"Islamic architecture is in part comprised of those buildings
and built environments intended for use in Islamic worship,
commemoration, and instruction. Among the architecture of this group are
mosques, madrasas or schools, mausoleums, and shrines. Islamic
architecture may also be considered as the creation of patrons and
builders who profess Islam or those that live in a region ruled by
Muslims. These buildings can generally be described as secular, and
include suqs (marketplaces), hammams (public baths), khans (inns), caravanseries or roadside inns, palaces, and houses".
Defining Islamic Architecture
Although Islamic architecture is infinitely varied in plan,
elevation, building material, and decorative programs, there are several
recurring forms found in all types of buildings, be they religious,
secular, public, or private. These basic components are the dome, the
arch, and the vault (Fig. 1 a-c). Before describing the different
aspects of Islamic architecture it is important to pause and ask if such
a categorization is viable.
This question stems from three considerations. First is the fact that
the forms and decorative practices of these buildings are largely
adaptations of pre-Islamic models. Thus it is not improper to ask if
Islamic architecture should in fact be labeled Classical, Sassanian, or
Hindu. If all that was being considered were forms emptied of meaning
and function then the answer to this question would be a resounding yes.
The second consideration derives from the fact that many of the
architectural forms considered as Islamic architecture were built for
secular purposes. How, then, can a religious category designate houses,
inns, baths, or even cities? Are there essential qualities of these
secular spaces that give them meaning as Islamic architecture? Finally,
there is a question of fit. If Christians, Jews, and Hindus living
within an Islamic region build similar forms then would not the
designation be too narrow? And, conversely is the designation too broad?
For how can a Malaysian congregational mosque built in the twenty-first
century be placed under the same analytic category as an Umayyad
congregational mosque of the eighth century, when they are not built of
the same materials and do not display common decorative practices or
forms?
While such considerations are beyond the scope of this article, it is
important to realize that contemporary historians of Islamic
architectural history weigh these questions critically. Some have
responded by introducing more specified categories of Islamic
architecture, such as those based on regional, dynastic, and
chronological designations. Others have introduced new analytic models,
for example, by studying the development of certain architectural forms,
such as the minaret, or a practice, such as the use of public
inscriptions. Taken together, recent scholarship of Islamic architecture
presents a more historically contingent and culturally varied approach
to the study of Islamic architecture. Many of the problems associated
with the category of Islamic architecture arise from what is taken as
the meaning of architecture. If Islamic architecture is simply a
material entity, composed of classical forms, then the notion of Islamic
architecture as being distinct from Byzantine or Sassanian becomes
questionable. However, if by architecture we mean a dynamic space that
produces relationships between people and helps individuals understand
and articulate their identity through their engagement (or
disengagement) with that space then the meaningfulness of Islamic
architecture can be seen as a distinct construction.
The Mosque
The mosque is the preeminent dynamic space that stands at the center
of Islamic society and culture. It is both a spiritual site of worship
and a social site of education, debate, and discussion of religion,
politics, and current events. Arab caliphs and their governors were the
first builders of architectural mosques. Emerging from a Bedouin culture
that did not necessitate permanent architecture, these early Islamic
rulers adopted and adapted the building traditions of the cultures they
conquered to guide the formation and style of the new mosques. Two
notable sources that contributed to the early mosques’s forms and styles
were the Byzantine and Sassanian Empires. In the conquered regions
previously dominated by these cultures Arabs established garrison cities
and ordered the founded mosques to provide the Islamic community with a
space to meet and pray. The mosques that appeared in the first
centuries of Islamic history were either renovated structures, for
example, Christian churches converted into mosques, or they were new
buildings constructed from recycled parts of abandoned buildings,
particularly columns of Roman ruins. Some Islamic rulers, such as the
Umayyad builders of the Dome of the Rock (completed in 692 c.e.) and the
Great Mosque of Damascus (706-714 c.e.), employed Byzantine artisans
practiced in mosaic design to decorate their structures with dazzling
images of vegetation, jewelry, and Qur’anic inscriptions. Over time, the
practice of employing local building techniques, decorative practices,
and architectural forms resulted in mosques of different regions and
periods of the Islamic world appearing visually dissimilar. They are,
however, all connected by their principal function: to provide a central
space for the Islamic community to unite, pray, and exchange
information.
