The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus: Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam 1909942456, 9781909942455

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Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved. George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:46:16.

Gingko Library Art Series

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Editor: Melanie Gibson

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:46:16.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved. George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:46:16.

ALAIN GEORGE

The

UMAYYAD MOSQUE of DAMASCUS

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:46:16.

Contents

2. Tangled Memories: The Temple, Church, and First Mosque The Cella of the Roman Temple

Acknowledgements

Introduction: A Day in the Life of Damascus The Story So Far The Present Book

1. Palimpsests in Stone and Layered Texts: The Multiple Histories of the Umayyad Mosque

6

11

12 15

19

The Mosque and its Historiography until the Ottoman Era

20

The Syrian Historiographical Tradition

22

Early Travel Relations and Geographical Works

23

The Mosque in the Abbasid and Fatimid Periods

24

The Fire of 1069 and the Later History of the Mosque

25

The Mosque since the Nineteenth Century

29 29

The Earliest Photographs of the Mosque

30

Restorations of the 1920s to 1960s

36

Photographs of the 1920s to 1940s

38

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

The Fire of 1893

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:47:53.

43

44

Layout of the Site

44

The 1962–63 Soundings

46

Identification of the Remains

48

Footprint of the Cella

51

Cella Elevation and Proportions

52

The Church within the Temenos and the First Mosque

53

Textual Narratives of Conversion

54

An Elusive Church

56

Location of the Church

57

The First Mosque and the Gate of the Khaḍrāʾ

59

The Church and the Cella

63

3. The Politics of Buildings: The Destruction of the Church and Construction of the Mosque

71

The Three Poems, the Foundation Inscription, and the Destruction of the Church

72

The Destruction as Divine Wisdom

72

The Church, Justinian II, and Maslama’s Anatolian Campaigns

74

The (Lost) Foundation Inscription and the Date of the Mosque

76

The Aphrodito Papyri and the Logistics of Construction

77

Supply Networks for Labour and Materials

77

Construction Supervisors

79

Beyond Aphrodito

81

Justinian II and Umayyad Building Projects

82

Gethsemane and the Columns of Mecca

82

Justinian II and the Mosque of Damascus

85

The Byzantine Mosaicists at Medina

87

The Banū Manṣūr Between the Umayyads and Heraclians

88

4. Silenced and Imagined Pasts: The Church in the Fabric of the Umayyad Mosque

6. ‘Jewelled Embellishments Dazzle’: The Mosque and Umayyad Aesthetics

185

The Novelty of al-Wal d’s Building

186

95

Embodying Power

186

The Transept

95

Work Procedures

186

The Corner Towers

97

The Mosque Doors

100

Inventing the Relics of the Baptist

102

Absence of the Relics in Christian Sources

102

Muslim Traditions About the Relics

103

The Origins of the Bayt al-M l

Scattered Echoes of the Church in the Mosque

Reshaping Building Types

187

Recasting Mosaic Forms

190

Poetic Composition and the Mosque

199

Mosaics, Empire and Polysemy

204

Paradise and Earthly Dominion

204

The Horizon of Judgement

206

109

The Art of Polysemy

207

The Bayt al-Māl in Arabic Sources

109

The Bayt al-Māl and the Typology of the Baptistery

112

The Craft of Perception

209

Al-Nābigha and the Intensity of Sacred Space

209

The Mosque as a Foil for the Qurʾan

210

5. A Vast Expanse of Splendour: Towards a Reconstruction of the Umayyad Mosque

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93

117



Appendix 1

Structure

118

Three Umayyad Poems about the Mosque of Damascus and the Destruction of the Church

Courtyard Arcades

118

Arabic Text and Translation by Nadia Jamil

Prayer Hall Arcades

125

The Transept

130

The Dome

135

Prayer Hall Façade

137

Windows and Door Hangings

139

Pavement and Floor Levels

142

The Bayt al-Māl Chamber

142

Merlons

147

Jar r Al-Farazdaq Al-N bigha al-Shayb n



214 218 222

Appendix 2

Roofing

150

Columns and Colonnettes

152

The Description of the Great Mosque of Damascus by al-Muqaddas in the Tenth century Arabic Text and Translation by Alain George

Gates and Vestibules

153

The North Minaret

157

Water Reservoirs and Ablution Facilities

158

Ornament

159

Marble Dado

159

Mosaics

169

The Vine Frieze with Precious Stones

171

The Central Mihrab and Minbar

174

The Mosaic Inscription

175

Ceilings

178

Lamps, Lighting, and Incense

180

Paint on Capitals and Columns

181

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:47:53.

Notes Bibliography Index

226

228 246 257

Acknowledgements

A book like this is never the solitary work of its author: it also

translations of these texts, I asked Nadia Jamil whether she

emerges from multiple interactions with others, in the present

would consider letting me feature hers instead, as they

case over a period of a decade. The project began with funding

were sure to be more elegant and accurate than my own.

from the Leverhulme Trust, which allowed me to step back

She responded with characteristic generosity and enthusiasm:

from day-to-day work at the University of Edinburgh between

the result can be seen in Appendix 1.

2011 and 2013. My heartfelt thanks to the Trust for this essential backing. Over the years, I also received support towards my

major undertaking, just as one would expect. When it came to

research expenses from the I.M. Pei Fund at the University

scans from libraries, I was fortunate to be helped by a succession

of Oxford and from Edinburgh College of Art. The Bodleian

of competent and friendly students at Edinburgh, then Oxford:

Library, Edinburgh University Library, and the National Library

in chronological order, Francesco Stermotich-Cappellari,

of Scotland provided the backbone of my documentation. I also

Yagnaseni Datta, Becky Wrightson, Ana Silkatcheva, and Fuchsia

spent many a research period in Beirut, where I was welcomed

Hart. Countless colleagues responded most helpfully to my

at the libraries of the American University of Beirut, the Institut

requests for information or documents: James Allan, Bassam

Français du Proche-Orient (Ifpo), and the Bibliothèque Orientale

Al Shiekh, Jean-Claude Bessac, Etienne Blondeau, Daniel Burt,

and Centre Louis Pouzet at the Université Saint Joseph. For two

Paul Dahan, Gabriel Daher, Badr El-Hage, Teresa Fitzherbert,

months in 2013, I worked on the excellent Roman architecture

Nikolaos Gonis, Rafael González Fernández, Li Guo, Oliver

resources at the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florence during a

Hoover, Mat Immerzeel, Alya Karame, Michel Maqdissi, Deborah

short fellowship on the Art, Space, and Mobility programme led

Mauskopf Deliyannis, Luitgard Mols, Elise Morero, Roberto

by Hannah Baader, Avinoam Shalem, and Gerhard Wolf.

Nardi and Araldo De Luca, Lawrence Nees, Said Nuseibeh,

This book would not be what it is without my friend and

Joseph O’Hara, Bilal Orfali, Mariam Rosser-Owen, Humam

colleague Andrew Marsham. Time and again, typically against

Saad, Elisabetta Scirocco, Loreline Simonis, Jack Tannous,

the background hum of Caffè Lucano in Edinburgh, we

Dimitris Theodossopoulos, Zeynep Yürekli-Görkay, and others

bounced ideas off each other and confronted the perspectives

whom I am bound to unintentionally omit as I write these lines.

of Umayyad art history and history in ways that proved

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Sourcing rare documents and images proved to be another

Librarians and curators at key collections facilitated my

edifying—and enjoyable to boot. I am grateful to him, as well as

access to reproductions of early photographs and Orientalist

to Marcus Milwright and to Mathieu Tillier for their immensely

paintings in their care: Betsy Baldwin and Matt Saba (Aga Khan

helpful comments on earlier drafts of this work. For their help

Documentation Center, MIT Libraries); Hélène Bendejacq and

with the translation and interpretation of languages beyond

Yannick Lintz (Département des Arts de l’Islam, Musée du

my competence (Armenian, Greek, Latin, Syriac, and Turkish),

Louvre); Joanne Bloom (Harvard Fine Arts Library); Antoinette

I thank Jean-Sébastien Balzat, Maurizio Campanelli, Timothy

Harri (Fondation Max van Berchem, Geneva); Giles Hudson

Greenwood, Nilay Özlü, Arietta Papaconstantinou, and David

and Elina Johanna Nuutinen (Orientalist Museum, Doha);

Taylor. I also fondly remember conversations I had about the

Lobna Montasser (Aga Khan Trust for Culture, Geneva); and

mosque with Nadia Ali, Sean Anthony, Doris Behrens Abouseif,

Sabine Wölfel (Staatliche Graphische Sammlung München).

Finbarr Barry Flood, Mattia Guidetti, Robert Hillenbrand,

I am also grateful to their respective institutions, as well as

Liz James, Jeremy Johns, Hugh Kennedy, Suleiman Mourad,

the Ashmolean Museum, Bibliothèque Nationale de France,

Christian Sahner, and Cristina Tonghini.

Bodleian Library, British Library, and the Royal Collection,

Three Umayyad panegyrics are among the core documents studied in this book. Long after producing my English

6

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:15.

for granting me preferential publication rights that made the illustration of this book possible.

