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Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque

Coordinates: 32°39′26″N 51°40′44″E / 32.65722°N 51.67889°E / 32.65722; 51.67889
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Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque
Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque in Naqsh-e-Jahan Square
Religion
AffiliationShia Islam
ProvinceIsfahan Province
Location
LocationIsfahan, Iran
MunicipalityIsfahan County
Geographic coordinates32°39′26″N 51°40′44″E / 32.65722°N 51.67889°E / 32.65722; 51.67889
Architecture
Architect(s)Ustad Mohammad Reza Isfahani
TypeMosque
StyleIsfahani[1]
Completed1619
Specifications
Dome(s)1
Dome dia. (outer)13 m
Minaret(s)0

Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque (Template:Lang-fa)[2] is one of the architectural masterpieces of Safavid Iranian architecture, standing on the eastern side of Naghsh-i Jahan Square, Isfahan, Iran.

Construction of the mosque started in 1603 and was finished in 1619. It was built by the chief architect Shaykh Bahai, during the reign of Shah Abbas I of the Safavid dynasty.

History

Entrance door leading from the L-shaped vestibule into the mosque.

Of the four monuments that dominated the perimeter of the Naqsh-e Jahan Square, this one was the first to be built.

The purpose of this mosque was for it to be a private mosque of the royal court, unlike the Masjed-e Shah, which was meant for the public.[3] For this reason, the mosque does not have any minarets and is of a smaller size. Indeed, few Westerners at the time of the Safavids even paid any attention to this mosque, and they certainly did not have access to it. It wasn't until centuries later, when the doors were opened to the public, that ordinary people could admire the effort that Shah Abbas had put into making this a sacred place for the ladies of his harem, and the exquisite tile- work, which is far superior to those covering the Shah Mosque.

To avoid having to walk across the maydān when getting to the mosque, Shah Abbas had the architect build a tunnel spanning across the piazza, from the Ali Qapu palace, to the mosque. When reaching the entrance of the mosque, one would have to walk through a passage that winds round and round, until one finally reaches the main building. Along this passage there were standing guards, and the obvious purpose of this design was for the women of the harem to be shielded as much as possible from anyone entering the building.[4] At the main entrance of the mosque there were also standing guards, and the doors of the building were kept closed at all times. Today, these doors are open to visitors, and the passage traversing underneath the field is no longer in use.

Sheikh Lutfallah

Throughout history, this mosque has been referred to by different names. For Junabadi it was the mosque with the great dome (Masjed-e qubbat-e ’azim) and the domed mosque (qubbat masjed), while contemporary historian Iskandar Munshi named it the mosque of great purity and beauty.[5] On the other hand, European travellers, such as Jean Chardin referred to the mosque using the current name, and Arabic inscriptions within the mosque, done by calligrapher Baqir Banai, also include the name of Sheikh Lutfallah. In addition, the reckonings of Muhibb Ali Beg, the imperial treasure holderer, show that the Imam's salary came directly from the imperial household resources. All this suggests that not only was the building indeed named after Sheikh Lutfallah, but also, that this famous imam was among the first prayer leaders for the royal court in this very mosque.[6]

Architecture

Showing the entrance and the dome which does not stand directly behind the entrance, but is offset to the south.
The dome does not stand directly behind the entrance, but is offset to the south.

The entry gateway, like those of the Grand Bazaar and the Masjed-e Shah, was a recessed half-moon. Also, like in the Masjed-e Shah, the lower facade of the mosque and the gateway are constructed of marble, while the haft-rangi tiles (هفت‌رنگی, lit. "seven-coloured", "polychrome mosaics") decorate the upper parts of the structure.[7] Creation of the calligraphy and tiles, which exceed, in both beauty and quality, anything created beforehand in the Islamic world, was overseen by Master calligrapher Ali Reza Abbasi.

The monument's architect was Mohammad-Reza Isfahani, who solved the problem of the difference between the direction of qibla and gateway of the building by devising an L-shaped connecting vestibule between the entrance and the enclosure. Reza Abbasi's inscription on the entry gateway gives the date of the start of construction.[8] The north-south orientation of the Maydan does not agree with south-west direction of qibla; it is set at 45 degrees to it.[9] This feature, called pāshnah (پاشنه) in Persian architecture,[10] has caused to standing the dome not directly behind the entrance iwan (see picture).[9]

Its single-shell dome is 13 m in diameter.[11] The exterior side is richly covered with tiles.[9]

Compared with the Shah Mosque, the design of the Sheikh Lotf Allah Mosque is quite simple, there is no courtyard and there are no interior iwans. The building itself consists of a flattened dome resting on a square dome chamber.[12] Though, in contranst to the simple structure of this mosque, the decoration of both interior and exterior is exceedingly complex,[13] and in its construction the finest materials were used and the most talented craftsmen employed. Robert Byron wrote about this sight: I know of no finer example of the Persian Islamic genius than the interior of the dome:

The interior of the dome which is inset with a network of lemon-shaped compartments, which increase in size as they descend from a formalised peacock at the pattern inlaid on plain stucco
The interior side of the dome. The decoration seems to lead the eye upwards toward its center, as the rings of ornamental bands filled with arabesque patterns become smaller and smaller.[13]

The dome is inset with a network of lemon-shaped compartments, which decrease in size as they ascend towards the formalised peacock at the apex... The mihrāb in the west wall is enamelled with tiny flowers on a deep blue meadow. Each part of the design, each plane, each repetition, each separate branch or blossom has its own sombre beauty. But the beauty of the whole comes as you move. Again, the highlights are broken by the play of glazed and unglazed surfaces; so that with every step they rearrange themselves in countless shining patterns... I have never encountered splendour of this kind before.[14]

The "peacock" at the center of the interior side of the dome is one of the unique characteristics of the mosque. If you stand at the entrance gate of the inner hall and look at the center of the dome, a peacock, whose tail is the sunrays coming in from the hole in the ceiling, can be seen.

Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque

At the interior side of the dome, the aethetic purpose of the long, low, gloomy passage leading to the dome chamber becomes evident, for it is with a sense of heightened anticipation that one enters the sanctuary. Lowness gives way to soaring height and gloom is dispelled by the steady illumination of nearly a score of windows.[15]

B. Barbara has described it in this way: "the turquoise cable moudling of an arch is seen below the dome, in which concentric rings of thirty-two lozenges diminish in size as they approach a centre which gives an impression of luminosity. The design, which suggests both movement and stillness, is a powerful though not an explicit vehicle of religious symbolism, speaking of the harmony of the universe. ... The support system of dome is illustrated by eight great arches of turquoise tilework in cable form which rise from a low dado to the full height of the wall, four in the position of squinches and four against the side walls; between them are kite-shaped squinches-pendentives. Within the dome, ranks of units of tilework of ogee-mandorla form are set in a lattice of plain brick and diminish in size until they meet a central sunbrust patterned with a tracery of arabesque".[9]

The structure of the dome of Lotfollah mosque and that of Blue mosque of Tabriz is believed to be derived from that of Shah Vali mosque of Taft, Yazd.[16]

The tiling design of this mosque, as well as that of Shah mosque and other Persian mosques of even before Safavid period, seems to be not completely symmetrical – particlularly, in colors of patterns. They have been described as intentional, "symmetrical" asymmetries.[17]

Architects of the complex were Sheikh Baha'i (chief architect) and Ustad Mohammad Reza Isfahani.[1]

The building was completed in 1618 (1028 AH).[18]

Art

The Ardabil Carpet. The design is derived from the interior side of the dome of Shekh Lotfollah Mosque.

Design of Ardabil rugs (such as the Ardabil Carpet) was from the same concept as that of the interior side of the dome.[19] Also design of the "Carpet of Wonders", which will be the biggest carpet of the world, is based on the interior design of the dome.[20] It has been suggested that concepts of the mystic philosopher Suhrawardi about the unity of existence was possibly related to this pattern at the interior side of the dome.[21][22] Ali Reza Abbasi, the leading calligrapher at the court of Shah Abbas, has decorated the entrance, above the door, with majestic inscriptions with the names and titles of Shah Abbas, the Husayni and the Musavi, that is, the descendants of Imams Husayn and Musa.[23]

The inscriptions of the Mosque reflect matters that were preoccupying the shah around the time it was built; namely the need to define Twelver Shiism in contrast to Sunni Islam, and the Persian resistance to Ottoman invasion. The running inscription in white tile on blue ground on the exterior drum of the dome, visible to the public, consists of three suras (chapters) from the Quran; al- Shams (91, The Sun), al-Insan (76, Man) and al-Kauthar (108, Abundance). The suras emphasize the rightness of a pure soul and the fate in hell of those who reject God’s way, most likely referring to the Ottoman Turks.[24]

Entering the prayer chamber, one is confronted with walls covered with blue, yellow, turquoise and white tiles with intricate arabesque patterns. Quranic verses appear in each corner while the east and west walls contain poetry by Shaykh Bahai. Around the mihrab are the names of the Twelve Shi’i Imams, and the inscription contains the names of Shaykh Lutfallah, Ostad Muahmmad Reza Isfahani (the engineer), and Baqir al- Banai (the calligrapher who wrote it).

