Badr al-Jamālī and the Mosques of Aswan

New Considerations Based on a Building Inscription from the Museum für Islamische Kunst in Berlin

https://doi.org/10.34780/fb6q-hqv5

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Abstract

The article revisits the discourse on the impact of Badr al-Jamālī on the construction of minarets and mosques in Upper Egypt and substantiates this with regional evidence based on a building inscription of a mosque in Aswan. The inscription, currently housed in the Museum für Islamische Kunst in Berlin, dates from the year A.H. 491/1098 C.E. It is argued that the builder of the mosque, who can be identified as a high-ranking official in Upper Egypt, had affiliations with Badr al-Jamālī and his son through patronage. In addition, the paper publishes for the first time the brick band inscription on the so-called Ṭābiya minaret, a tower from the Fatimid era that was demolished in 2021 for unknown reasons without any historical building documentation. At the end of the article, the earliest datable mosque (318/930) and minaret are identified for Aswan.

Schlagwörter:

Badr al-Jamālī, Aswan, mosque, minaret, Ṭābiya tower

Veröffentlicht

2024-10-18

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Artikel

Bibliographische Daten & Rezensionen

Zitationsvorschlag

Schmidt, S. (2024) “Badr al-Jamālī and the Mosques of Aswan: New Considerations Based on a Building Inscription from the Museum für Islamische Kunst in Berlin”, Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts Kairo, 79, pp. 1–18 (§). doi:10.34780/fb6q-hqv5.