Islamic Art in Cairo
Islamic Art in Cairo
Islamic Art in Cairo
Prisse d'Avennes
Introduction by
George T. Scanlon
Captions by
Yasmeen Siddiqui
A Z e i t o u n a Book
The American University in Cairo Press
Plates reproduced courtesy of the Rare Books and Special Collections Library of the American University in Cairo.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner and the publisher.
Introduction vii
Plates (1-200) 1
Supplementary Plates (I-XXXIV) 201
List of Plates 226
Islamic Art in Cairo
INTRODUCTION
by George T. Scanlon
France perfected the art of the dessinateur in the early 19th century, relating it to the newer crafts of
lithography, colored printing from metal or stone plates, and eventually photography. This art can be relished
in the thousands of drawings assembled in the Description d'Egypte, Napoleon's eternal gift to the civilization
of the Nile Valley. Emile Prisse d'Avennes was the contingent heir of this legacy; indeed he may be deemed its
pinnacle in that color reproduction often enhanced his purely linear talents. It would be a courageous
Egyptologist at the very end of the twentieth century who would eschew the use of the two volumes of
illustrations in his Atlas de I'art Egyptien because many are of buildings or decoration which have disappeared.
The very same reasons obtain for his equally monumental L'art arabe d'apres les monuments du Kaire, in three
volumes, the subject of this new updated edition.
There can be little doubt that Prisse's strength and reputation as a dessinateur were based on his thorough
training as architect-engineer-surveyor (in this sense his modern congeners would be Lutyens and Wright,
whose drawings and sketches have become collectables) and his strength of personality, the almost total
subjection of his life to his work. This latter facet is almost brutally suggested in the face painted in 1844 by
Deveria. The determination to achieve his two-fold objective of recording the Pharaonic and Islamic legacies of
Egypt is apparent in the visage. The parallel dedication toward publication of the immense body of materials is
equally apparent in the dates of the publication of his masterworks: the Atlas was published serially between
1858 and 1877, L'art arabe between 1867 and 1879. An earlier volume of character sketching appeared in
London in 1848 as an Oriental Album, whose drawings have appealed to social historians and art historians of
nineteenth-century Egypt until the present day. And beyond all these are the finished drawings and etchings,
the sketches and notes, memorabilia and correspondence which comprise the Prisse d'Avennes archive in the
Bibliotheque National in Paris. (For all his valor and dedication, Prisse was not above a corrosive commentary
on contemporary Frenchmen in Egypt and his viceroyal patrons, as well as giving a savor of a repressed libido:
his Petite memoires secretes saw the light of print in Paris in 1930.)
He arrived in Egypt in 1827 and worked under the patronage of Muhammad Ali and his heir apparent,
Ibrahim Pasha, at various tasks related to his architectural and engineering skills and was at one time the
official tutor to the royal children. During this period he was seized by the idea of recording the architectural
and artistic legacy of Egypt from the earliest period to right before that of an unsympathetic (to the past)
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Islamic Art in Cairo
eupeptic modernization. In 1839 he took off for Luxor as his base of operations (indeed he lived in the back
rooms of an incompletely excavated temple), making recording forays throughout Upper Egypt and into Nubia
and the Eastern Desert, a by-product being the splendid drawings of the Oriental Album. By 1843 he believed
he had enough data to contemplate publication, and returned to Europe. There was evidence of no small pride
in having amended and added to the immense recording of the dessinateurs of the Description. We, his debtors,
should also note that he had but two assistants as compared to the numbers of experts deployed by Napoleon.
But he was still unsatisfied with his trove. Some of his drawings needed a refinement of detail, others
evidenced the need for a fresh approach, still others dictated a survey of monuments requiring inclusion if the
ones he had drawn were to yield their incontrovertible value and uniqueness. He knew, too, that with the
appointment of Mariette as head of the new Egyptian Museum and director of the powerful Antiquities Service
a new rigor had enspirited archaeology and recording. He returned to Cairo in 1858 and managed to fit himself
into this new world of permits and reports. He devoted the first year to the Islamic monuments and the next
year and a half to Upper Egypt and Nubia. In less primitive conditions than obtained in the earlier period, he
corrected his previous work and recorded pertinent aspects of what had been uncovered in the interval. And
this time he included a photographer in his team so as to gauge better the degree of correction necessary for a
more perfect publication. Without being fully aware of the effect, Prisse commenced the evolution of the
extinction of the dessinateur.