Farah Dabbous produced a key piece of artwork for the final chapter with her trademark professionalism and attention to detail. Even though I have not had the chance to meet Ross Burns, I owe him a debt of gratitude for making his extensive photographic archive of the mosque available for research and publication through the Manar al-Athar project at the University of Oxford. This repository, which was founded by the late Judith McKenzie, also features images by Michael Greenhalgh, Sean Leatherbury, and many others. It proved to be a crucial resource as it became impossible for me to visit the mosque again in person at an early stage in this work. I thank Bea Leal and Miranda Williams for giving me the fullest access to its contents. Finding the right publisher for this book was not an easy task, but I could hardly have made a better choice than Gingko Library. Melanie Gibson has been an editor the like of which one seldom encounters: fully engaged with the text, able to grasp its complexities with an eye for detail and clarity, efficient in the face of formidable task lists, and unfailingly encouraging. The rest of the team—Barbara Schwepcke, Harry Hall, Edoardo Braschi, and their colleagues—impressed me with their professionalism and enthusiasm. My thanks, also, to Adrian Hunt for his thorough and elegant work on the design. Philippe and Luc Aractingi offered me a warm welcome— a true home from home—when I needed it in the closing stages of this work. I was also fortunate to share many leisurely yet inspiring discussions on its subject with Adham Saouli, in Edinburgh and Doha. The book comes a full two decades into my career. This is Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

a time to look back and express my gratitude for the decisive support I received in those early years from Martine Faideau and Jonathan Randal. It shall be remembered always. My wife Hiba and sons Salim Gabriel and Adam Raphaël were endlessly patient during the long spells of work that the project demanded, offering me sustaining warmth and good spirits each time I returned. In an unexpected turn of events, my mother Mouzayane Nassar and father-in-law Adnan Nasser passed away as the book was making its final push to the printing press. It is dedicated to their memory.

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:15.

7

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved. George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:15.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved. George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:15.

p  figure 1 The Great Mosque of Damascus, ground plan. From Creswell, Early Muslim Architecture I.1, fig. 90.

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10

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:15.

Introduction: A Day in the Life of Damascus

30 December 2010

I

t is rainy and cold today. As our car edges past the gentle slopes of the Anti-Lebanon mountains, I discover once again the distant vision of Damascus, this vast urban

sprawl experienced until a generation ago on a more intimate scale, enclosed by orchards. Moments later, walking through the old city, I catch a first glimpse of the Minaret of Jesus, which vanishes as I turn into a winding alley. Street life is quietly running its course: a shop owner tenders change, delivery bicycles ring their bells, and children chat away after school. Reaching the massive Roman walls of the Umayyad Mosque, I pause to gaze at its Greek

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inscription, reaching the courtyard after a few more paces. Suddenly, the confined spaces of surrounding streets give way to the majestic expanse, bounded by arcades and a monumental façade, of a courtyard that frames the limitless grey skies above. The marble floor has been given added lustre by rainwater, making it vividly reflect the architecture. Inside, some people seated on the carpeted floor rest or talk p  Arcade leading from the west to the Great Mosque of Damascus. Alain George, 2010.

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:25.

while others bow down in prayer. Tourists from Arab countries, Europe, and beyond amble about. An Ethiopian man in traditional dress peers through the metal grille that screens the

11

p  figure 2 Title page of J.L. Porter, Five Years in Damascus, vol. 1.

relics of John the Baptist. Repose and a certain awe inspired by

(d. 286/900) wrote a ‘Volume on the Story of the Congregational

harmonious monumentality; the sense of touching something

Mosque in Damascus and its Construction’, which is now lost

very old, and alive: I have felt this way even since my first visit

but was cited by later writers.1 This is exceptionally early for

here, a long time ago, and still do so today. Little do I know that

a culture that has left precious little written output about art

it will be years before I return—years during which the people

and architecture of any period, let alone its first century. Ibn

of Syria will endure the worst of torments in their millions. To

Muʿallā’s work was the inaugural salvo of a historiographic

this day, the monument remains nearly unscathed—a meagre

tradition that would span a millennium. I will soon return to it;

consolation in the face of such human suffering. But it stands

but, in order to situate what follows, let me begin with a brief

as a witness to the long course of history, a poised counterpoint

overview of modern scholarship.

to the tragedies of our times. Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

The book you are holding is an investigation into this history. My core subject is the foundation of the mosque by

The Story So Far

the Umayyad dynasty (661‒750), just as the first century of Islam was drawing to a close. I also venture into the long

The first substantial modern account of the mosque was

pagan and Christian past over which the monument was

published in 1855, a thousand years after Ibn al-Muʿallā,

inscribed; early eighth-century politics in the Muslim

by Josias Leslie Porter (1823–89) as a section of his book Five

empire and beyond; the Umayyad state of the mosque and

Years in Damascus (Figure 2).2 Other Europeans had furtively

later alterations; and early Islamic aesthetics. Some of these

seen it before, bringing back with them hasty descriptions.3

concerns have an old pedigree. When the mosque was still

But Porter, an Irish Presbyterian on a mission to convert local

in its second century, the Damascene historian Ibn al-Muʿallā

Jews, resided in Damascus long enough to get a solid footing in

12

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:25.

local society and thus managed to study it at close quarters. He

scholarship on the Temple of Jupiter, which has given its walls

also offered brief glimpses of its pre-Islamic past, foundation,

and gates to the mosque.7 These publications set the monument

and original state as related by the foremost medieval historian

in its Roman context and furthered the documentation of

of the city, Ibn ʿAsākir (499–571/1105–76), whose work he

relevant inscriptions and textual sources. In 1932, less than eight decades after Porter’s book, the

consulted in manuscript form. In 1890, Guy Le Strange, an Orientalist scholar trained in Paris and later based in Cambridge, translated a much wider

milestone with the publication of K.A.C. Creswell’s two-volume

range of relevant Arabic sources, especially travel accounts,

Early Muslim Architecture (a second, revised edition appeared

thereby creating a small compendium that remains serviceable

in 1969). By then, the Ottoman Empire had been recently

today. In the following years, structural studies and drawings

abolished and the French Mandate over Syria and Lebanon

were published by two architects, Archibald Campbell Dickie

facilitated access to the site for Europeans. With this work,

(1897) and Richard Phené Spiers (1900, based on a visit made in

Creswell, an electrical engineer by training, demonstrated

1866). These efforts shared a link to the Palestine Exploration

his outstanding acumen as an architectural historian. Over

Fund, which published Le Strange’s book, invited Spiers to

some sixty pages of the first volume, he scrutinised, dated, and

lecture on the mosque, mandated Dickie to Damascus—and,

critically assessed every aspect of the mosque against textual

in 1900, published Charles Wilson’s diary of 1865 about the

sources. Creswell notably exposed as untenable the theories of

building. It must have been during these same years that the

Watzinger, Wulzinger, and Dussaud about the prayer hall as a

famous Swiss epigrapher and historian Max Van Berchem

conversion of the church. He also provided a series of detailed

(1863‒1921) compiled his own detailed ‘archaeological notes’

plans and elevations with accomplished draughtsmanship.

4

about the monument, which were only printed posthumously,

This volume of Early Muslim Architecture, on the Umayyads,

in 1937–38. Knowledge about the building thus slowly started

concluded with a study of the mosaics by the art historian

to build up from different perspectives.

Marguerite Van Berchem (1892‒1984), Max’s daughter, in which

The first surveys of Islamic architecture appeared in the

she sought to distinguish Umayyad parts from later restorations

next decade. The one written by Henri Saladin (1907) offered

and, again, collect sources about them. Most of these mosaics

a basic account of the mosque with photographs predating

had been uncovered only four years earlier, in 1928, through

the fire of 1893 by Jules Gervais-Courtellemont. That by G.T.

her efforts combined with those of Victor Eustache, known as

Rivoira devoted a longer passage to the site, with reflections on

de Lorey (1875‒1953), who also published a series of articles

its history before and after the Umayyad period. During the

setting them in the context of Christian wall mosaics.8 The

same years, an important new body of evidence surfaced with

spectacular discovery and its diffusion soon turned the mosaics

Harold Idris Bell’s edition and partial translations of the British

into the main centre of interest for studies on the mosque.

5

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modern historiography of the mosque reached its first major

Museum’s collection of papyri from Aphrodito in Egypt, some

Whereas Creswell had an innate fascination for buildings—

of which pertained directly to the construction of the mosque.

as Robert Hamilton put it, for him, ‘human beings and

They remained largely unexploited until the end of the century,

their affairs were part of the evidence, not vice versa’—his

when Federico Morelli gathered and described the fragments

contemporary Jean Sauvaget (1901–50) had a rare instinct

about Umayyad building projects.6 Between 1921 and 1924, Carl

for history.9 Although he only published brief remarks about

Watzinger and Karl Wulzinger published an extensive study of

the Damascus mosque, his seminal study on the Umayyad

the site through its pre-Islamic and Islamic history—the first of

Mosque of Medina (1947) established a template for the parsing

its kind—and inaugurated, along with René Dussaud in 1922,

of complex Arabic sources to reconstruct an early Islamic

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:25.

introduction  •   a day in the life of damascus

13

monument. He also put forward the provocative and somewhat

important strand in scholarship. The Great Mosque of Damascus:

overstated argument that such key architectural features as

Some of its Developments until the Year 730 A.H. was written in

the mihrab and minbar were invented for courtly ceremonial

Arabic by the Syrian scholar Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn al-Munajjid (1920–

and audiences, which he saw as prime functions of the early

2010).15 Al-Munajjid was born in the vicinity of the Umayyad

mosque.10 At around the same time, in contrast, Ugo Monneret

Mosque to a father, ʿAbd Allāh, who had trained as a sheikh

de Villard (1881‒1954) argued that the concave mihrab and

under several Damascene scholars. After legal studies at

architectural emphasis on the transept at Damascus both

Damascus and the Sorbonne, from 1955 to 1961 he was director

reflected ‘thinking of a theological order’. But this work was

of the Institute of Arabic Manuscripts, founded in 1948 by the

only published posthumously, in 1966.