The Prophet Muhammad’s house was the first constructed mosque (Fig.
2). Established soon after his community moved to Medina in 622 c.e., it
was a simple, unremarkable enclosure. The principal consideration of
Prophet Muhammad’s mosque was to provide a large, open, and expandable
courtyard so the ever-growing community could meet in one place. The
walls of the courtyard were made of mud-brick and had three openings.
The walls surrounded an open space of about 61 square yards (56 meters).
On the east side of the courtyard were the modest living quarters of
Prophet Muhammad and his family. Palm tree trunks were used for the
columns and palm leaves for the roof of a covered area called the zulla, which was built to protect worshipers from the midday sun. The zulla marked
the direction Muslim prayer was originally oriented— north, toward the
holy and venerated city of the Jews, Jerusalem. Later, Prophet Muhammad,
while in prayer, received divine enlightenment that caused him to
change the direction of prayer south to the Ka’ba in Mecca. The zulla was therefore moved to concur with the new qibla (direction of prayer). Besides the qibla, another architectural form introduced at the first mosque was the minbar (stepped platform or pulpit) from which Prophet Muhammad addressed the growing Islamic community.
Figure 2: House of the Prophet Muhammad in Medina.
The Prophet’s mosque, with its austere plan, large square enclosure, orientation toward the qibla, and minbar,
provides the basic elements of subsequent mosque architecture. The
first mosque type to emerge was the hypostyle plan (Fig. 3). Its basic
unit, the bay (a covered area defined by four columns), could be
expanded upon so the mosque could grow with the community. The hypostyle
mosque typically has an inner courtyard, called the sahn, surrounded by colonnades or arcades (riwaqs) on three sides. Within the courtyard there is usually an ablutions fountain, where the wudu’ (minor ablution) is performed before the salat (prayer). There are three entrances into the sahn.
The principal entrance can be a monumental portal as built in Cairo in
the Fatimid Mosque of al-Hakim (1002 c.e.). Passing through the sahn, the worshiper walked into a covered sanctuary area or haram. The haram
of the Great Mosque of Cordoba (786, 962-966 c.e.) is one of the most
visually breathtaking. The arches of the double-arch arcades are
composed of alternating red brick courses and pale stone voussoirs that
when viewed from within the sanctuary produce a visually captivating
labyrinthine configuration over one’s head. Once inside the sanctuary of
a mosque the focus is the qibla, a directional wall that
indicated which way to pray. In the center of the wall was often a
semicircular niche with an arched top, known as the mihrab. In large mosques a minbar located to the right of the mihrab was also included. It was from atop the minbar that on Fridays the khutba (sermon) was delivered by the imam or prayer-leader. The minbar
is based on the stepped platform that was used by Prophet Muhammad. It
ranges from a simple three-step elevation to a highly decorated
monumental stairway of many steps. The very top of the minbar is never occupied as it is symbolically reserved as the space of Prophet Muhammad, the original imam.
In large mosques another platform called the dikka is provided at the rear of the sanctuary, or in the courtyard, and along the same axis as the mihrab. A qadi repeats the sermon and prayer from the dikka
for those standing too far from the minbar. Located outside of some
mosques is a minaret that, along with the dome, has become the
architectural symbol of Islam due to its ubiquitous presence and high
visibility. Constructed as a tower, it either stands outside the mosque
precinct or it is attached to the outer walls or portals of the mosque.
The minaret varies in shape, ornamentation, and number depending on the
region and building conventions of the patron. Besides visually
broadcasting the presence of the mosque and Islam within a city or
landscape the minaret also serves as an effective place for the mu’adhdhin or “caller” (also muezzin) to perform the adhan (call to prayer) and be heard for a great distance. The maqsurah is a later addition made to the hypostyle-plan mosque. It is a differentiated, protective space, adjacent to the qibla wall. The maqsurah
is found in mosques where the imam or ruler wanted either to be
protected or ceremonially separated from the congregation. It was
originally built as a raised platform separated with a wooden screen
that allowed total to partial concealment of its occupants.
