
often with a dome over the bay in front of it.
In some mosques, the mihrab is preceded by a
screened area called the maqsura, an area
reserved for the ruler or his representative.
The MINARET where the muezzin sends the call
to prayer out to worshippers, is perhaps the most
recognizable feature of Islamic architecture.
The essential features of a mosque might be
modeled after the Prophet’s house in Medina
UMAYYAD PALACE, MSHATTA
Frieze of the Umayyad palace,
Mshatta, Jordan, ca. 740-750,
limestone, 16 ½ feet tall
Long stone frieze richly carved
w/geometric, plant and animal
motifs -> but, no animals appear
on the exterior wall of the palace’s
mosque
Figure 13-5 Plan of the
Umayyad palace,
Mshatta, Jordan, ca.
740–750
[Key: 1. Entrance gate; 2.
Mosque; 3. Small
courtyard; 4. Large
courtyard; 5. Audience
hall.]
The fortified palace at
Mshatta resembled
Diocletian’s palace at
Split and incorporated
the amenities of Roman
baths but also housed a
mosque in which the
caliph could worship five
times daily
BAGHDAD
In 750 ABBASIDS overthrew the
Umayyad caliphs -> capital is
moved from Damascus to
Baghdad
For nearly 3 centuries Baghdad is
the hub of Arab power and Islamic
culture
GREAT MOSQUE, KAIROUAN
Aerial view of the Great Mosque,
Kairouan, Tunisia, ca. 836-875
Hypostyle mosque resembling the
plan of Muhammad’s house in
Medina
Tall tower in front is a minaret
Two domes on hypostyle hall -> the
first is over the entrance bay -> the
second is over the bay the fronts the
mihrab set into the qibla wall
Plan of the Great
Mosque, Kairouan,
Tunisia, ca. 836–875.
One of the finest
hypostyle mosques,
still in use today. The
precinct takes the
form of a slightly
askew
parallelogram of
huge scale, some
450 feet by 260 feet.
MALWIYA MINARET, SAMARRA
Malwiya Minaret, Great Mosque,
Samarra, Iraq, 848-852
Minarets can take a variety of
forms -> unique spiral Malwiya
(snail shell) Minaret is 165 feet tall
Stepped spiral ramp
Suffered some damage in the
during the Iraqi insurgency in 2005
SAMANID MAUSOLEUM, BUKHARA
Mausoleum of the Samanids, Bukhara,
Uzbekistan, early 10th century
Samanid dynasty ruled the Eastern realms
of the Abbasid Empire -> mostly
independent but pledged loyalty to the
Caliph in Baghdad
Monumental tombs were virtually
unknown in the early Islamic period -> this
is one of the oldest and first examples
Constructed of baked bricks -> dome on
cube structure -> half round engaged
columns -> squinches support the dome
GREAT MOSQUE, CORDOBA
Prayer hall of the Great Mosque,
Cordoba, Spain, 8th to 10th
centuries
Unique system of double tiered
arches -> lower arches are
horseshoe shaped
Interior of the Mosque ->
hypostyle prayer hall with some of
the 36 piers and 514 columns
The Spanish Umayyad dynasty
lasted almost three centuries
became the center of a brilliant
culture rivaling that of the
Abbasids in Baghdad & exerted
major influence on the civilization
of the Christian West.
The jewel of the capital at
Cordoba was the mosque which
was expanded in the late 900s &
became the largest in the Islamic
West.
The mosaicists & the tessserae
were brought to Spain from
Constantinople by the caliph.
Exterior view
Mosque of Córdoba
Moorish Portal:
Arabesque above portal,
South side of the
Mezquita
The pointed arch and
multilobed arches are
characteristic of mosques.
Maqsura of the Great Mosque,
Cordoba, Spain, 961-965
MAQSURA = area of the mosque
reserved for the caliph -> at
Cordoba it connected to his
palace by a corridor in the qibla
wall
Highly decorative, multilobed
arches
Dome in front of the mihrab of the
Great Mosque, Cordoba, Spain,
961-965
Dome rests on an octagonal base
of arctuated squinches ->
crisscrossing ribs form an intricate
decorative pattern
Byzantine artists fashioned the
mosaic ornament
Dome in front of the
mihrab of the Great
Mosque, Córdoba, Spain,
961–965.