Qayrawān

Qayrawān
Author: William Gallois
Publisher: Penn State Press
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2024-04-04
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0271096160

In the last years of the nineteenth century, the Tunisian city of Qayrawān suddenly found itself covered in murals. Concentrated on and around the city’s Great Mosque, these monumental artworks were only visible for about fifty years, from the 1880s through the 1930s. This book investigates the fascinating history of who created these outdoor paintings and why. Using visual archaeological methods, William Gallois reconstructs the visual history of these works and vividly brings them back to life. He locates pictorial records of the murals from the backdrops of photographs, postcards, and other forms of European ephemera. In Qayrawān, he identifies a form of religious painting that transposed traditional aesthetic forms such as house decoration, embroidery, and tattooing—which lay exclusively within the domains of women—onto the body of a conquered city. Gallois argues that these works were created by women as a form of “emergency art,” intended to offer amuletic protection for the community, and demonstrates how they differ markedly from “classical” Islamic antecedents and modern modes of Arab cultural production in the Middle East and North Africa. Based on extensive archival research, this study is both a record of a unique moment in the history of art and a challenge to rethink the spiritual force and agency of a group of anonymous female artists whose paintings aspired to help save the world at a time of great peril. It will be welcomed by scholars of art history, Islamic studies, Middle East studies, and the history of magic.

The Jews of Arab Lands

The Jews of Arab Lands
Author: Norman A. Stillman
Publisher: Jewish Publication Society
Total Pages: 540
Release: 1979
Genre: Arab countries
ISBN: 9780827611559

ليبيا البيزنطية و اندفاع العرب نحو شمال أفريقيا

ليبيا البيزنطية و اندفاع العرب نحو شمال أفريقيا
Author: Vassilios Christides
Publisher: British Archaeological Reports Oxford Limited
Total Pages: 172
Release: 2000
Genre: History
ISBN:

A detailed study of Byzantine Africa and its conquest by the Arabs beginning in 641/642. Professor Christides assesses the political situation on the eve of the first Arab raid, the raids themselves and the sources available for studying them, as well as the causes and consequences of the Byzantine loss of North Africa and the integration of Arabic and Islamic cultures. The study focuses primarily on the regions of Cyrenaica, Tripolitania and Fezzan (roughly modern-day Libya).

The History of an Islamic School of Law

The History of an Islamic School of Law
Author: Nurit Tsafrir
Publisher: Islamic Legal Studies Program @ Harvard Law School
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2004
Genre: History
ISBN:

So closely is the early development of the Hanafi school interwoven with non-legal spheres--the political, social, and theological--that its study is essential to a proper understanding of medieval Islamic history. Tsafrir offers a thorough examination of the first century and a half of the school's existence, the period during which it took shape.

African Architecture

African Architecture
Author: Nnamdi Elleh
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing
Total Pages: 410
Release: 1997
Genre: Architecture
ISBN:

Provides an extraordinary account of the evolution, transformation and development of architecture across this continent. It is examined and evaluated from a wide range of ethnic, climatic, political economic and religious factors.

Minaret, Symbol of Islam

Minaret, Symbol of Islam
Author: Jonathan M. Bloom
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 224
Release: 1989
Genre: Architecture
ISBN:

Using buildings, archaeological reports, medieval histories, geographies and early Arabic poetry, this book reinterprets the origin, development and meanings of the minaret. explaining how the tower became identified with Islam. Bloom shows how the introduction of the tower into the mosque marked a major shift in the iconography of architecture and how the tower, once a sign of political and royal power, became associated with religious architecture. Charting the spread of the minaret throughout the Islamic lands until its universal acceptance as a sign, Bloom concludes with an overview of subsequent developments once the minaret had become the symbol of Islam.