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The Madrasa of Ulugh Beg in Samarqand (1417-20). Standing in front of the Registan square, this four-iwan madrasa has four domed chambers on the corners, possibly functioning as mausolea, and a vaulted prayer hall on the iwan axis. The Registan square was defined later by the addition of two other madrasas to form a locus of urban life.
Format
Photograph
Credit
Image courtesy of Nasser Rabbat of the Aga Khan Program at MIT.
MIT OpenCourseWare Course of Origin
4.614 Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures, Fall 2002
MIT Course Instructor
Rabbat, Nasser O.
MIT Department
Architecture
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Stucco Decoration, Samarra Style: the style tended towards the abstraction of scrolls, stems, and leaves that belonged to the decorative vocabulary of Antiquity. Following the degree of abstraction, three styles have been identified: Style A: vine-leave ornament bearing resemblance to the Hellenistic, naturalizing origin. Style B: vegetal ornament with some abstraction such as no stalks from which the leaves grow. Style C: moulded pattern, very abstract with a combination of vegetal and geometric motifs. Patterns are normally inscribed within borders.
Format
Photograph
Credit
Image courtesy of Nasser Rabbat of the Aga Khan Program at MIT.
MIT OpenCourseWare Course of Origin
4.614 Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures, Fall 2002
MIT Course Instructor
Rabbat, Nasser O.
MIT Department
Architecture
License
Publisher
Alsahabah Mosque,, new opened in 2017,, in AlSHAREM ALSHEKH,, SOUTH SIENA,, EGYPT,, CANON EOS ,,, NOV 2018
This mosque was designed by Architect Abdel Wahid El-Wakil and it won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 1989.
For more info on the mosque, click on the link below.
One of the largest and most impressive mosques globally, the vast space can house 25,000 worshippers. The tall minaret is 210 meters and is visible from many parts of the city and from the ocean.
Tabatabayi house, Kashan, Iran. A 150~200 years old house in an ancient city in Iran. Now a museum and traditional cafeteria.
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Khaneh Tabatabaei-ha or "The Tabatabaeis' House" is a famous historic house in Kashan, Iran.
The house was built in the 1840s for the affluent Tabatabaei family.
It consists of a four beautiful courtyards, delightful wall paintings with elegant stained glass windows, and all the other classic signatures of Traditional Persian residential architecture such as biruni and andaruni.
It was designed by Ustad Ali Maryam. He is the same person who later on built the Boroujerdi-ha House, for the Tabatabaei's newly married daughter. (www.wikipedia.org)
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Taken with Canon EOS 10 QD (film camera)
Scanned with Nikon SUPER COOLSCAN 9000 ED
The Mosque of al-Rifai in Cairo. Begun in 1869 and designed in a neo-Mamluk style, the mosque was left unfinished until 1906 when Max Herz Bey, the famous restorer of Islamic monuments in Cairo completed it. It stands opposite the grand mosque of Sultan Hasan as an attempt of the Khedival family to measure up to the achievements of the Mamluks.
Format
Photograph
Credit
Image courtesy of Nasser Rabbat of the Aga Khan Program at MIT.
MIT OpenCourseWare Course of Origin
4.614 Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures, Fall 2002
MIT Course Instructor
Rabbat, Nasser O.
MIT Department
Architecture
License
Publisher
The Mihrab of Sultan Oljeïtu at the Isfahan Masjid-i-Jomeh (1310): a most unusual, carved stucco mihrab added onto a structural wall along with the whole vaulted oratory, called the winter hall.
Format
Photograph
Credit
Image courtesy of Nasser Rabbat of the Aga Khan Program at MIT.
MIT OpenCourseWare Course of Origin
4.614 Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures, Fall 2002
MIT Course Instructor
Rabbat, Nasser O.
MIT Department
Architecture
License
Publisher
First imperial mosque built by Caliph al-Walid I (705-15), the son of Abd al-Malik. A detail of the Barada mosaic of the eastern wall of the mosque courtyard.
Format
Photograph
Credit
Image courtesy of Nasser Rabbat of the Aga Khan Program at MIT.
MIT OpenCourseWare Course of Origin
4.614 Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures, Fall 2002
MIT Course Instructor
Rabbat, Nasser O.