Types of Mosques.
There are two general types of mosques. The first is the congregational mosque, known as the jami masjid. The jam¥
(from the Arabic word for “to gather”) is built on a large scale to
accommodate the entire Islamic community of a town or city. The second
type is known simply as masjid (from the Arabic word meaning “to prostrate oneself”). Masjids are small community mosques used daily by members of a quarter, or an ethnic group within a city. Masjids were also constructed as subsidiary structures next to mausoleums, palaces, caravanseries, and madrasas. Early masjids and jam¥ masjids,
while different in size, shared the same architectural forms and style.
However, as Islamic rulers grew in wealth and power starting in the
late seventh century, they built monumental jam¥ masjids in
their cities to reflect the preeminence of Islam and the permanence of
their dynasty. Adapting the basic building elements of vaults, arches,
and domes, these rulers built mosques that from the exterior appeared to
span large areas and soar to great heights. To create a stunning visual
experience in the interior the jami masjids were ornamented
with complex geometric and arabesque or vegetal decoration in mosaic and
stucco. Quartered marble decorated the lower walls, or dados, and
Qur’anic and historical inscriptions in stucco and mosaic Arabic script
engaged the intellect.
Regional Variation of Mosques.
Although there is no
one style to unify the mosques of the Islamic world, they can be divided
into broad regional variants. The mosque style of central Arabia was an
early development influenced by church- building of the Syrian
Byzantine Empire and palace-building of the Sassanian Persian Empire. In
the east, the ground plans of the Great Mosques of Kufa (638 c.e.) and
Basra (635 c.e.) were square like those of Zoroastrian temples. When the
Great Mosque of Kufa was rebuilt in 670, its haram was based on the apadanas
or throne rooms of Achaemenian kings: five rows of tall stone columns
supporting a teak ceiling. Similarly, the Great Mosque of Damascus,
built by the Umayyad caliph al-Walid between 706-714, was based on
indigenous building conventions. Architects used the preexisting
enclosure of the temenos and church, but since the mosque had to be oriented to the south, the qibla
wall was on the longer side of the rectangular space. Also, due to the
constraints of the preexisting quadrangle, the courtyard was transversal
in orientation rather than longitudinal. The haram contained a
short, wide central nave with a gabled roof and a wooden dome in its
center. Three aisles of double-tiered arches, parallel to the qibla
wall, supported a gabled ceiling. Al- Walid, wanting to outdo the
neighboring churches and temples, employed Syrian-Christian artisans to
richly decorate the interior of the mosque with imported gold and
colored mosaics and marble, and even used rock crystal for the mihrab.
The early Abbasid caliphate, ruling from Baghdad from 749 to 847,
first built their mosques with square floor plans as the early Umayyads
had done in the region. However, after the Abbasids moved their capital
to Samarra, their mosques reflected the rectangular hypostyle form
favored by the later Umayyads. The Great Mosque of Samarra, built by al-
Mutawakkil from 848 to 852, was the largest hypostyle mosque of its
time with nine rows of columns in the sanctuary that supported a
thirty-five-foot-high ceiling. The mosque is most famous for Malwiyya,
the colossal spiral minaret. Once faced with gold tiles, Malwiyya’s
great size and unusual shape made the Great Mosque of Samarra a highly visible presence in the surrounding landscape.
Sub-Saharan West African mosques are unique in their use of organic
materials that are constantly replenished over time, such as tamped
earth, timber, and vegetation. Due to seasonal deterioration during the
wet and dry seasons, the mosques are constantly being repaired and
resurfaced. The predominant quality of these structures is their rounded
organic form, reinforced with projecting timber beams or torons, which
also serve as supports for scaffolding when the mosque is being
resurfaced. The Great Mosque of Djenne (thirteenth century) is the most
representative of the West African mosques. Its tall rounded towers and
engaged columns, which act as buttresses, easily flow into each other
and give the structure its characteristic verticality and overwhelming
majesty.