L'art arabe is the perfect pendant to those sections of the Description devoted to the Islamic art and
architecture of Egypt. Its 200 plates, when conjoined to their parallel pictorial treatment in the Description,
exert a powerful effect on the reader and scholar. If Art, in the noumenal sense, is the depiction of, then
collection of, details so as to create a sense of tradition then these volumes are a visual celebration of such Art.
When coupled with a volume like Owen Jones' Grammar of Ornament they become witnesses to the
omnivorous appetite for the older traditions in the latter half of the nineteenth century. They provide the 'inner
life' to the pictorial records of such Orientalist artists as David Roberts, Lord Leighton, and John Frederick
Lewis in that they, the dessinateurs, recapitulate more exactly what was demonstrable to the reader and scholar
and artist and architect in the painted scene, correcting what was imprecise or merely 'impressionistic' in the
oil or watercolor. Without them, there could have been no 'Oriental Rococo,' 'Saracenic Eclectic,' or the motley
trends of Ottoman and/or Mughal imitations. With them in hand, the decorator did not have to travel to trawl
themes. Men as different as Fortuny and Oscar Wilde were utterly charmed by them.
Is there a demand for a new edition? By scholars and students of Islamic art and architecture, yes. It was
admitted by his contemporaries and assistants that Prisse spoke Arabic far better than most of the expatriates
vin
Islamic Art in Cairo
in Cairo. (In addition, he had no trouble going anywhere in Egypt as he dressed in the style of an Egyptian Turk
and called himself 'Idriss Effendi,' a close approximation of his name.) Nevertheless he made a fair number of
mistakes in his transliterations and was probably misled by the locals as to names and dates attributed to
various monuments. These have been corrected as nearly as possible in this edition (do not forget that some of
the monuments have been destroyed) with a proper correlation of plate number and correct historical data. The
subjects are now intelligently identified with reasonable subscriptions. If any errors attend after such
perspicuity, they are a very small price to pay for the accuracy and variety of the drawings. (For instance, the
many drawings of the eaves and side attachments of lambrequins or of stone dome decoration attest to his art
historical sense of development and variation.)
One aspect of his endeavors remains paramount to this day: his drawings and notes about buildings that
have disappeared. Creswell depended on him for his own assays of the development of architectural and
decorative principles. One need only cite the excellent portrayal of a stone doorway in the palace of the
Ayyubid sultan, Najm al-Din Malik al-Salih, on Roda Island (Pi. I), which has now gone. The incipient molded
bull's eye is sketched in the stone around the rectangular window. This is forty years before the fulfillment of
the 'idea' in the buildings of the Qalawaun period. And the waxy-leaved capitals of the engaged colonettes
forming the sides of the portal point toward the 'lotus' capitals of the fifteenth century (e. g., the capitals of the
Maqaad of Mamay of 1496). One looks, too, at the ground plan of the Mosque of Malika Safiya (Pi. II and
wrongly ascribed to a sixteenth-century Ottoman governor, Da'ud Pasha) and one wonders if it did have an
octagonal fountain in the courtyard and if there were three grand sets of rounded steps originally. Or one looks
at PI. XVIII (tomb complex of Abdallah al-Manufi, who died in 1348): today only the sky-lighted dome remains.
Because of Prisse we know there was a second dome and a liwan to the complex and the remains of a separate
domed mausoleum slightly to the south with a set of three lights above a keel-arched mihrab similar to those in
the aforementioned liwan.
For the present-day reader and/or scholar, one major problem remains to be faced with Prisse's work on the
score of the Islamic art and architecture of Cairo: why so much extraneous material? Why are we given
drawings of Andalusian textiles (some misdated into the bargain)? Why an Ottoman quiver and bow case of
appliqued leather? Or a piece of paper applique design of the late Mughal period? There are seven plates
devoted to the minbar at Qus and still others to the later minbars of al-Salih Tala'i and Qaysun while there are
precious few examples of Mamluke ceramics and enameled glass. And it is difficult to explain his comparative
obsession with the decoration of the Burdayni Mosque, unless it was easier of access than other monuments.
One wonders about the ten plates devoted to an eighteenth-century Maghribi Quran; was he under obligation
IX
Islamic Art in Cairo
to the Cairene shaykh who owned it? Since all of these drawings are of superior quality and have proven useful
to scholars working outside the distinct field of Egyptian Islamic art, would it be better to have excluded them?
If Prisse understood these as contributing to his two broad fields of endeavor, Egyptian Islamic architecture and
architectural decoration, he left the relationships unexplained. And one must not forget that a dessinateur was
determined to get the bulk of his material into print notwithstanding our modern niceties of categorization.