MIT Department
Architecture
License
Publisher
The mosque was built in 1912, a contributory effort of YTM Tunku Mahmud Ibni Almarhum Sultan Tajuddin Mukarram Shah. The site of this mosque was the cemetery of Kedah warriors who had died while defending Kedah from the Siamese in 1821. The architecture of the mosque was inspired by the AZIZI Mosque in Langkat town in north Sumatra. This mosque is enhanced with five prime large domes symbolizing the five Islamic principles.
Its official opening ceremony was held on Friday, 15 October 1915 by the late HRH Sultan Abdul Hamid Halim Shah. Tunku Mahmud read the Friday sermon while HRH Sultan Abdul Hamid Shah led the Friday prayer. Behind Zahir Mosque is the Syariah Court building complex and Pre-School for Children aged below 6 years old.( wikipedia )
Architect; Kamil Khan Mumtaz, 2001- , The central courtyard contains the lime preparing tanks. It is said that the requirements of organic additives have been accidentally fulfilled by thousands of baby frogs perishing in these pools after rains.
One of the false chambers over the actual grave in the basement can be seen behind the marble 'jali', under the double dome above, an exact replica of Imam Ali's shrine in Najaf.
For more see here
Most government buildings in Putrajaya are inspired by the Islamic architecture gathered from all around the world with the local touch .
Al-Azhar Mosque: (969-72) The royal congregational mosque of al-Qahira, founded in 969 and dedicated in 972, it evolved to become the religious center of Egypt and the most celebrated theological college in the Islamic world.
Format
Photograph
Credit
Image courtesy of Nasser Rabbat of the Aga Khan Program at MIT.
MIT OpenCourseWare Course of Origin
4.614 Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures, Fall 2002
MIT Course Instructor
Rabbat, Nasser O.
MIT Department
Architecture
License
Publisher
From this gate we were entered for the Ziarat-e-Roza-e-Rasool Hazrat Muhammad Mustafa Sallalaho Alaihay Waa-Alayhi Wassalam (S.A.W.W)
This mosque was designed by Architect Abdel Wahid El-Wakil and it won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 1989.
For more info on the mosque, click on the link below.
Had an interesting conversation about faith with an Indian muslim at this mosque in Singapur. I love Islamic architecture.
Title: Sevilla. Alcazar. Patio de las Munecas.
Alternative Title: [Seville. Alcazar. Patio of the Dolls.]
Creator: Masson, Luis
Date: ca. 1870-1899
Part of: Collection of photographs of Spain and Malta
Place: Seville, Spain
Physical Description: 1 photographic print on stereo card: albumen; 8 x 17 cm
Upload File Name: ag2015_0007_67_c.jpg
Rights: Please cite DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University when using this file. A high-resolution version of this file may be obtained for a fee. For details see the sites.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/research/permissions/ web page. For other information, contact degolyer@smu.edu.
For more information and to view the image in high resolution, digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eaa/id/2116
Digital Collection: Europe, Asia, and Australia: Photographs, Manuscripts, and Imprints
This is one of the largest mosques in the Crimea and one of the first buildings of the Khan's palace. The mosque was built in 1532 by Sahib I Giray and bore his name in the 17th century.
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bakhchysarai_04-14_img14_...
The Mosque of Sultan Hasan (1356-61). The most monumental of all Cairene mosques, it stands like a fortress across from the Citadel of Cairo. The structure is a four-iwan, four-madrasa composition with a mausoleum right on the qibla axis of the mosque. The huge portal is oriented to impress the viewer coming from the Citadel. Its minarets mark the beginning of the line of development of the 3-tiered Mamluk minarets.
Format
Photograph
Credit
Image courtesy of Nasser Rabbat of the Aga Khan Program at MIT.
MIT OpenCourseWare Course of Origin
4.614 Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures, Fall 2002
MIT Course Instructor
Rabbat, Nasser O.
MIT Department
Architecture
License
Publisher
(July 29, 2010) Lois Lammerhuber presenting stunning pictures of islamic architecture. The photos were taken in Qatar.
credit: rubra
It is situated in El Nassirrya District, Sayeda Zeinab at the end of a closed-ended alley known as Monge alley. Getting there is directly through a right corridor at top of Komi Street that meets Hassan El Kashef Alley which leads to Monge alley; or through an adjoining alley to the Sabil of Sultan Mustapha which also leads to El Kashef alley.
for more info: