The art and architecture of Islam, 650-1250
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The art and architecture of Islam, 650-1250
(Yale University Press Pelican history of art)
Yale University Press, 1994, c1987
New impression
- : pbk
Available at 14 libraries
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Note
Originally published: Harmondsworth : Penguin , 1987
Includes bibliographical notes (p. [387]-413), bibliography (p. [415]-428), and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Prophet's own house at Madina and the Ka'ba at Mecca stand at the beginning of this account of the earlier treasures of Muslim art and architecture from 650-1250, the history, culture and arts of the period are integrated and allowed to shed light one upon another.
Table of Contents
- Part 1 The caliphate: the rise of Islam and the artistic climate of the period
- the Umayyads and their art 650-750 - the dome of the rock, early congregational, the mosques of al-Walid, secular buildings, the decorative arts
- the Abbasid tradition 750-950 - architecture and architectural decoration, the decorative arts, the art of the book, painting. Part 2 The breakdown of the caliphate: the Muslim west 750-1260 - architecture - the Umayyads of Spain 750-1009, North Africa and Spain 1009-1260
- the decorative arts
- the Fatimids in North Africa and Egypt 910-1171 - architecture - North Africa, Egypt until 1060, Egypt 1060-1171
- the decorative arts
- Iran and central Asia 800-1025 - architecture - mosques, mausoleums, secular buildings
- the decorative arts
- painting. Part 3 The 11th to 13th centuries: architecture - Iran and Central Asia - the monuments, mosques, mausoleums, towers and minarets, secular archiecture
- materials and techniques of construction - materials, vaults and domes, the minaret, the pishtaq, the court and four iwans
- architectural decoration - techniques, themes
- India
- Iraq
- Northern Mesopotamia
- Syria and Egypt - the monuments, construction and decoration
- Anatolia - the monuments, construction and decoration
- the decorative arts - decorative themes, technical complexity, the Turks, the arts of the Book
- Iran - textiles, metalwork, pottery and tiles, the arts of the Book
- Iraq and the Jazira
- Syria - woodwork, metalwork, pottery, glass, manuscript illustration
- Anatolia.
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