And publishers could and did add graphic work from other hands to enhance what they thought was the
'picturesque' quality of a work. Prisse found this out when he looked at the narrative sections (provided by the
Egyptologist James Augustus St. John) of the Oriental Album of 1848: therein PL 25 ('Nubian Females') is
followed in the text by an etching 'Minar at Natens,' which is of the complex at Natanz in Iran; and PL 28
('Abyssinian Priest and Warrior') by an etching of 'Pavilion near Kashan'! Thus, if the aforementioned reader
and scholar is also interested in Iranian Islamic art and architecture, would they be better served if the etchings
were excised?
Enfin, Prisse was perhaps not well served by the publishing norms of his own day or by his manic drive to
get his work before the public. Other imperfections have been noted above, some of which have been corrected
or made more felicitous in this edition.
Nevertheless, in bulk this was an impressive body of work, of such scope and quality that we still turn to it
today as much to resolve lacunae occasioned by what has been lost in the interval as to admire its professional
quality. At some point in the very near future Emile Prisse d'Avennes will be 'scanned' and rendered into a
quotidian CD-Rom; in the meantime let us look once more at a supreme dessinateur at work and for those
passionate about the Islamic legacy of Egypt—may they admire and stand grateful.
X
THE PLATES
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
1
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
Mosque of Ahmad ilon Tulun, arcade and interior windows, 9th century
2
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
3
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
4
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
5
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
6
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
7
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
8
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
9
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
10
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
11
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
12
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
13
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
14
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
15
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
The mausoleum's
symmetrical floor designs
and intricate woodwork
ground the gaze, while
the floor and square
pillars, like a swath of
light, draw the eyes
upward. The octagonal
drum, composed of two
pairs of piers alternating
with two pairs of
columns, reflects a debt
to the Dome of the Rock.
16
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
17
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
18
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
19
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
20
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
21
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
22
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
23
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
Minarets of Turab al-lmam mosque, 15th century, and Qalmi mosque, 16th century
24
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
Contrasting minarets,
cubical and cylindrical—
both have trilobed arches,
muqarnas, and alternating
vertical and horizontal
voussoirs. The Nasiriya
minaret exploits
alternating voussoir
designs featured in the
portal frame, whereas the
al-Burdayni mosque
displays intricate carvings.
Minarets o/Qaniboy al-Rammah at Nasiriya mosque, 15th century & al-Burdayni mosque, 17th century
25
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
26
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
27
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
28
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
29
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
30
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
31
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
32
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
Shown in elevation,
details, and a plan, the
mosque appears to revive
Mamluke building designs
of the Qaitbay period.
The absence of the
Ottoman-style cascading
domes and austere
facades hints at the
patron's Egyptian roots.
33
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
34
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
35
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
36
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
In 1729, Abdal-Rahman
Katkhuda built a zawiya—
housing for Sufis—on two
levels above a few shops.
This was but one of his
contributions to Cairo's
cityscape. Prisse draws
parallels between its
decoration and that of
European Renaissance
styles.
37
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
38
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
39
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
Domes (1-4)
40
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
Domes (5-8)
41
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
Stone as opposed to
brick is the underlying
theme in this set of
domes. The central dome
displays an interpretation
of functional brick ribs
into architectonic stone
ones. Further
developments, particularly
zigzagged designs, lighten
solid stone ribs with
changes of direction at
vertical joints.
(9) Sultan Barsbay,
Khanqa mausoleum
(1432);
(10) Emir Qurqmas
(1506);
( 1 1 ) Emir Inal al-Yusufi
(1392-93);
(12) Emir Ganibak at the
madrasa (1426-27); and
(13) Khanqa of Faraj ibn
Barquq(l4l I).
Domes (9-13)
42
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
43
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
44
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
45
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
46
Islamic Art in Cairo Architecture
47
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
48
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
49
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments &• Mosaics
50
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
51
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments &• Mosaics
52
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments &> Mosaics
53
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
54
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments 6- Mosaics
55
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
56
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
Fragments of delicate
stucco relief inlaid on
white marble contrast
sharply with the
geometric patterns often
employed over vast
surfaces. This design is
similar to pietra-dura,
popular
contemporaneously in
Florentine and Mughal
Indian objects and
architectural decoration.
57
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
58
Islamic Art in Cairo O r n a m e n t s & Mosaics
Prisse, an admirer of
Mamluke forms, explores
the mosque of Shaykh al-
Burdayni, where prevailing
Ottoman architectural
traditions had been
rejected in favor of
revived lavish Mamluke
styles, epitomized here by
a high marble dado.
59
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
Platonic metaphysics, as
interpreted in wall
mosaics, relies on
octagons manipulated
into distinct designs that
pivot around highly
stylized Kufi Quranic
inscriptions.
60
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
61
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
Revived Mamluke
traditions of decoration
are captured in the
mihrab mosaic in al-
Burdayni's mosque. Prisse
parallels the texture of
the mihrab area,
composed of white
marble and mother of
pearl, with rich
glimmering fabric.
62
Islamic Art in Cairo O r n a m e n t s dy Mosaics
Madrasa & mausoleum of Emir Sarghitmish, details of the tomb, 14th century
63
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments 6- Mosaics
64
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
MadYasa <S> mausoleum ofEmirSarghitmish, marble frieze and rosette, 14th century
65
Islamic Art in Cairo Ornaments & Mosaics
66
Islamic Art in Cairo O r n a m e n t s & Mosaics
Carved marble
decoration surmounting
the arched entrance to a
tomb is reflective of
changing times. It was
built during the Ottoman
period, its designs similar
to those of the Qawam
al-Din complex. The
spandrel is adorned with
marble sculpted in
decorative arabesques
and medallions to
establish a balance.
67
Islamic Art in Cairo Ceilings
68
Islamic Art in Cairo Ceilings
69
Islamic Art in Cairo Ceilings
70
Islamic Art in Cairo Ceilings
Arabesques on the
ceilings of the small rooms
in al-Burdayni's mosque
resemble bouquet designs
found in ancient Egyptian
Theban tomb paintings,
but reject the central
ankh-shaped staff, symbol
of life, in favor of a
seemingly unending maze
of leafy vines.
71
Islamic Art in Cairo Ceilings
72
Islamic Art in Cairo Ceilings
73
Islamic Art in Cairo Ceilings
Ceilings composed of
dodecagonal stars offer
another example of
geometry's role in wood
carving. Various designs
emerge from the
woodwork Aspects of
the formation are
articulated by coloring in
different segments of
carved floral patterns.
74
Islamic Art in Cairo Ceilings
75
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
The congregational
mosque of Qus featured
a magnificent minbar that
is said to have been
constructed by order of
Emir Tala'i Abu Rezik
Qus, a town in Upper
Egypt, served for some
time as a seat of the
Abbasid caliphate.
76
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
77
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
78
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
79
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
Prisse's presumed
arrangement of design for
the door of the minbar of
the mosque of Qus
provides an example of a
motif that lacks the six-
pointed star. Instead, a
pattern is formed by
repeating and rotating a
hexagonal emblem.
80
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
Mosque ofQus, arbitrary assemblage of details from the minbar, 12th century
81
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
82
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
Details of beams and friezes from a muristan, or hospital, display animals, fantastical
and realistic, perched in elaborate arabesques. This belies the common assertion
that artisans had abandoned animistic designs. Prisse interprets the designs as
indicative of tolerance for such images in all but religious places.
83
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
84
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
85
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
86
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
87
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
88
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
Mosque ofQaitbay, elevation of the minbar door and side view, 15th century
89
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
90
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
91
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
Articulated geometric
patterns in this
assemblage of details of
the minbar hint at the
artist's reluctance to rely
on drawings or
mathematics. Prisse
suggests that perhaps the
patron, renowned for his
intellect, encouraged
artisans to follow their
own inclinations.
Mosque ofal-Salih Tala'i, assemblage of details from the minbar, 13th century
92
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
Tomb of Sultan Qansuh al-Ghuri, carved wooden leaves on a cabinet, 16th century
93
Islamic Art in Cairo Woodwork
94
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
95
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
96
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
A bronze-framed wooden
door from Sidi Yusef
house is contrasted with
a bronze-faced door from
Barquq's mosque. The
door from Barquq's
mosque is a striking
anomaly—by his reign,
doors were generally no
longer totally faced with
bronze.
Sidi Yusef house, interior door, 18th century (left) & mosque ofBarquq, bronze door, 14th century (right)
97
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
98
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
Tomb ofSalih Najm al-Din, leaves of a chest and a window shutter, 13th century
99
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
100
Arab Art in Cairo Doors
Geometric designs
captured by the
woodcarver were
subsequently embellished
by the painter. The
surfaces would have been
enhanced by a finishing
varnish of egg whites.