The central-planned, domed mosque of the Ottomans is yet another
distinctive type. When the Ottomans conquered Constantinople in the
fifteenth century they converted the Byzantine church of Hagia Sophia
into a mosque by framing it with two pointed minarets. Later in the
nineteenth century they added roundels inscribed with calligraphic
writing of the names of Muhammad, Allah, and the early caliphs. Using
the Hagia Sophia as their prototype, Ottoman rulers built mosques in the
principal cities of their empire. The mosques were defined by large
spherical domes, with smaller half-domes at the corners of the square,
and four distinctively shaped minarets—tall, fluted, and
needle-nosed—that were typically placed at the exterior corners of the
mosque complex. The Selimiye Cami (Mosque of Selim) in Edirne, Turkey
(1507-1574), best characterizes the central-plan Ottoman mosque.
Moving further east to Seljuk Iran, another type of mosque emerges known as the four-iwan mosque. The iwan is an open vaulted space with a rectangular portal orpishtaq. In a Seljuk mosque four of these iwans
would be oriented around a central courtyard. The Great Mosque of
Isfahan, built in this style in the twelfth century, is a monumental
four-iwan mosque. Of these, the principal or qibla iwan is the largest, with a large domed maqsura and muqarnas vaulting. To lend it further visual impact, two minarets were added at the corners of the portal. The iwan that stood opposite the qibla iwan followed in size, and it was both smaller and shallower. The lateral iwans were the smallest. While the exterior of the mosque was unadorned, the inward-facing iwans
were decorated with architectural ceramic tiles of turquoise, cobalt
blue, white, deep yellow, and green. The decorative designs contained
geometric and arabesque patterns as well as Kufic inscriptions. The
layout of the Great Mosque of Isfahan influenced countless other mosques
in Iran, Central Asia, and South Asia.
From their start, the mosques of South Asia were syncretic
structures. They were the by-products of hired Hindu masons, indigenous
architectural material taken from destroyed or decaying Hindu buildings,
and necessary elements of mosque architecture such as the mihrab.
The mosques were trabeated at first and decorated with popular Hindu
motifs such as vegetal scrolls and lotuses. The plans of South Asian
mosques ranged from traditional hypostyle, to Persian four- iwan
types, and to single-aisle domed plans. The earliest mosques of the
Delhi sultanate (1192-1451) were hypostyle and built out of reused
materials from Hindu and Jain temples such as the Quwwat al-Islam in
Delhi of the late twelfth century. The greatest achievement of this
mosque is the monumental minaret, the Qutb Minar. Standing at 238 feet
it was a victory tower that announced the power of the new religion to
the surrounding landscape.
The next significant mosque type of South Asia is the single-aisle
plan with five bays that used stucco and colored stones as surface
decoration and squinch and muqarnas vaulting. These mosques had
monumental central portals and domes. The Bara Gumbad mosque in Delhi,
built by Sultan Sikandar Lodi in 1494, and the QaPa-e-Kuhna mosque of
Sher Shah (1540-1545) exemplify this style. It was this basic form of
mosque architecture that was later adopted by the great Mogul dynasty
(1426-1848). Two exemplary Mogul- style mosques are Akbar’s Great Mosque
of Fatehpur Sikri (1571-1572) and Shah Jahan’s Great Mosque at Delhi
(1650-1656). These mosques have large courtyards and are built from the
local red sandstone combined with white marble to create decorative
geometric and vegetal patterns. The distinctive feature of Akbar’s
mosque at Fatehpur Sikri is the monumental portal on the south side
called the Buland Darwaza. Its form is that of a colossal pishtaq
(tall central portal), derived from Timurid origins. It is embellished
with native Indian architectural elements as well such as small open
pavilions called chatris and lotus-shaped medallions. Located
on the west side of the great courtyard is the sanctuary, a three-domed
prayer-hall with a central pishtaq. The Great Mosque of Delhi was based on the four-iwan plan. Three onion-shaped bulbous marble domes surmount the qibla iwan,
the same shape used for the dome of the Taj Mahal. The minarets are
divided into four parts and are capped with small pavilions. Smaller,
private mosques built for the Mughal palaces of Lahore, Agra, and in
Delhi reflect the fine marble carving skills of the Indian artisans.