Arab League in Cairo. In this role, he established meticulous

11

Judging from their verbal jousts in various publications,

travelled the world in search of original works to record on

to the achievements of both scholars that their works should

microfilm. He taught briefly at Princeton (1959–60), then settled

remain indispensable references to this day—and this posterity

for a decade and a half in Beirut, where he established the Dār

is likely to endure, given that they gathered much primary

al-Kitāb al-Jadīd publishing house. Following the start of the

evidence on their respective subjects, some of it now lost.

Lebanese civil war in 1975, he moved to Jeddah where he would

Another of their contemporaries is mostly remembered for

live for another thirty-five years.16

courting controversy. Henri Lammens (1862–1937) was a Jesuit

Throughout his prolific career, al-Munajjid retained a

priest from Ghent in Belgium who settled in Beirut at the age

particular interest in the history of his home city. In 1954, he

of fifteen. Equipped with a thorough command of Arabic, he

edited al-Rabaʿī’s Virtues of Syria of Damascus and initiated work

was the first scholar (and to a large extent the last) to highlight

on the edition of Ibn ʿAsākir’s History of Damascus. He published

the Umayyad caliph al-Walīd’s destruction of the church at

two volumes in the same year; the second of these was

Damascus in an article of 1925. In this work, he also adduced

translated into French in 1959 with a useful critical apparatus

to the study of the Umayyad Mosque some fundamental

by Nikita Elisséeff. This was only a small part of Ibn ʿAsākir’s

documents: a few verses from court poems by al-Farazdaq

work, which would be edited only decades later. Al-Munajjid

and al-Nābigha al-Shaybānī that commemorated this event;

also published in 1967 a valuable anthology of texts about the

and a testimony datable to around 670 ascribed to ‘Arculf’ by

history of Damascus: The City of Damascus in the Writings of

Adomnán, abbot of Iona in Scotland (d. 704).13 The profound

Muslim Geographers and Travellers, including several extracts

hostility of Lammens towards Islam tainted his work, making

from unpublished manuscripts.17

12

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standards for text editions, launched a specialised journal and

Creswell could be seen as Sauvaget’s nemesis. It is a testimony

it distinctly unpalatable to the modern reader. His outlook

From the 1960s onwards, other Syrian scholars gathered

reflects a discourse current in Lebanese Christian circles at

primary evidence relevant to the mosque. Muṭīʿ Ḥāfiẓ and ʿAlī

the time, its tone probably aggravated by famine and Ottoman

al-Ṭānṭāwī collected medieval and modern sources about its

exactions against the Jesuits during the First World War. Its

history, while ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Rīḥāwī published brief reports

undeniable biases should, however, not obscure Lammens’

about mosaic restorations and archaeological soundings

knowledge of the sources—especially as these inclinations were

undertaken at the time.18 In 1987, the collected poems (dīwān)

partly mitigated in his treatment of the Umayyads, because of

of al-Nābigha al-Shaybānī, al-Walīd’s court poet, were edited

their Syro-centrism.

for the first time in Damascus by ʿAbd al-Karīm Ibrāhīm

14

In 1948, the year after Sauvaget published La mosquée omeyyade de Médine, a small Arabic pamphlet inaugurated an

14

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:25.

Yaʿqūb.19 The complete publication of Ibn ʿAsākir’s work, a project re-attempted by several scholars after al-Munajjid,

was finally brought to completion through the efforts of ʿUmar

of the building.23 Gérard Degeorge has produced a lavish

al-ʿAmrawī and his collaborators.20 The wide availability of this

volume (2010) with a well-documented text articulated around

edition, published by Dār al-Fikr in Beirut from 1995 to 2001,

the photographs of the author. It is also during this last period

is of fundamental importance to the study of the mosque. Many

that the next milestone in the historiography of the mosque

of these modern writers were driven by a Syrian nationalist

was published: Finbarr Barry Flood’s The Great Mosque of

or patriotic outlook, combined for some, such as Ḥāfiẓ, with

Damascus: Studies in the Making of an Umayyad Visual Culture

an interest in the Islamic credentials of Damascus. They were

(2000). With this study, Flood delved into the complex history

also seeking to remedy, by integrating the methods of modern

and textual memories of the monument to an unprecedented

scholarship, the break from the Syrian historiographical

depth. He notably established the importance of the now

tradition that had occurred after the end of the Ottoman Empire.

lost vine frieze in the prayer hall (al-karma), highlighted the

Meanwhile, building partly on Creswell’s scholarship, the

connotations of its pearl motifs with light, exhumed textual

modern study of Islamic art and architecture was growing

materials about a forgotten gate, a water clock and a colonnade

in scope and sophistication in Europe and the United States.

on the qibla wall and introduced elements of comparison

In a short passage in his seminal Arab Painting, published in

between the topography of this site and Constantinople. Flood’s

1962, Richard Ettinghausen proposed the first overarching

work has given a new textural density to our understanding of

interpretation of the famed mosaics at the mosque, which

the mosque. It has also helped to move analysis away from the

he saw as a representation of the Islamic empire. A few

mosaics, the main focus of attention since the 1960s, towards a

years later, in 1967, Eva Surpan-Boersch argued that these

history that engages fully with other parts of the structure. The

were paradisiacal landscapes, a theory developed further

present study blazes a similar trail, but with different ends.

by Barbara Finster in 1970–71, and again by Klaus Brisch in 1988. In 1971, Lucien Golvin published a book-length study of Umayyad architecture, including a long section on the mosque

The Present Book

that discussed both of these interpretations without seeking to resolve their contradictions. More than his predecessors,

The core themes of this book started emerging around 2000,

he also sought to place the whole monument—not just the

when I was still a student of Islamic art. Having browsed

mosaics—in their broader artistic context.

through the bookshelves of the Oriental Institute and the

21

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Between the late 1980s and mid-2000s, Klaus Freyberger

(then labyrinthine) Ashmolean Museum libraries in Oxford, I

devoted a series of articles to the remains of the Roman

had gathered a pile of studies which left me perplexed as to a

temple at Damascus, which offered a more systematic study

fundamental question: why did the Umayyad caliph al-Walīd

of its ornamental styles and phases of construction. Further

decide to build this mosque towards the end of 705? Obvious

contributions were made from this period to the 2010s by

though it may seem, I could not find a clear answer to it—and

Ernest Will on the temple, Mab Van Lohuizen-Mulder on the

for good reasons, as I would later learn by the sweat of my

Umayyad mosaics, Luitgard Mols on the gates, and François

brow. It is never easy to understand events at a distance of over

Bogard on the later mosaics inside the transept. A book by

a millennium. The issue is compounded, in the present case,

Talal Akili (2009) contains architectural plans and elevations

by their memories being embedded in a monument that was

with extensive measurements and stone-by-stone drawings.

deeply reworked through time, in layered and complex textual

This visual survey, carried out in 1996–2000 by a team of

narratives, and in evidence from other disciplines, such as

forty-five architects, is a valuable resource for the study

archaeology and papyrology.

22

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:25.

introduction  •   a day in the life of damascus

15

In fact, this study would barely have been possible twenty years ago, not least because its most important historical

major building on a site hitherto occupied by a church and an

source, Ibn ʿAsākir’s History of Damascus, had only just been

early mosque? How did he muster the political and logistical

published: the eightieth and final volume of the Dār al-Fikr

resources to carry out his decision? To what extent did the

edition appeared in 2001. Its availability has opened up a wealth

Damascene church and Roman temple leave their mark on

of information about the city and mosque, as if a specialised

the new building? What did the Umayyad Mosque look like in

medieval library had suddenly re-emerged, albeit as entangled

its pristine state? How, finally, did contemporaries react to its

and scattered fragments. Early photographs of Damascus

stupendous architecture and ornament? Turn the pages to find

were also much more difficult to source then than they are

out more about these and other questions.

24

now thanks to the exponential growth of online archives,

Chapter 1 sets the parameters for the rest of the book

such as those of the Library of Congress, Harvard University,

by establishing the complex nature of the site and its

and the Royal Collections. Meanwhile, the methodological

historiography. I outline the major changes undergone by the

toolbox of the historian dealing with early Islam has improved.

mosque since its foundation as a result of a long succession

In the course of the twentieth century, scholars had grown

of fires, earthquakes, and other disasters interspersed with

increasingly wary of relying on the textual sources available

restorations. In parallel with this, I review written testimonies

about this period because of their relatively late dates and own

from each period—primarily Arabic histories, biographical

narrative agendas. These issues have been unpacked since the

works, and travel accounts, notably from the Syrian

1990s to allow a reflection on layers of discourse, medieval

historiographical tradition. This leads me to adopt the literary

methods of textual criticism, and successive redactions,

concept of the ‘palimpsest’ as an analytical tool for its study.

thereby allowing a nimbler approach to the source material.

25

Even in 2000, some key evidence about the mosque had been

I also emphasize the ways in which photography, a technology first presented to the world in 1842, marks a sea change in the

known for decades, but was scarcely used. Three Umayyad

documentation of the mosque—all the more so because its

poems were composed to mark its foundation, but so far only

fabric was profoundly transformed by a major fire in 1893, then

a few verses from two of them have been studied by Lammens

again by several restoration campaigns in the twentieth century.

and cited by later scholars. They are a treasure trove of 26

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return to the initial question, did al-Walīd decide to found a

Chapter 2 explores the pre-Islamic past of the site, which is

evidence about the political climate of the period and the

essential to our understanding of its Umayyad history. I turn

aesthetic reception of the new building. They will be referenced

first to the little known archaeological soundings undertaken

extensively in the coming pages. Appendix 1 contains their

in 1962‒63, which revealed the spectacular foundations of the

Arabic texts with translations by Nadia Jamil that convey to

cella, the inner sanctum of the Roman temple, but were not

the English reader their meaning along with something of

published except in a few photographs. Using the available

their verve. Nearly as valuable are the administrative papyri

evidence, I seek to estimate the position and scale of the

from Aphrodito in Egypt, some of which relate directly to

cella, which must have been comparable to those of the

the construction of the mosque and can shed light on its

largest Roman temples, such as the Temple of Bel in Palmyra,

logistics. While their contents are largely accessible through

destroyed in 2015. The conversion of the site to Christian

the work of Bell and Morelli, they remain to be analysed more

worship around the late fourth century raises questions about

systematically in the context of the building.

the church within the Roman temenos walls. Where did it

27

My primary purpose, then, is simple: to give a historical account of the foundation of the Umayyad Mosque. Why, to

16

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:25.

stand? In the seventh century, what was its spatial relationship with the first mosque and a lost gate associated with the early

caliph Muʿāwiya? Bringing together these different threads,

framed the prayer hall were probably Christian structures. The

I advance the hypothesis of the church as a conversion of the

Bayt al-Māl, the famous treasury on columns in the courtyard,

Roman cella, rather than a new basilica.

may likewise have been built around a Christian core. While

Chapter 3 opens with a climactic event: the destruction of

some remains of the church are thus hidden in plain sight, the

the church within the Damascene temenos by the young caliph

relics of John the Baptist—its most visible legacy in the modern

al-Walīd (r. 86–96/705–15). Its importance has been overlooked

mosque—appear to be an ‘invention’ of the late Umayyad to

by modern historians: this was the burning issue of the day, as

early Abbasid era. Thus, the church went through successive

shown by virulent poems composed by al-Walīd’s panegyrists

phases of erasure, memorialisation of absence, and oblivion.

Jarīr, al-Farazdaq, and al-Nābigha al-Shaybānī. Their powerful

Chapter 5 seeks to lay out the evidence for the Umayyad

pieces of rhetoric place the destruction of the mosque in a

state of the mosque, section by section, source by source,

context of political and armed conflict with Christians, not only

image by image. This process reveals an Umayyad monument

in Damascus but also on the Anatolian frontier with Byzantium.

that is familiar, yet profoundly different from the one of today:

Turning to the empty site left by this traumatic affair, I use

more open, with different vistas and materials, and vastly more

the administrative papyri from Aphrodito to investigate the

colourful. The study of early photographs reveals lost masonry

logistics required by the new Umayyad Mosque—and the

and ornament, including mosaic panels and Roman columns

political control of territory that they entail. Several Arabic

from the prayer hall. This chapter also offers glimpses of its

traditions ascribe a role in the construction of the mosque to

later life from the Abbasid to the Ottoman periods.

the Byzantine Emperor Justinian II, and I revisit their claims

who created al-Walīd’s new mosque. By comparing its form

embodied the shifting relationships between Muslim and

and ornament with those of earlier mosques and churches,

Christian élites in the Umayyad Empire. This evolution is

its novel features come into focus. The Damascus mosaics

illustrated by the fate of a prominent Damascene Christian

mark the breakdown of patterns seen in church floor and wall

family probably linked to these events: the Banū Manṣūr,

mosaics. Their composition seems to be based instead on

whose most famous son was John of Damascus, the last of

rhythms inspired by the art of Arabic poetry; like poetry and

the Greek Church Fathers.

the Qurʾan,28 they were consciously polysemic. Al-Nābigha’s

Chapter 4 investigates the legacy of the Damascene church

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Chapter 6 investigates the mindset of the Umayyad patrons

in light of this more complete evidence. The mosque, I argue,

panegyric about the mosque is then exploited as a unique

in the fabric of the Umayyad Mosque. While the remains of

document on aesthetics in this era. The mosque ultimately

the Roman temple are clearly apparent in the enclosure walls,

emerges as a space crafted to invite a powerful sensorial and

those of the church are more elusive, yet further study allows

emotional response from the beholder.

them to surface in multiple traces and echoes. The transept

The main focus of the book is on the decade between 705

at the centre of the prayer hall, the most monumental part of

and 715, during which the mosque was built. But such a thin

the Umayyad Mosque, was probably conceived in a dialectic

slice of history cannot be effortlessly disentangled from its

relationship with the freshly destroyed church. The metal

past and future, hence my many ventures into the Roman,

sheathing of the mosque gates, which is much later, seems to

Christian, medieval and modern periods. For, as will now

carry distant memories of a Christian template, as shown by

become apparent, the stones and ornament of the mosque

previous scholarship. The two corner towers that originally

are deeply layered, and so is its historiography.

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introduction  •   a day in the life of damascus

17

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1 Palimpsests in Stone and Layered Texts: The Multiple Histories of the Umayyad Mosque

T

he Great Mosque of Damascus was built between around 705 and 715, a mere eight decades after the death of the Prophet. To write the history of

its foundation is, in essence, to investigate micro events at a distance of over a millennium. The prime actors—the Muslim ruling élites—have left few textual declarations, opting instead to fashion and transmit their historical memories orally. It is only with the rise of Arabic historiography at the turn of the ninth century that the fleeting narratives of earlier times started to coalesce into a solid form. Even so, their contents were not fixed as each writer made decisions to select, reframe, expand, or abridge available materials. The extensive body of

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

historical sources about the mosque reflects the ever-changing contexts of their authors. The passing of time made the stones and ornament of the p  The west vestibule, Bāb al-Barīd, viewed from the courtyard of the mosque, with the city in the background. Kamil Chadirji, early to mid-twentieth century. Kamil and Rifat Chadirji Photographic Archive, courtesy of Aga Khan Documentation Center, MIT Libraries (AKDC@MIT).

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:52.

monument just as layered as the texts composed about it. Fires, earthquakes, and the slow yet inevitable decay of the fabric led, year after year, to gradual losses of masonry and materials. Rulers and the local population sought to maintain, repair, and upgrade the monument that had become, at an early stage in its life, the beating heart of Damascus. To use a notion first articulated in 1845 by Thomas De Quincey as a

19

metaphor for human memory, the mosque is fundamentally

Al-Farazdaq and Jarīr, both of whom died around 110/729, were

palimpsestic. A palimpsest is a manuscript wholly or partly

famous for lampooning each other in verse through the years,

erased so that it can be rewritten, sometimes more than once.

along with al-Akhṭal (ca. 20–92/640‒710), a Christian. Al-Nābigha

After each erasure, it retains traces of its earlier layers, and

al-Shaybānī, whose birth name was ʿAbd Allāh ibn al-Makhāriq,

these may eventually resurface. In architecture, likewise,

had a less illustrious posterity in the Arabic literary tradition,

a monument is never a stable entity: instead, each moment

but his sobriquet (literally nābighat Banī Shaybān, ‘the genius of

witnesses an ephemeral ‘instance’ that is inscribed on the base

the Shaybānid tribe’) reflects the esteem in which he was held

layer of the site. Some erasures are conscious while others are

by contemporaries. Jarīr and al-Farazdaq lived in Iraq, although

caused by time, decay, and natural disasters. This conceptual

the sources suggest that the former visited Damascus under ʿAbd

tool, pioneered for architectural history by Finbarr Barry

al-Malik.4 One anecdote places al-Farazdaq there after al-Walīd’s

Flood and Gülru Necipoğlu, is particularly relevant to the

destruction of the church, and another has both poets come into

Umayyad Mosque.

the mosque during his reign.5 In both cases, these details are

1

2

3

The tumultuous history of the mosque did not cease with the

introduced as a narrative backdrop to present selected verses and

advent of modernity: on the contrary, it accelerated. Images

their historical value is uncertain. The tenth-century littérateur

of the building had been extremely scarce until the 1840s,

Abū al-Faraj al-Iṣfahānī also asserts that al-Nābigha regularly

when the revolutionary technology of photography marked a

visited Syria to recite his panegyrics to the Umayyads, receiving

profound change in its documentation. Half a century later, in

generous rewards in return.6 Unlike Jarīr and al-Farazdaq,

1893, a major fire devastated the mosque, followed by invasive

al-Nābigha includes a long description in his poem on the mosque,

restoration campaigns through much of the twentieth century.

which makes it likely that he saw it during its construction.

This increases the value of early daguerreotypes, photographs,

Umayyad poetry is only extant through later compilations,

and rare Orientalist paintings that now constitute an archive

but these have generally been accepted as reliable records of

of lost materials. They come into focus in the second half of

the original works.7 This assumption is based on the rules of

the chapter. For each period, the state of the building will be

rhyme and metre that govern every single syllable, making

considered in parallel with its growing historiography, as their

these texts more difficult to remodel than prose narratives. It

discursive and architectural realities were often intertwined.

is reinforced in the present case by circumstantial historical information and political ideas which, as will become apparent, are unlikely to have been invented later. Words, or even the

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The Mosque and its Historiography until the Ottoman Era

occasional hemistich, could be replaced by transmitters to convey a similar meaning, typically with a view to improving their literary quality, but most of their contents are likely to be

Towards the end of 705, the young caliph al-Walīd I (r. 86–96/

authentic. This seems confirmed by the minor variants that

705‒15) ordered the seizure and destruction of the church that

occur in some medieval citations of al-Farazdaq.8

had stood inside the Damascene temenos walls alongside a first

The three poems are extraordinary documents for such an

mosque dating to the Muslim conquest of the 630s. Three poets

early period of Islam and they are not the only evidence to

belonging to the literary firmament of the age—Jarīr, al-Farazdaq

survive. An Umayyad Qurʾan discovered in Sanaa, the Yemeni

and al-Nābigha al-Shaybānī—were called upon to vindicate this

capital, contains two schematic renditions of mosques—in

controversial act in panegyric form. The memorialisation of the

other words, of sacred architecture as envisioned by Umayyad

Umayyad Mosque thus began as it was still being built.

patrons and their illuminators in the first half of the eighth

20

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:52.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

p  figure 3 Umayyad Qurʾan discovered in Sanaa, second illumination. Original dimensions ca. 51 × 47 cm. Probably Greater Syria, early eighth century. Sanaa, Dār al-Makhṭūṭātal-Yamaniyya, IN 20-33.1. From Von Bothmer, ‘Architekturbilder im Koran’, Abb. 2.

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:52.

21

century (Figure 3).9 Just as significant are the large segments

He then returned to Damascus and remained there for the rest

of an administrative archive from Aphrodito in Middle Egypt

of his life. During those years, the Crusades were reaching their

dating to the very years in which the mosque was built: a few of

height in Greater Syria, and Egypt was ruled by the Fatimids

these papyri even relate directly to its construction.

(909–1171), a dynasty professing the Ismaʿili creed of Islam. It is

10

in this context that Ibn ʿAsākir, a staunch proponent of Sunni The Syrian Historiographical Tradition

Islam, produced his oeuvre with support from the Zangid sultan

The fall of the Umayyads in 750 turned Damascus into a

Nūr al-Dīn (r. 541‒65/1146–74). His prolific writing was driven

relatively neglected provincial capital. The threat of relegation

by a multi-layered agenda: to assert the holiness of Syria and

and oblivion seems to have spurred a conscious interest among

its locales in the long course of prophetic, early Islamic, and

learned circles in the history of local spaces and events, real or

current history; to highlight the credentials of Shāfiʿī law and

imagined, and in the status of this mosque. It is from religious

Ashʿarī theology; and to firmly establish the standing of Syria in

scholars of this period, the second half of the eighth century,

a Muslim worldview hitherto dominated by Iraqi historiography.

that some of the earliest information about the monument was collected in the ninth century, notably by such Damascene

masterpiece: the History of Damascus (‘Tārīkh Madīnat

historians and traditionists as Ibn ʿĀʾidh (d. ca. 232–34/846–49),

Dimashq’), which occupies no fewer than seventy-four volumes

Abū Zurʿa (d. 281/895), and Muḥammad ibn al-Fayḍ al-Ghassānī

(plus six volumes of indices) in its modern printed edition.

(ca. 219–315/835–927). As already noted, their contemporary

The work begins with a topographical introduction before

Ibn al-Muʿallā (d. 286/900) probably wrote the first dedicated

spreading its contents over a staggering 10,226 biographical

history of the mosque.

entries that add up to a cross-section of religious and politico-

11

In parallel with the memorialisation of the building through

administrative life in the first five centuries of Islam.14 The

texts, a genre emerged that extolled the sacred aura of cities:

notices consist of citations of earlier writings and traditions,

Faḍāʾil (‘Virtues’) literature, which had among its outputs the

systematically backed by extensive transmission chains (asānīd,

Virtues of Syria and Damascus (‘Faḍāʾil al-Shām wa Dimashq’)

sg. isnād). I have opted to cite this important part of the medieval

by ʿAlī ibn Muḥammad al-Rabaʿī (d. 444/1052). Thus, by

scholar’s critical apparatus in italics, both as information about

the eleventh century, there circulated in Syria a number of

the source materials and to give a clearer sense of the form in

traditions about the Damascene temple, the church, and the

which historical information has reached us.

12

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It took Ibn ʿAsākir some four decades to produce his

construction of the Umayyad Mosque. Spatial markers were also

Modern scholars working on different topics have assessed

provided to locate the former church and holy spots associated

the contents of selected entries against preserved early treatises

with such figures as John the Baptist, the Prophet Hūd, and the

and found in them ‘admirable accuracy’, in the words of

enigmatic al-Khiḍr. In the next century, a figure emerged who

Steven Judd—a judgement amply confirmed by this study and

would change the course of this tradition: Ibn ʿAsākir.

its specific concerns.15 Ibn ʿAsākir shows a particular interest

Ibn ʿAsākir (499–571/1105–76) was a scholar of prodigious

in early Islam: about a third of the History is devoted to the

ability, and the most prominent member of a family, the

century and a half between the time of the Prophet and the

Banū ʿAsākir, which gave Damascus a string of judges

downfall of the Umayyads, when many Companions settled in

and religious experts between the late eleventh and early

Syria and Damascus became the capital of the Islamic Empire.16

fourteenth centuries. Between 1126 and 1141, like many of

He thus preserves much otherwise lost material about the

his contemporaries, he travelled the Muslim world from the

period. For all these reasons, his work is of fundamental

Hijaz through Baghdad to Central Asia in search of knowledge.

importance for the study of the mosque.

13

22

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:52.

Ibn ʿAsākir’s History of Damascus had a profound impact

features of the city ‘its mosque, of which there is none more

on the Syrian historiographical tradition. The biographical

beautiful in the whole of Islam, made with marble and gold;

format of his work, arranged in alphabetical order, had been

al-Walīd ibn ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Marwān built it during his

inspired by al-Khaṭīb al-Baghdādī (d. 463/1071) and his History

reign’.20 His contemporary Ibn al-Faqīh (d. after 290/903)

of Baghdad (‘Tārīkh Baghdād’). It was emulated in the next two

wrote what may be its earliest preserved description:

centuries by his successors, such as al-Mizzī (654–742/1256–1341) and al-Dhahabī (673–748/1274–1348). Ibn Manẓūr (d. 711/1311),

The mosque is built with marble and mosaics, with a

who is best known for his classical dictionary Lisān al-ʿarab,

ceiling of ebony (sāj), and ornamented in dark blue

produced an abridgement of the original History. As a

(al-lāzaward) and gold. The mihrab is inlaid with

scholarly genre, biography fell out of fashion in favour of

precious gems and wondrous stones.21

17

chronology from the fifteenth century onwards, but Ibn ʿAsākir had set a seminal precedent (again inspired by al-Khaṭīb al-Baghdādī) with his topographical introduction to Damascus,

template for the ornament. Like others in his era, Ibn al-Faqīh

where he notably gathered materials about the foundation of

also records some anecdotes about the construction of the

the mosque and its Umayyad history. Much of this information

building.22 In the following century, a slightly more detailed

would be relayed, recast, and expanded by generation after

description was cited successively by Aḥmad ibn Sahl al-Balkhī

generation of writers in Syria, in different types of works:

(ca. 263–322/850–934), al-Iṣṭakhrī (d. 346/957), and Ibn Ḥawqal

annalistic histories, such as those of Ibn Shākir al-Kutubī

(d. 367/977), with minor variations of wording; this convergence

(686–764/1287–1363) and Ibn Kathīr (ca. 700–74/1300–73);

is unsurprising since these three authors were, to some extent,

chronicles with a narrower focus on the lifetime of their authors,

continuators of one another.23 Al-Masʿūdī (d. 336/948) briefly

as with Ibn Ṣaṣrā (fl. ca. 1400), Ibn Ṭūlūn (880–953/1473–1546),

discusses the mosaic inscription and shows an interest in the

and al-Budayrī al-Ḥallāq (fl. 1175/1762); topographical and

pre-Islamic past of the monument. Al-Muhallabī (d. 380/990)

geographical works like those of Ibn Shaddād (d. 684/1285) and

offers a more substantial description of the mosque, but with

Ibn Kannān (d. 1153/1740); or treatises mixing genres, such as

inaccuracies, in his geographical work al-Masālik wa’l-mamālik,

one on Damascene pleasure gardens composed by Abū al-Tuqā

which he dedicated to the Fatimids.24

18

(also Abū al-Baqāʾ) al-Badrī (d. 894/1489).19 This broad tradition

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Laconic though it may be, this account provides a general

The next description, in chronological order, marks a

was still alive at the beginning of the twentieth century. Thus,

turning point in the documentation of the mosque, being

the core reference represented by the History of Damascus can be

more extensive than any before it. Its author, al-Muqaddasī

supplemented by later works, which often yield unique shreds

(also al-Maqdisī, writing around 378/989), was from Jerusalem

of information, if typically with a reduced citational apparatus.

(Ar. al-Bayt al-Muqaddas, Bayt al-Maqdis). His geographical treatise The Best Divisions in the Knowledge of Regions (‘Aḥsan

Early Travel Relations and Geographical Works

al-taqāsīm fī maʿrifat al-aqālīm’) brought to a new level the

While the Syrian tradition preserves the bulk of historical

geographical genre initiated by Ibn al-Faqīh’s generation as

memory about the mosque, other strands of Arabic scholarly

he relied more heavily on corroboration through his own

writing also contributed to it. In the ninth century, Damascus

travels.25 Al-Muqaddasī was born into families of builders on

begins to emerge in the earliest accounts of major historians

both his paternal and maternal side and he seems to have taken

and geographers from Iraq, then the intellectual powerhouse of

a particular interest in the Umayyad Mosque when he visited

the Islamic world. Al-Yaʿqūbī (d. ca. 292/905) lists among other

Damascus. His description is included in a new translation as

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:52.

chapter 1  •  Palimpsests in Stone and Layered Texts

23

an appendix to the present volume. Through it, our knowledge

(which is extant) and central dome (which has been rebuilt)

of the early state of the mosque is much greater than it would

were reportedly built under the Fatimids. A fountain outside

otherwise have been, since less than a century later, in 1069,

Bāb Jayrūn and two columns that held lamps in the courtyard

much of its early fabric was destroyed by fire.

were added during the eleventh century, when Damascus passed from Fatimid to Saljuq control.31 Relevant elements will

A few later authors of travel accounts and geographical works offered descriptions of the building as it stood in their

be discussed in more detail below: for now, it is sufficient to

time. The testimony of Ibn Jubayr, the Andalusi traveller who

note that the textual record, if taken on its own terms, would

visited Damascus in 581/1184, is by far the most detailed, not

imply that the monument changed relatively little during its

only for this period, but for the whole pre-modern era. The

first 350 years.

26

later account by Ibn Baṭṭūṭa, whose travels spanned the years

Such a degree of transformation is consistent with the

1325–54, seems to be largely—but not entirely—derived from

historical reality of this period. After the fall of the Umayyads

it.27 Al-Idrīsī (d. 548/1154) and ʿAlī al-Harawī (d. 611/1215) also

in 132/750, the centre of gravity of the Muslim empire shifted

provide some original material.

from Syria to Iraq, where the Abbasids had founded their new capital Baghdad in 145/762. Some Abbasid caliphs visited

The Mosque in the Abbasid and Fatimid Periods

Damascus, and two of them, al-Maʾmūn (r. 198–213/813–33) and

Because of the vicissitudes of time, each of these writers

al-Mutawakkil (r. 232–47/847–61), briefly resided there during

encountered a slightly different monument from his predecessors.

military campaigns; but on the whole, the city, like the rest of

The first known damage to the mosque occurred three decades

Greater Syria, became a provincial backwater.32 In this respect,

after its completion, around 131/748, when an earthquake split

the Mosque of Damascus offers a marked contrast with the

the roof of the prayer hall. A century later, in 233/847, a second

Prophet’s Mosque in Medina and the Masjid al-Haram in Mecca,

earthquake destroyed masonry from the Roman enclosure

which were also rebuilt by al-Walīd but continued to attract

28

wall (the temenos), part of the minaret, and some merlons.

extensive patronage from the Abbasids.33 These were, of course,

The sources on both events are late but the earthquakes are

the most sacred sites of Islam, but the neglect of Damascus

corroborated by other writers (with small variations of date),

is also explained by the depth of pro-Umayyad sympathies in

so one may cautiously accept their reports. These imply that

Syrian society and the achievements of the dynasty embodied

the mosque received some ceiling repairs in the eighth century

in the monument—too famous to be razed, but too close to the

and patching to the stonework in the ninth century. A third

arch-enemies of the Abbasids to receive major improvements.

29

earthquake is recorded in Damascus at the beginning of

Repairs must nevertheless have been periodically carried out

381/991, but without any mention of damage to the mosque. Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

30

Limited construction also seems to have occurred in this

during this period. One instance is recorded by al-Muqaddasī, who in the tenth century wrote about the eastern mihrab: ‘Its

period. The Bayt al-Māl, the chamber on columns in the

centre had crumbled, so I heard that 500 dinars were spent to

western part of the courtyard, is ascribed by several writers

restore it.’34 Undocumented interventions probably occurred

to the early decades of Abbasid rule, a question that will

on an ad hoc basis. The Dome of the Rock, the other great

be revisited in Chapter 4. A blind niche, or mihrab, on the

Syrian Umayyad monument, provides a benchmark for the

northern pier between Bāb al-Barīd and the courtyard may be

nature and scale of such repairs. Built in 72/691, it suffered

Tulunid since two comparable niches exist at the Mosque of

its first major disaster in 407/1017 when the dome collapsed.

Ibn Ṭūlūn (Fustat, 263–65/876–78); in any case, it must date to

As Temple Mount is set aside from the rest of Jerusalem by its

the ninth or tenth century. Also in the courtyard, the east dome

gigantic platform, its interior has never been ravaged by flames.

24

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This may be why more traces of Abbasid restorations are

the Dār al-Mulk, which is the Khaḍrāʾ, bordering the qibla

preserved there: an early Abbasid carved wooden frieze above

side of the mosque. It burned down, and the fire spread

the current ceiling, a fragmentary marble inscription about

to the mosque. The ceilings collapsed, the gilded stones

a perpetual endowment for its upkeep under al-Muktafī

on its walls were scattered to the ground, and the mosaics

(r. 289–95/901–8) and small votive inscriptions in the name

on its floor and walls pulled down. Its landmarks and

of the mother of al-Muqtadir (r. 295–320/908–32) attached

beauties were altered; its splendour relapsed.38

to wooden beams in the roof.35 Similar commemorative inscriptions may or may not have existed at Damascus, a site

This version is consistent in its key elements with that

with a less universal aura than Jerusalem; if they ever did,

of Ibn al-Athīr, even though a few details vary: the warring

they were lost to subsequent fires and rebuilding.

factions are more explicitly named; the date is narrowed to the middle of Shaʿbān 469/first half of June 1069 (as also stated

The Fire of 1069 and the Later History of the Mosque

by al-ʿUmarī); and the edifice where the fire was kindled is

In his entry for the year 461/1069, Ibn al-Athīr (555–630/1160–

identified as the Khaḍrāʾ, the former palace of the Umayyads.

1233) writes:

Ibn Kathīr expands further on the ruined prayer hall, mosaics, marble, and ceiling of the mosque. He does so with a poetical

In Shaʿbān, the Mosque of Damascus burned. This was

rather than inventorial intent, in what still amounts to the most

caused by war in Damascus between the Westerners

concrete description of the damage available.

(al-maghāriba), who supported the Egyptians (al-miṣriyyin),

The earliest source to mention this fire seems to be Ibn

and the Easterners (al-mashāriqa). They kindled a fire in

al-Qalānisī (Damascene, ca. 465–555/1073–1160), who writes

a mansion adjacent to the mosque, which burned before

that only the four walls of the mosque remained standing.39

this spread to the mosque. The population helped the

Ibn Kathīr asserts that Ibn al-Jawzī (Baghdadi, 510–97/1126–1200),

Westerners and they stopped the fight to try and quell the

Ibn al-Sāʿī (Baghdadi, 593–674/1197–1276) and al-Dhahabī

fire in the mosque. The matter grew, intensified and the

(Damascene, 673–748/1274–1348) give 458/1065–66 as the date

fire destroyed the mosque. Its beauties were scattered to

of the fire. Ibn al-Jawzī, whose work is preserved, reports:

the ground, its rare works annihilated.

‘In Shaʿbān [458/June–July 1066], there was infighting in

36

Damascus, and a mansion next to the mosque was struck by

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

In Shaʿbān 461/May–June 1069, the mosque was thus ravaged

fire, so the mosque of Damascus burned.’40 Ibn al-Sāʿī’s account

by a major fire following a local fight between a pro-Saljuq

does not appear to be extant. Al-Dhahabī, on the other hand,

(hence pro-Abbasid and ‘eastern’) and a pro-Fatimid (‘western’)

does give the date as mid-Shaʿbān 461 on the basis of Ibn

faction. Al-ʿUmarī (a Damascene active in Cairo, 700–49/1301–49)

al-Athīr’s account.41 Thus local Damascene sources seem to

states in his version that the fight was triggered by the Fatimid

converge around an accepted date of 1069, whereas at least

vizier Badr al-Jamālī’s visit to Damascus. The event was also

one Iraqi writer, and possibly also a second, place the fire

described by Ibn Kathīr (Damascene, ca. 700–74/1300–73):

three years earlier. The date 1069 therefore carries more

37

weight than 1066. On the night of the middle of Shaʿbān of this year [461],

After a brief description of the mosque before the fire,

there was a fire in the Great Mosque of Damascus.

Ibn Kathīr continues his account in a way that will serve to

The reason was that, as slave-soldiers (ghulmān) of the

illustrate the type of textual evidence from which the later

Fatimids and Abbasids were fighting, a fire was kindled in

history of the mosque is to be reconstructed:

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25

Then its floor became mud in winter and dust in summer,

Year

Event

ca. 131/748

Earthquake (ceiling and roof)

233/847

Earthquake (parts of the masonry; minaret; possibly merlons)

the four shrines (mashāhid) in the east and west, until the

461/1069

Major fire (prayer hall)

qadi Kamāl al-Dīn al-Shahruzūrī removed them at the

552/1158

Earthquake (mosaics loss)

562/1167

Fire (Bāb al-Sāʿāt)

[Nūr al-Dīn] gave him [Kamāl al-Dīn] and the judiciary

570/1175

Fire (north minaret)

oversight of it along with all the endowments (awqāf), the

597/1202

Earthquake (east minaret, dome)

598/1203

Earthquake (crowning parts of minarets, elevation on north side)

646/1249

Fire (east minaret)

803/1401

Fire following Timur’s invasion (roof and other parts)

884/1479

Fire (prayer hall, west minaret)

restorations under various Ayyubid, Zangid, and early Mamluk

1172/1758

Earthquake (dome, north arcade)

rulers. A mosaic inscription near the northeast corner does

1311/1893

Fire (prayer hall)

hollowed and abandoned. Thus it remained until it was paved at the time of al-ʿĀdil Abū Bakr ibn Ayyūb [the Ayyubid Sultan, d. 615/1218], after the year 600 of the hijra [1204–5]. All the fallen marble and wood were stored in

time of al-Malik al-ʿ Ādil Nūr al-Dīn Maḥmūd ibn Zankī [the Zangid Sultan, r. 541–65/1146–74]. At that point, he

mint, and other things. Later kings continued to restore its beauties and its rehabilitation has become nearly complete under the Amīr Sayf al-Dīn Tankiz ibn ʿAbd Allāh al-Nāṣirī [d. 740/1340], the governor of Syria, may God reward him!42

The description evokes a long period of neglect followed by

commemorate repair work carried out by Nūr al-Dīn ibn Zankī and thus corroborates the text. But much else is also left out by Ibn Kathīr. Extant inscriptions record restorations by the

p  Table 1 Major disasters in the history of the mosque.