101
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
102
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
103
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
104
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
105
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
106
Islamic Art in Cairo Doors
107
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
Although disputable
because they closely
resemble 18th-century
Ottoman tilework, Prisse
asserts that these wall
tiles were laid in the
mihrab of the Shaykhun
mosque when it was
erected. The mosque as a
whole displays an
inconsistent wall tile
program, a point that
becomes very clear when
they are contrasted with
those in plate 128.
108
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
Prisse ascribes an
Andalusian origin to these
wall tile designs that
resemble 'zillij1 patterns—
introduced to Andalusia
by North African
Almohads, they are
formed by cutting small
monochrome tiles and
arranging them into
polychrome designs.
109
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
110
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
Wall tiles, panel depicting the Ka'aba and its surroundings, 16th century
111
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
112
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
113
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
114
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
115
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
116
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
117
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
118
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
119
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
120
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
121
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
122
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
123
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
124
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
Tekiya of the Dervishes, glazed tile tympanum and borders of an arcade, 17th century
125
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
126
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
127
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
128
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
129
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
130
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
131
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
132
Islamic Art in Cairo Faience
133
Islamic Art in Cairo Mashrabiya & Lattice Work
Described as resembling
an "aviary affixed to a
wall" the interior
mashrabiya in Bayt al-Emir
illustrates the
complementary natures
of wood and greenery.
Climbing plants around
the window neutralize the
glare of the sun and
sprout flowers, which
brighten the view from
inside the harem.
134
Islamic Art in Cairo Mashrabiya &> Lattice Work
The carved-wood
latticework, commonly
referred to as mashrabiya,
is composed of small
pieces of wood that are
turned in various forms
and fixed together,
without glue or nails,
simply by being inserted
into each other.
135
Islamic Art in Cairo Mashrabiya &> Lattice Work
138
Islamic Art in Cairo Interiors
This rendition of an
upstairs salon in the Sidi
Yusef Adami house offers
a sense of propriety and
proportion. To provide
secluded women with
comfort, polytextured
surfaces were used to
create an airy
environment
139
Islamic Art in Cairo Interiors
140
Islamic Art in Cairo Interiors
141
Islamic Art in Cairo Interiors
142
Islamic Art in Cairo Glasswork
143
Islamic Art in Cairo Glasswork
Sayyida Zaynab mosque, shamsa or stained glass window with perforated plaster, 14th century
144
Islamic Art in Cairo Glasswork
Madrasa ofBarquq, shamsa or stained glass window with perforated plaster, 14th century
145
Islamic Art in Cairo Glasswork
146
Islamic Art in Cairo Carpets & Tapestries
A 12th-century tapestry,
found in a church where
it enveloped the relics of
a saint, displays a date
tree between two
standing Cerberuses that
to Prisse, resemble "blind
and lifeless poodles." The
design is pre-lslamic but
the textile is Islamic.
147
Islamic Art in Cairo Carpets <&• Tapestries
148
Islamic Art in Cairo Carpets &> Tapestries
149
Islamic Art in Cairo Carpets &> Tapestries
150
Islamic Art in Cairo Carpets 6- Tapestries
151
Islamic Art in Cairo Carpets &> Tapestries
152
Islamic Art in Cairo Carpets &> Tapestries
153
Islamic Art in Cairo Carpets &> Tapestries
154
Islamic Art in Cairo Arms & Armor
155
Islamic Art in Cairo Arms & Armor
156
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular dy Religious F u r n i s h i n g s
157
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &• Religious Furnishings
Probably commissioned
by one of Sultan Baybars'
eunuchs in Damascus, the
main center for Mamluke
metal work. It adheres to
Mediterranean (Greco-
Roman) tradition as
opposed to the equally
popular Sassanian design.
158
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular & Religious F u r n i s h i n g s
159
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular <&> Religious F u r n i s h i n g s
160
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular & Religious F u r n i s h i n g s
161
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular <&> Religious F u r n i s h i n g s
162
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &> Religious Furnishings
The inlay/damascene
featured in this bronze
tray is formed by setting a
gold or silver thread in a
furrow. It can either be
filed down, or as in this
case, left in relief. The
other method for inlay is
executed by applying gold
or silver leaf between
raised metal lines.
163
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &> Religious F u r n i s h i n g s
164
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &• Religious Furnishings
Ornamental details,
particularly the lotus
flower, reveal the vessel's
origin and age. Inspired by
Chinese motifs and set in
the frame of three
overlapping three-leaf
clovers, this lotus motif
first appeared in Egypt
during Qalawaun's reign.