Turning right at the entrance to the domed prayer chamber, one first encounters the full text of Sura 98, al- Bayyina, the Clear Proof. The message of this chapter is that clear evidence of the true scripture was not available to the People of the Book (i.e. Christians or Jews) until God sent his messenger Muhammad. The horizontal band of script at the bottom of the arch is not Quranic, but states that God’s blessings are on the (Shi’i) martyrs. Thus, Shi’i invocation echoes the Quranic verses in its stress on the truthfulness of God’s message.[25]

The poem of Shaykh Bahai on the right wall prays for help from the Fourteen Immaculate Ones (Muhammad, Fatima and the Twelve Imams), while the inscriptions on the interior of the dome emphasize the virtues of charity, prayer and honesty, as well as the correctness of following Islam and its prophets versus the error of other religions.

The specifically Shi’i passages and their prominent placement in the mihrab, on the two lateral walls and in the horizontal bands of each corner, underscore the pre- eminence of this creed in Safavid Iran.

The fact that two poems by Shaykh Bahai, a devoted Sufi, grace the walls of Shah Abbas’ private mosque, proves that, although some Sufi elements in the empire were suppressed, Sufism as a general phenomenon continued to play an important role in the Safavid society.[26]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Āzarnoush, Āzartāsh. "اصفهان". Encyclopaedia Islamica (in Persian). Tehran: Center for the Great Islamic Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2012-04-07. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Also transliterated as Lotfallah, Lotf Allah, Lutfullah, Lutfallah, Lutf Allah
  3. ^ Ferrier, R. W.; A Journey to Persia, Jean Chardin's Portrait of a Seventeenth-century Empire; p. 53, p.143
  4. ^ http://www.kulturreiser.no/reisene/iran0411.asp
  5. ^ Blake, Stephen P.; Half the World, The Social Architecture of Safavid Isfahan, 1590- 1722; p. 149
  6. ^ Blake; p 149
  7. ^ Blake; p. 148
  8. ^ Blake; p. 147
  9. ^ a b c d Brend, Barbara (1991). Islamic Art. Harvard University Press. p. 153. ISBN 0-674-46866-X. Retrieved 2012-04-07.
  10. ^ مسجد شیخ لطف الله (in Persian). IRIB. Retrieved 2012-04-07. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ L. Baker, Patricia; Smith, Hilary (2009). Iran (3 ed.). Bradt Travel Guides. p. 107. ISBN 1-84162-289-3. Retrieved 2012-04-07.
  12. ^ Savory, Roger; Iran Under the Safavids; p. 163
  13. ^ a b Savory, Roger (1976). Introduction to Islamic Civilisation (10 ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 94. ISBN 0-521-09948-X. Retrieved 2012-04-07.
  14. ^ Byron, Robert; The Road to Oxiana; p. 177- 8
  15. ^ Jackson, Peter; Lockhart, Laurence, eds. (1986). "Safavid Architecture". The Cambridge History of Iran: The Timurid and Safavid Periods. Cambridge University Press. p. 785. ISBN 0-521-24699-7. Retrieved 2012-04-07.
  16. ^ Jaʿfari, Shivā. "تفت". Encyclopaedia Islamica (in Persian). Tehran: Center for the Great Islamic Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2012-04-07. اهمیت این مسجد بیشتر از جهت گنبد و مقصورۀ آن است که می‌توان ساختمان گنبد مسجدکبود در تبریز و شیخ لطف‌الله در اصفهان را تقلیدی از این بنا دانست. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  17. ^ Soleymāni, Amin (2007). اشاره‌ای به بی‌قرینگی در نقوش کاشی‌کاری دو مسجد امام و شیخ لطف الله اصفهان. Âyene-ye Khiâl (in Persian) (2). Iranian Academy of the Arts: 6–17. Retrieved 2012-04-07. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  18. ^ Holt, P. M.; Lambton, Ann K. S.; Lewis, Bernard (1977). The Cambridge History of Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 737. ISBN 0-521-29138-0. Retrieved 2012-04-07.
  19. ^ مسجد شیخ لطف الله (in Persian). isfahanportal.ir. Retrieved 2012-04-07. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  20. ^ فرش ایرانی (in Persian). Aftab Magazine. Retrieved 2012-04-07. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  21. ^ Khosravi, Shahnāz. گزارش ميزگرد "ضرورت تدوين و تأليف كتب در مباني حكمي و فلسفي هنر" (in Persian). Iranian Academy of the Arts. Retrieved 2012-04-07. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |trans_title= (help)
  22. ^ Canby, Sheila R.; Shah Abbas, The Remaking of Iran, pp. 28- 35
  23. ^ Canby; p.28
  24. ^ Canby; p. 30
  25. ^ Canby; p.30
  26. ^ Canby; p.33