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Creator

Denis Baly

Creation Year

1967

Image ID

AP.022

Alternate Identifier

B41.022

Subcollection

AP: Central Turkey

Abstract

Low relief stone carving at the Gök Medrese in Sivas, Turkey. Stone was the preferred building material in Anatolian Seljuk architecture - SK.

Description

Construction of the Gök Medrese in Sivas, Turkey, was begun for the vizier Fakhreddin Sahip Ata by the architect Kaluyan al-Qunawi in 1271. This façade is one of the earliest twin-minaret facades in Turkey. The façade (see AP.015) consists of stone carvings in high-relief derived in part from Syrian models and in part from local sources. The medrese followed a traditional four-iwan open court related to Syrian and farther eastern types. - SK

Image Notes

Creation date unknown. Photograph processed September 1967. Formerly catalogued as B41.022, AP.021. Notes written on the slide or index: Gök Medresi.

Image Format

35 mm slide

Geographic Reference

Sivas, Turkey

Keywords

Stone, Carving, Thirteenth Century, Seljuk

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Rights Statement

In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted