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Creator

Denis Baly

Creation Year

January 1967

Image ID

B.071

Alternate Identifier

B02.071

Subcollection

B: Mosques of Isfahan

Abstract

Pointed barrel-vaults opening onto the adjacent courtyard of the madrasa of the Shah Mosque. -MA

Description

Barrel-vaulted arcade in the courtyard of one of the madrasas of the Shah Mosque. "The domed sanctuary [of the Shah Mosque] is flanked by rectangular chambers, which are covered by eight domes and serve as winter prayer halls. These halls in turn lead to rectangular courts surrounded by arcades, which serve as madrasas" (Blair and Bloom, 189). This is what Robert Hillenbrand says about these madrasas: "The two madrasas in the Masjid-i-Shah are longitudinally conceived and with their miniature garden courtyards make a delightfully bijou impression. They dispense with iwans and with prayer chambers, presumably because both features were readily at hand in the mosque proper. Instead they exploit the available space to the full for student cells" (Hillenbrand, 234). -MA

References

Blair, Sheila S., and Jonathan M. Bloom. The Art and Architecture of Islam: 1250–1800. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1994. ; Hillenbrand, Robert. Islamic Architecture: Form, function and meaning. New York: Columbia University Press, 1994.

Image Notes

Photograph created 1967. Photograph processed September 1967. Formerly cataloged as B.02.071. Notes written on the slide or index: Masjid-i-Shah.

Image Format

35 mm slide

Geographic Reference

Isfahan, Iran

Keywords

Vaulting, Arches, Pointed Arches, Columns, Engaged Columns, Tiles, Seventeenth Century, Safavid, Shah Mosque of Isfahan

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Rights Statement

In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted