A Carved Wooden Door from Kayseri
https://doi.org/10.25281/2072-3156-2021-18-1-44-54
Abstract
The article deals with a little-known mo- nument of Seljuk woodcarving — a door from an ancient Friday mosque (Jami-i Kebir) in Kayseri (Turkey). The carved door, exhibited now in the Ankara Museum of Ethnography, has not yet been the subject of a comprehensive publication. Therefore, this artifact belongs to the group of Anatolian Seljuk woodcarvings, made in the 12th — early 13th centuries, that have a special significance. As rare monuments of Islamic art of the pre-Mongol Middle East, they stood at the origins of the blooming of Anatolian Seljuk art that would occur some decades later.
The door was ordered and installed during the Jami-i Kebir mosque renovation, carried out in the second reign of the Seljuk Sultan Giyseddin I Kayhosrov (1205—1211), on the instructions of one of his emirs — Muzaffar al-din Mahmud son of Yagy-Basan, a descendant of the Danishmendid dynasty. The article considers the door’s ornamental decoration, organized as a classic “mihrab” composition, in a set of technical and stylistic aspects. For a comparative analysis, the author inspects a wide range of woodcarvings of the 11th—13th centuries from Anatolia and Iran. The close resemblance of used techniques and decoration, as well as motifs, ornamental themes and epigraphy makes it possible to suggest that the cabinet maker Ibrahim son of Abu-Bakr al-Rumi, who left his signature on the Minbar of the Alaaddin Mosque in Ankara Fortress, could be the author of the magnificent carved door from Kayseri’ Jami-i Kebir.
About the Author
Liliya I. SattarovaNational Museum of the Republic of Tatarstan
Russian Federation
National Museum of the Republic of Tatarstan,
2, Kremlevskaya Str., Kazan, 420111, Russia
ORCID 0000-0003-4062-9113; SPIN 4252-9845
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- Carved wooden architectural elements and utensils were an integral and important part of the artistic identity of the Muslim religious architecture of the medieval Anatolia.
- One of the few rare monuments of the Seljuk woodcarving of the 12th – early 13th century that survived to our time is the door of the Jami-I Kebir in Kayseri.
- The intricacies of the carving, along with the epigraphics, the geometric grids, and the stylized floral motifs present an outstanding example of the Islamic ornamental art.
- The study of this lesser-known piece of woodcarving allows to connect it to the works of a prominent artist of the Ankara school of woodcarving, the master of the Alaaddin Mosque Minbar in the Ankara Fortress.
Review
For citations:
Sattarova L.I. A Carved Wooden Door from Kayseri. Observatory of Culture. 2021;18(1):44-54. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.25281/2072-3156-2021-18-1-44-54