Saljuqs, who had captured Damascus from the Fatimids in

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

471/1079, in the transept and north temenos in 475/1083 and 503/1109. An inscription on the north arcade was written

anecdotes about their own era. Thus, in the above passage,

in the name of the late Abbasid caliph al-Mustaẓhir Bi’llāh

Ibn Kathīr mentions that remains of the original decoration

(r. 487–512/1094–1118). Further inscriptions from the intervening

were collected and stored in the four shrines (mashāhid). He

period record the refurbishment of marble cladding in 575/1180

is referring to the four side rooms of the Roman temenos;

under the Ayyubid sultan Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn (‘Saladin’, r. 570–89/

other sources confirm that they were variously associated

1174–93) and work ordered by the Mamluk sultan Baybars

across the centuries with the four Rightly-Guided caliphs

(r. 658–75/1260–77), probably on the mosaics.

and other holy figures.45 The account also asserts that the

43

Similarly, no single source contains a full record of events

mosque was transferred from the jurisdiction of rulers to that

affecting the mosque although one author, al-Nuʿaymī

of judges in the mid-twelfth century—a claim which, again,

(845–927/1442–1521), gathered many reports up to his own

deserves to be assessed against its broader historical context.

time. This relative exception notwithstanding, various

It is only by considering the full gamut of such evidence that a

testimonies need to be corroborated and complemented by

comprehensive history of the mosque—an account of the whole

surviving inscriptions. Individual texts often yield valuable

palimpsest—may eventually be reached.

44

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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Numerous earthquakes and fires occurred in the eleventh to fourteenth centuries. Evidence of these and later

and it was wrapped in smoke. Every time a part of the roof collapsed, one heard a formidable thunder-like

transformations have already been collected by previous

noise. People could see each other in the night because

studies. Some major episodes are summarised in Table 1.

46

The fifteenth century was particularly devastating. In Safar 803/October 1401, the mosque was largely burnt down in the aftermath of the siege of Damascus by Tīmūr Lang

of the brightness of the fire. All grieved profoundly; even the ahl al-dhimma (Christians and Jews) wept at the sight, as did the people who flocked in from the villages. On Friday 29 Rajab [15 October 1479] a bench for the

(‘Tamerlane’, d. 1405), the founder of the Timurid dynasty in

preacher (al-khaṭīb) was placed in the courtyard before

Muslim Central Asia. Repairs were undertaken under the

the transept dome. He performed the sermon while the

Mamluk sultan al-Muʾayyad (r. 815–24/1412–21) but in Rajab

audience was heavily weeping. It was a terrible moment.49

47

884/October 1479, a major fire ravaged the whole building again, sparing only the side rooms along the temenos and part

The feeling of irretrievable loss, the destruction of treasured

of the north wall. An eyewitness account by Ibn al-Ḥimsī

objects amassed in the building come through as expressions

(841–934/1438–1527) provides a rare glimpse into the reality

of the symbiotic relationship between mosque and city. Ibn

experienced by the local population during such events:

al-Ḥimṣī’s account is also notable for its mention of Christians

48

working on marble repairs, thus contributing to the fabric of I was present most of the time, carrying away with my

the mosque seven centuries after the Umayyads, and for its

colleagues the carpets from the mosque to the courtyard

multiple allusions to holy spots revered at this particular point

and urging others to do the same. As the fire was

in time, in a spatial map of the site that slowly evolved over

progressing, I gave orders to remove the minbar and take

the centuries.

out the Qurʾan of ʿUthmān, Qurʾan volumes, and the ḍarīḥ (tomb) which belonged to the waqf (mosque endowment).

extensive maintenance works in its early years as noted by

We had just had straw mats of unparalleled fine quality

the historian Ibn Ṭūlūn: in 926/1520, floors and marbles were

newly made. They were placed near the window of

repaired; painting and regilding were carried out, including on

mashhad al-nāʾib (the Shrine of the Deputy) where they all

the four transept pillars; the doors were polished, ‘becoming

burned. However, the mashhad itself did not; it had also

like gold’, as were the two lanterns in the courtyard—probably

escaped the fire of Tīmūr.

those on the freestanding columns. ‘All the columns in the

Two months earlier the viceroy Qānṣūḥ al-Yaḥāwī had Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Ottoman rule, which began in 922/1516 in Damascus, saw

interior’, he also notes, ‘were painted, one green and the next

ordered the renovation of the mosque and the estate

deep red, whereas they had been stone white.’ 50 No other major

that belonged to its waqf. The marble panelling in the

restorations seem to be recorded until the eighteenth century.

southern wall had been entirely renovated by Christian

On 6 Rabiʿ II 1172/7 December 1758, an earthquake destroyed

craftsmen (naṣāra murakhkhimīn), as far as the shrine of

the dome and north arcade, which were rebuilt the following

Sīdī Hūd.

year.51 Our source, al-Budayrī al-Ḥallāq, also reports that the

The fire also destroyed the gilded ṭirāz (inscription

west gate (Bāb al-Barīd) and some minarets were damaged.

band) that had been entirely renovated. The marble

The monument received further targeted restorations in the

burned down and collapsed like melting salt. Glass bits

nineteenth century.52 At the end of this period, disaster struck

fell alongside a grilled glass window and the lead from the

again, setting in motion the latest phase in its history.

roof melted down. The beauty of the mosque vanished

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chapter 1  •  Palimpsests in Stone and Layered Texts

27

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28

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:52.

p  figure 4 (opposite) The transept façade after the fire of 1893. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem. p  figure 5 (right) The local committee in charge of the 1890s reconstruction. From Ḥāfiẓ, Al-jāmiʿ al-umawī, 158.

The Mosque since the Nineteenth Century

In a tragic irony of fate, the disaster was triggered by a worker hired for the upkeep of the mosque.55 The damage was

The Fire of 1893

devastating (Figure 4). Beside the loss of a Qurʾan attributed

On 4 Rabiʿ II 1311 (15 October 1893), a fire ravaged the Great

to the early caliph ʿUthmān (r. 23–35/644–56), the roof and

Mosque of Damascus. The event was vividly described by

one of the two arcades on the west side of the prayer hall

Jamāl al-Dīn al-Qāsimī (1283–1332/1866–1914), a traditional

were destroyed.56 The transformative impact of the event was

scholar who became a leading figure of the Islamic Modernist

multiplied by the restoration campaign that followed. Western

movement; he was also the co-author of a two-volume

accounts often state that it was led by Paul Apéry, a European

Dictionary of Damascene Arts and Crafts, which records a now

from Istanbul who became chief architect (sar-muhandis) of

largely-vanished world. As he writes,

Damascus. Perhaps as a reflection of this role, he appears as

53

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‘the municipal architect (muhandis al-baladiyya) Apéry Efendi’ [The mosque] was clutched in the claws of disaster,

in the Arabic chronicle of Wilhelm II’s tour of the region in

its glories past killed by the present as fire came upon

1898, when he guided the Kaiser’s visit to the mosque.57 Other

its roof and walls and set ablaze its gates, doors and

Arabic sources barely mention Apéry, if at all, emphasizing

pillars, destroying an arcade on the west side, entering

instead the agency of local authorities, committees, and

the luminous house of the preachers, burning down its

craftsmen (Figure 5).58 Ottoman archival materials show that the

precious vestiges until it engulfed the large Qurʾan of

authorities in Istanbul were also involved in this project and that

ʿUthmān, on the morning of Saturday 4 Rabiʿ II 1311. This

debates arose around its course and the choice of an architect,

was caused by the fire lit by someone repairing the ceiling

with Damascene authorities rejecting names suggested by the

of the western chamber (mashhad) for his water pipe

Sublime Porte. Initial proposals to rebuild the monument in

(arkīla) and its accursed tombac: he placed it on the lead

reinforced concrete were abandoned on historical grounds.59

of its roof which melted, burning what was below.54

An unpublished document suggests that Raimondo D’Aronco,

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chapter 1  •  Palimpsests in Stone and Layered Texts

29

p  figure 6 Great Mosque of Damascus from the southwest. (Image flipped to reflect the actual orientation). Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey, 1843–44. Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Rés. Eg7-763.

an Italian architect famous for his Art Nouveau work at the

held together by steel collars, were cleaved by the fire’.62 The

Ottoman capital, was commissioned to produce unspecified

history of this campaign, which triggered passions both locally

work for the mosque.60

and at the imperial capital, deserves a fuller investigation.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

The most consequential decision made at the time was to

In any case, the fire and its aftermath profoundly altered the

remove the remaining columns of the prayer hall in order to

fabric of the mosque. Fortunately, a technology invented a

build the space anew with modern shafts and neo-Corinthian

few decades earlier can help us retrieve some of what was lost

capitals. These were made with stone from the hills near

from oblivion.