165
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &> Religious Furnishings
166
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular & Religious Furnishings
167
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &> Religious Furnishings
168
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &• Religious Furnishings
169
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &> Religious Furnishings
170
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular & Religious Furnishings
171
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &> Religious Furnishings
172
Islamic Art in Cairo Secular &> Reiigious Furnishings
173
Islamic Art in Cairo Manuscripts
174
Islamic Art in Cairo Manuscripts
Manuscripts were
decorated with paper
cuttings like this late 18th-
century example. Colored
papers were cut with a
knife, half a dozen at a
time, then pasted on
backgrounds of different
colors, sometimes on
silver or gilded paper.
175
Islamic Art in Cairo Manuscripts
176
Islamic Art in Cairo Manuscripts
177
Islamic Art in Cairo Manuscripts
178
Islamic Art in Cairo Manuscripts
179
Islamic Art in Cairo Manuscripts
180
Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
1 T ! t I f ! ? T V» f T v ' TT v T 'Y I |f
181
Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
Maghribi Quran, double frontispiecejrom the mosque of Muhammad Abu Dahab, 18th century
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
Maghribi Quranjint pagesjrom the mosque of Muhammad Abu Dahab, 18th century
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
Maghribi Quran, twin pagesjrom the mosque of Muhammad Abu Dahab, 18th century
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
Maghribi Quran, ornamentationjrvm the mosque of Muhammad Abu Dahab, 18th century
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
Maghribi Quran, ornamentationjrom the mosque of Muhammad Abu Dahab, 18th century
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
Maghrib: Quran, twin pagesjrom the mosque of Muhammad Abu Dahab, 18th century
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
Maghribi Quran, ornamentationjrom the mosque of Muhammad Abu Dahab, 18th century
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
Maghribi Quran, twin pagesjmm the mosque of Muhammad Abu Dahab, 18th century
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Islamic Art in Cairo Qurans
Maghribi Quran, twin pages, fmm the mosque of Muhammad Abu Dahab, 18th century
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Islamic Art in Cairo S u p p l e m e n t a r y Plates
I. Interior door, palace of al-Salih Ayyub Najm-al-Din, in the courtyard of the Nilometer ofRoda (1241)
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary Plates
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary Plates
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary Plates
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Islamic Art in Cairo S u p p l e m e n t a r y Plates
This quintessential
congregational mosque
plan conveys an austerity
typical of architecture
before the Fatimid and
Mamluke periods. The
entire plan covers 162
square meters with a
square inner court of 92
square meter. In the
center is a fountain, which
was protected by a gilded
dome that fell in 968.
Covered areas include
five aisles parallel to the
qibla wall and a double
arcade on the other three
sides of the court.
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary P l a t e s
(Above) XII. Fortified door of a house, nearMahmudJanum. (Below) XIII. Comparative masonry
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary Plates
Medieval Cairo
architecture displays an
amalgam of recycled
Egyptian, Greek, and
Roman materials. Prisse
elaborates on the
felicitous efforts of
artisans as seen in a
mosque in Damietta: it
boasts a capital (top) with
an inverted bell-shape at
its base by overlapping
leaves and surmounted
by an abacus, whose arms
are supported by
palmettes.
XIV Capitals
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary P l a t e s
Prisse depicted a wide array of stone lancet arches, some of which display characteristically Eastern single keystones
at the peak of the arch. Others, following a more Western style, lack a keystone proper the summit of the arch is
a vertical point that separates the voussoirs of one demi-arch from those of the one opposite.
Prisse included these arches as an insight into the subtle yet fundamental difference between lancet arches of the
East and West. He asserts that the lancet arch, employed since antiquity in Egypt solely for its decorative
possibilities, did not—unlike in Western architectural traditions—lead to further developments in construction
techniques.
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A muqamas, a mason's technical term, is composed of a series of niches embedded within a frame, such as a pendentive or
squinch. Prisse parallels the design with a sliced and pitted watermelon; the popular metaphor today is the honeycomb. The
term used in European sources, stalactites, is only valid in cases where the image of dripping stone formations is evoked.
Owen Jones' analytical eye dissects the muqamas. Prisse notes how the structure as a whole can be "easily reduced to a
mathematical construction ... composed of many prisms of plaster held together on their lateral faces by means of a very
fine cement." He distinguishes the vertical prisms: the right triangle as (a), the parallelogram (b), and the isosceles triangle (c).
