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Essential
Architecture- Uzbekistan
Gur-i-Amir |
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architect
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location
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Samarkand |
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date
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1404 |
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style
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Islamic Timurid |
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construction
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type
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Mosque |
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View
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Plan |
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Timur built this celebrated monument as the resting place of his grandson
and heir-presumptive Muhammad Sultan, who died in battle in 1403 at the
age of 29. In 1405 Timur himself was interred here, and later so too
were his sons Miranshah and Shah Rukh and grandson, Pir Muhammad.
Timur's spiritual advisor, Sayyid Barakah, also lies within. Ulugh Beg,
who had established the tomb as the Timurid dynastic mausoleum and
commissioned additions, was the last of the family to be placed within
the crypt.
The mausoleum was constructed on the southern side of a walled
square courtyard already defined on two sides by a madrasa and khanaqah,
no longer extant. Minarets marked each corner of the courtyard, two of
which remain in part. The plan of the mausoleum forms a modified octagon
on the exterior: a projecting entrance portal extends the northern side
of the octagon, decreasing in length the two flanking sides. A bulbous
ribbed dome on a tight high drum presents a monumental profile visible
across the city.
The interior comprises a square chamber, a bay on each wall, a
stairway in the southeast corner that leads to the cruciform crypt, an
octagonal zone of transition and an unusually steep hemispheric dome.
Vertical flanges linked with timber are concealed between the two shells
of the dome, supported by the inner dome and providing structure for the
outer dome; an invisible 'column' built on top of the center point of
the inner dome terminates in angled timber prongs that also support the
outer dome.
In 1424 Ulugh Beg added a corridor known as his 'gallery',
entered through the eastern bay of the mausoleum. Four vaulted bays form
the corridor, leading to a small vestibule accessed from the courtyard.
In the seventeenth century construction of an iwan on the western side
of the mausoleum commenced, but remained unfinished.
The exceptional interior decorative scheme employs luxurious
materials and a wealth of techniques. Onyx hexagons form a dado, capped
by a shallow cornice of marble muqarnas. Above this, a gold inscription
band painted onto jasper encircles the mausoleum. Constituting one of
the earliest examples of this technique, papier mache was employed
extensively; the interior dome, the zone of transition and the muqarnas
vaults of the four bays were all decorated with painted molded paper.
Other areas were plastered and painted, or covered with a revetment of
various materials.
The exterior decoration employs extensive hazarbaf brickwork. The
dome is tiled in two tones of blue. Bands of tile inscriptions encircle
the drum; a monumental kufic inscription of white and black tiles
repeats "God is eternal".
Sources:
Blair, S. and J. M. Bloom. 1994. The Art and Architecture of
Islam. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 41.
Brandenburg, D. 1972. Samarkand: Studien zur islamischen Baukunst
in Uzbekistan (Zentralasien). Berlin: Bruno Hessling Verlag, 102-141.
Golombek, L. and D. Wilber, eds. 1988. The Timurid Architecture
of Iran and Turan. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 260-263.
Michell, G. 1995. Architecture of the Islamic World. London:
Thames and Hudson, 262.
"Guri Amir Mausoleum". World Monuments Fund Panographies.
http://www.world-heritage-tour.org/asia/uz/samarkand/guriAmirMausoleum_out.html.
[Accessed February 2, 2006]
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links
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Special thanks to the Islamic architecture website
http://archnet.org/ |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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