Faced with white marble, elegantly carved with vegetal patterns, these
mosques were then topped with graceful onion-shaped domes with lotus
molding and metallic finials. These private imperial mosques were the
architectural counterparts of the elegant gems so highly prized by the
Mughals.
Secular Architecture
One of the secular types of Islamic architecture is the palace, which
matches the mosque in reflecting the rich variety of forms,
ornamentation, and the sophisticated skills of artisans. Built as large
complexes rather than singular units, Islamic palaces were generally
self-sustaining, and most contained bastion walls, towers, gates, baths,
stables, private quarters, public meeting spaces, workshops, offices,
hospitals, harams or zenanas (reserved for the women
of the palace), libraries, pavilions, fountains, and gardens. These
palaces were built as the architectural embodiment of the ruler, the
spatial metaphor of his dominion, and, if built in idyllic settings with
surrounding gardens, were considered earthly paradises. The first
palaces were built by the Umayyads and were modeled after Roman villas.
Serving as hunting lodges or rural residences these include the Qasr
al-Hayr, Khirbat al-Mafjar, and Khirbat al-Minya of the eighth century.
Other well- known palaces are the Fatimid Palace of al-Qahira
(1087-1092), Umayyad Madinat al-Zahira of Cordoba (936-976), the Nasrid
Alhambra in Granada, Spain (early fourteenth century), the Ottoman
Topkapi complex, and Mogul Fatehpur Sikri and Red Fort, built in Delhi
during the sixteenth century.
Islamic secular architecture is also public in nature. Among these buildings are the caravanseries and hammams.
The caravanserai was a stopping place for travelers to rest and water
and feed their animals. A typical caravanserai had a large open
courtyard with a single large portal. Inside, along the walls, were
covered arcades that contained identical stalls to
accommodate a traveler, and his servants. Animals were usually kept in
the courtyard or stables located in the corners. Caravansaries were
usually fortified with bastions and turreted walls. As with mosques and
palaces, caravansaries vary in ornamentation and form from region to
region. Inside the city the khan housed the travelers and
merchants. These structures were multistoried and overlooked a central
courtyard. The animals and goods were kept on the ground floor and
apartments were located above.
The public bath or hammam was another architectural form found in many Islamic cities. Along with the khan it was located in the suq or marketplace. Adopted from the Romans, the hammam
was used for washing and purification before Friday prayer. It was
composed of large rooms for steam baths as well as others for soaking in
hot and cold water, all of which communicated through waiting halls.
Utilizing marble covered floors and walls, arches, large ornamented
domes that helped circulate hot air, muqarnas vaults, and
stucco decoration, some public baths were highly luxurious environments.
Men and women bathed separately either in their own hammam, if there were two in a town, or on different days or at designated times.
Residential Architecture
The final type of Islamic architecture to be considered is the
domestic. The typical house built in Islamic societies is oriented
inward. A bent entrance that turns at a sharp angle marks the transition
from the outside world to the home. The entrances of homes do not
usually align with those across the street, so the privacy of the
interior is maintained. On the inside the rooms are arranged around a
central courtyard and range from the private spaces of the family to
semiprivate spaces where male guests, who were not members of the
family, could enter. The open courtyard ventilates the house. A central
basin or fountain, part of most courtyards, also provides a cooling
effect and the soothing sound of falling water. In more prosperous
households delicately carved wooden screens called mashraabiyyat
were used to create private space, filter air from the outside, and
allow light to enter the home. The exterior of an Islamic house is often
left unadorned. Only upon entering the home will the visitor know the
class status of the owner.
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Frishman, Martin, and Hasan-Uddin, Khan, eds. The Mosque: History, Architectural Development & Regional Diversity. London: Thames and Hudson, 1994.
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Credit to : Santhi Kavuri-Bauer
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