(Left) XIX. Comparative muqarnases (stalactites); (right) XXII. Study of pendentives, by Owenjones
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary Plates
The muqamas, an architectural composition of niche-like quarter-domes closely connected with the transition
zone, was used to mask the awkwardness of the area between the cubic base and the domical section of the
building. Units of the muqamas are sometimes repeated and multiplied on a smaller scale to form the squinch.
The muqamas spread in the I Ith century throughout the Islamic world, becoming, like the arabesque and
inscriptional bands, a characteristic feature of architecture from Egypt to Central Asia. Prisse refers to Diez,
who suggested this design element was not an individual invention but something rooted in Islamic culture
and mentality.
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary Plates
A corbel, a large external stone that protrudes a greater distance than its height was used to ease the
weight on a beam or to support the transverse rib of a vault. Sculpted in a variety of ways, corbels were
often at the base of a capital or positioned under a mashrabiya when it formed part of a stone house; in
such cases, the device was included in architectural plans. According to Prisse, the pendentive, originally
intended to fill a portion of the vault between the dome, was adapted to serve a functional and aesthetic
role in cubical structures requiring support. He seemingly credits Islamic architectural traditions with
developing this device.
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary Plates
The kursi al-imma played a significant role, according Prisse, in prevailing matrimonial ritual. It accompanied the
bride to her conjugal residence, where it was placed beside the bed to hold the clothing she removed at night. It
was a unique and meaningful piece of indoor furniture, as people for the most part sat on divans and carpets.
Although Prisse makes it clear that wood was an imported medium in Egypt, he asserts that this "Indian armchair...
is of Arab construction. If it was not built by guilds of Arab workers, there is no doubt that it is the work of a
Muslim artist of India." He notes that the chair would have been used in the garden.
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Wood cut into the shape of arabesques was a popular form of ornamentation. According to
Prisse it was transmitted during the medieval period from Arabs to Europeans, who have since
then frequently employed this decorative method in their architecture. Prisse asserts that wood
lambrequins offer more originality and flexibility than gypsum arabesques. These cut wood pieces
would have been used to border overhanging roofs or the balustrades of terraces. They were
employed to mask awkward or abrupt transitions wherever it was not possible to use stone,
bronze, or plaster.
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Kufic writing, a derivative of the equally angular Syriac script, was used in the earliest stages of Islam. Kufic, initially associated with the
copying of Qurans, was reserved for that purpose and architectural decorations. The role of writing in the development of Islamic
architecture was critical as it afforded structures a new system of symbols. A significant characteristic of calligraphic scripts is their
adaptability. Shapes and sizes can be compressed and given a rounded form to fit on the face of a circular coin or stretched out and
given an angular form to follow the surface of a rectangular page. The script itself can absorb a variety of motifs, thus further blurring
the distinction between it and the decoration.
XXX &> XXXI. Comparative writing of various periods: Kufic &> rectangular Kufic
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Islamic Art in Cairo Supplementary Plates
Thuluth (which literally means 'one third' and denves its name from the principle that a third of each letter should
slope) is a dynamic and ornamental script with well-formed letters that emphasize vertical and horizontal
movements, which are easily contrasted with the masculine appearance and straight lines of the Kufic below.
Individual scripts can be endlessly modified or adapted to all kinds of surfaces, from parchment to paper to stone
and metal. By twisting, braiding, and ornamenting the ends of stems of certain letters, such as alif and lam, a whole
range of decorative features are added to the script. Although modified and lightened, the Kufic still provides
contrast for the Thuluth, which dances on the page.
XXXII &> XXXIII. Comparative writing of various periods: Kufic & Thuluth
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Islamic Art in Cairo List of Plates
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Islamic Art in Cairo List of Plates
83. Muristan ofQalawaun, details of beams andfriez.es, 13th century. 121. Mosque ofAqsunqur, tiled pseudo-mihrab, 17th century.
84. Muristan ofQalawaun, carvings on main interior door, 13th century. 122. Mosque ofAqsunqur, tiled panel, 17th century.
85. Mosque of al-Nafsi Qaysun, ornamental details of the minbar, 123. Tekiya of the Dervishes, wall tiles, 17th century.
14th century. 124. Tekiya of the Dervishes, wall tiles, 17th century.
86. Mosque ofal-Nafsi Qaysun, details of mihrab woodwork, 14th century. 125. Tekiya of the Dervishes, glazed tile tympanum and borders of an
87. Mosque ofal-Nafsi Qaysun, details of minbar decoration, 14th century. arcade, 17th century.
88. Mosque ofal-Nafsi Qaysun, minbar, 14th century. 126. Bayt al-Emir,wall tiles, 17th century.
89. Mosque ofQaitbay, elevation of the minbar door and side view, 127. Glazed tiles, 18th century.
15th century. 128. Shayfehun mosque, wall tiles, 18th century.
90. Mosque ofal-SalihTala'i, details of the minbar, 13th century. 129. Sabil Abd al-Rahman Katkhuda, wall tiles, 18th century.
91. Mosque ofal-Salih Tala'i, details of the minbar, 13th century. 130. Studies ofleaves and floral ornaments painted on tile.
92. Mosque of al-Salih Tala'i, assemblage of details from the minbar, 131. Oval panel in tile.
13th century. 132. Wall tilesfrom a hanout.
93. Tomb of Sultan Qansuh al-Ghuri, carved wooden leaves on a cabinet, 133. Sula_yman Pasha mosque, crown of the minbar door, 18th century.
16th century. Mashrabiya & Lattice Work
94. Niches and assembled wooden borders. 134. Bayt al-Emir, interior mashrabiya, 18th century.
Doors 135. Mashrabiya, ensemble &• details.
95. Mosque of al-Salih Tala'ijront & back of main door, 12th century. 136. Mashrabiya with Ku/ic inscriptions.
96. Madrasa of Sultan Barquq, interior door, 14th century. 137. Mashrabiya windows, ensemble, & details.
97. Sidi Yusef house, interior door, 18th century (left) <S- mosque of Barquq, 138. Mashrabiya, sections <S-/ragments.
bronze door, 14th century (right). Interiors
98. Mosque of Ylgai al-Yusufi mosque, exterior door, 14th century. 139. Sidi Yusef Adami house, upstairs salon.
99. TombofSalih Najm al-Din, leavesofa chest and a window shutter; 140. Sidi Yusef Adami house, wet nurse's chamber.
13th century.
141. Sidi Yusef Adami house, mandara.
100. Mosque of Sidi Yusef Ylmas, main door, 14th century.
142. Husni Ahmad a!-Burda_yni house, 17th century.
101. Mosque ofQaitbay, decoration on doors & cabinets, 15th century
102. Tombo/Sultan Qansuh al-Ghuri, inner door, 16th century. Glasswork
103. Bayt al-Emir, ensemble &• details of a small door, 16th century. 143. Madrasa of Sultan Barquq, lamp in enameled glass, 14th century.
104. Sulayman Pasha mosque, leaves of a shutter & a cabinet, 16th century. 144. Sayyida Zaynab mosque, shamsa or stained glass window with
105. Sabil Abd al-Rahman Katkhuda, door, 18th century. perforated plaster, 14th century.
106. A!-Khanqa mosque, details of a door, 18th century. 145. Madrasa of Barquq, shamsa or colored glass window with perforated
107. Door knockers &• handles, various periods. plaster, 14th century.
146. Vase inglazedglass,16th century.
Faience
108. Shayfehun mosque, mihrab wall tiles, 14th century. Carpets & Tapestries
109. Shaykhun mosque, mihrab wall tiles, 14th century. 147. Tapestry, 12th century.
110. Wall tiles, borders, 16th century. 148. Silk tapestry, conserved in Toulouse, 10th century.
111. Wall tiles, panel depicting the Ka'aba and its surroundings, 16th 149. Fragment of a tapestry, conserved in the cathedral of Nivelles, Belgium,
century. 14th century.
112. Wall tiles of a kiosk, 16th century. 150. Small velvety ushafe carpet, 7 4th century.
113. Wall tiles,MahuBek kiosk, 16thcentury. 151. Textile, conserved at the Ut :cht Museum, 14th century.
114. Mosque ofQus, tiled tympanum, 16th century. 152. Quiver and bow case, 16tr. entury.
115. Mosque ofQus, tile-work decoration, 16th century. 153. Large velvety carpet, 18th :ntury.
116. Palace of Ismail Bek, wall tiles, 16th century. 154. Haifa tapestry for cover .g wall panels, 18th century.
117. Radwan Palace, wall tiles, 17th century. Arms &• Armor
118. Radwan Palace, wall tiles, 17th century. 155. Arms ofTumanbay, e1 ,emble 6- details, 16th century.
119. Mosque ofAqsunqur, wall tiles, 17th century. 156. Armor/or a horse's lead
120. Mosque ofAqsunqur, wall tiles, 17th century.
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