Mezzeh, just outside Damascus. From photographs, one can 61

infer that many of the originals were still standing after the fire,

The Earliest Photographs of the Mosque

including the two large columns of the transept façade (Figure 4).

On 19 August 1839, the photographic process invented by

Some may have become structurally unsound: al-Ṭānṭāwī,

Louis Daguerre, building upon earlier work by Nicéphore

writing in 1961 but drawing from a surviving eyewitness and

Niépce, was presented to the public for the first time at the

other local sources, notes that ‘the columns of the mosque

Académie des Sciences in Paris. Three months later, several

were old and most of them, having already been broken and

French teams were sent to different countries with state-of-

30

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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the-art photographic equipment to create a book about the

documenting architecture, its mass reproduction facilitated

monuments and cities of the world. The earliest daguerreotype

by the invention of lithography in 1798. As if to underline

of Damascus, now lost, was made on 19 January 1840, five

this turning point, at the same moment, in May 1844, John

months to the day after the launch event in Paris. The oldest

Gardner Wilkinson produced in watercolour the earliest known

surviving photographs of the mosque were taken a mere three to

naturalistic representation of the mosque seen from

four years later, between 1843 and 1844, as part of an expedition

the house of Richard Wood, the British consul at Damascus

carried out by Joseph-Philibert Girault de Prangey (1804–92).

(Figure 8).65

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63

The three published daguerreotypes—others may yet surface—

The first European accounts of the mosque had been given

show the building from the southwest and west (Figures 6

by travellers such as Harry Maundrell in 1697, Jean de Thévenot

and 7). They mark a change of era: the moment when this age-

in the late seventeenth century, and Richard Pococke in the

old monument emerged from centuries of verbal descriptions—

1730s, but they were forbidden entry to the building and could

and rare schematic drawings—to a new medium that captured

only peek at it from the gates. In the early eighteenth century,

its appearance in facsimile. In an Islamic context, the image

etchings of the mosque were printed in books by Paul Lucas

was taking over from the word as the primary medium for

(1720) and Vasily Barsky (1723–47).66

64

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p  figure 7 (right) Great Mosque of Damascus from the west. (Image flipped to reflect the actual orientation). JosephPhilibert Girault de Prangey, 1843–44. Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Rés. Eg7-764. p  figure 8 (opposite below) The Great Mosque of Damascus from the north. Watercolour. John Gardner Wilkinson, 1 May 1844. Oxford, Bodleian Library, MSS Wilkinson, dep. d. 22, ff. 14v‒15r.

In 1807, the Spaniard Domingo Badía y Leblich offered

in place, as noted for instance by Alphonse de Lamartine

his French readers a proper description by passing himself

in 1833 and Charles de Pardieu in 1849.70 But the tone and

off as a descendant of the Abbasids called Ali Bey and donning

content of J.L. Porter’s account in 1855 suggest that he saw the

local dress, as he did throughout his travels. He noted in his

interior—even though he still commented, in relation to the

account of Damascus, ‘a European cannot without risk present

Christian inscriptions on its south wall, that this was a building

himself there in the dress of his homeland and has to adopt

‘within whose hallowed precinct the feet of Christ’s people

that of the Levant’. In 1816, James Silk Buckingham and his

dare not tread!’71

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67

68

companions also entered the mosque unnoticed, he says, ‘by

From that time onwards, it seems that restrictions still existed

the aid of our beards, white turbans, and a certain conformity

but could be overcome with the help of local contacts. Porter, an

to Turkish or Arabic movements only to be acquired by habit’.

Irish Presbyterian, had taken residence in Damascus since 1850

Still, times were changing. From 1832 to 1841, Syria passed

on a mission to convert Jews. The shots taken in 1862 by Francis

into the hands of the autonomous governors of Egypt who

Bedford, the official photographer of Prince Albert’s ‘tour of the

sought to open up trade with Europe and facilitate access to

East’, suggest that he had free access to the courtyard—he must

their lands. The ban on non-Muslims in the mosque remained

even have carried his equipment into the minarets—but not to the

69

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chapter 1 • palimpsests in stone and layered texts

33

prayer hall. By contrast, the French photographer Félix Bonfils,

Suleiman Hakim, a Syrian, opened his own studio in Damascus.72

who had established a studio in Beirut in 1867, was able to produce

Hakim, Dumas and others also worked for the Maison Bonfils.

images of both the exterior and interior at several intervals.

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Damascus, being part of the biblical horizon, was a

These photographers created their images for a variety of purposes: commercial, looking to cater for popular books and

natural magnet for European travellers and a string of other

postcards, but also historical and missionary. The first known

photographers began to immortalise the building. Their ranks

attempt to systematically survey the building through both

included Francis Frith, who visited it around 1857–58 as part of

photographs and notes was made by Max Van Berchem. He and

a series of trips to produce commercial images of the region;

Hakim straddled two eras in that they photographed the state

Tancrède Dumas, who was based in Beirut from 1867; Frank

of the mosque before the fire of 1893, and shortly afterwards as

Mason Good, who was employed by Frith and travelled to the

it lay in ruins (Figures 4 and 9).73 Van Berchem’s photographs

region four times in the 1860s to 1870s; Félix Bonfils’ son Adrien,

have outstanding historical value as they show aspects of the

who succeeded his father from 1877 to 1895; Henry Phillips,

building that had not been recorded previously and would

mandated by the Palestine Exploration Fund in 1865 and 1867;

soon be lost to Ottoman restoration.

and Jules Gervais-Courtellemont, who visited Damascus in June 1893, four months before the fire. Towards the end of the century,

34

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:52.

During the same period, a few paintings of the mosque were executed in Orientalist style by European artists.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

p  figure 9 (opposite) The prayer hall, east wing. Max Van Berchem, after 1893. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem. p  figure 10 (right) Portions of the Interior of the Grand Mosque of Damascus. Oil on canvas, 158 × 120  cm. Frederic Leighton, 1873–75. Preston, Lancashire, Harris Museum/Bridgeman Images.

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chapter 1  •  Palimpsests in Stone and Layered Texts

35

p  figure 11 (far left) Restorations of the 1950s to 1960s: Detachment of mosaic panel. From Anon., Fusayfisāʾ al-jāmiʿ al-umawī, pl. 14. p  figure 12 (left) Restorations of the 1950s to 1960s: Craftsmen at work on the mosaics. From Rīḥāwī, ‘Fusayfisāʾ al-jāmiʿ’, fig. 8

p  figure 13 (far left) Restorations of the 1950s to 1960s: In situ restoration of the mosaics on an arch. From Fusayfisāʾ al-jāmiʿ al-umawī, pl. 13. p  figure 14 (left) Restorations of the 1950s to 1960s: Creation of a new mosaic panel in a workshop. From Anon., Fusayfisaʾ al-jamiʿ al-umawi, pl. 15.

Frederic Leighton (1830–96) depicted the central part of the

accurate when assessed against other evidence. Together with

qibla wall (Figure 10) on the basis of an oil sketch taken in situ

Wilkinson’s watercolour (Figure 8), they also record a dimension

in 1873, along with study drawings and possibly photographs.74

of the building not captured by early photographs: colour.

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In 1890, Gustav Bauernfeind (1848–1904) completed two oil paintings on canvas showing respectively the façade of the

Restorations of the 1920s to 1960s

transept from the north gate and the west gate. These were

The transformation of the mosque did not end with the fire

again done from sketches and watercolours executed in

of 1893. Limited restorations, mainly of marble panels, floor

Damascus in 1888–89, including a second view of the west gate.

tiles, and mosaics, were undertaken in the 1920s and 1930s.76

Both artists added fictitious figures to their works. Leighton

The famous mosaics in the west arcade of the Great Mosque

depicts a man praying towards the east rather than south in the

were revealed underneath their plaster cover in 1928 through

direction of Mecca and his finished painting has two children

the initiative of Victor Eustache de Lorey and Marguerite Van

not present in the sketch. Bauernfeind had reportedly paid

Berchem.77 The discovery put Umayyad art in the spotlight,

models to be sketched. But in both cases, the renditions of

inaugurating decades of interest in these spectacular

architecture are detailed and, as we shall see, impressively

creations. In 1937, Van Berchem started campaigning with

75

36

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:49:52.

p  figure 15 Restorations of the 1950s to 1960s: preparatory drawing for a mosaic panel on the transept door arch (far left) and the same panel after restoration (left). From Anon., Fusayfisāʾ al-jāmiʿ al-umawī, pls. 9–10.

Republic lasted until around 1385/1965–66, the date recorded in a mosaic inscription.81 Work on the mosaics followed procedures described by ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Rīḥāwī, the head of excavations at the Syrian Direction of Antiquities.82 His testimony is worth paraphrasing in full as it has implications p  figure 16 Restorations of the 1950s to 1960s: In situ restoration of the river mosaic, west courtyard wall. From Anon., Fusayfisāʾ al-jāmiʿ al-umawī, pl. 12.

for the study of this ornament. Pieces of cloth soaked with a mixture of sugar, flour and glue were pressed against the mosaic panels, thus enabling the workers to pull them off the wall (Figure 11). They were taken to a workshop where their mortar was removed, leaving the tesserae attached to the cloth. Next, each panel was placed on a workbench and tesserae were added to fill any voids (Figure 12). A layer of reinforced concrete was applied to the back of the mosaics to hold them together and the cloth was soaked

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in water to detach it from the tesserae. The mosaics were then local authorities to have craftsmen trained so that, as she

brushed and cleaned before being reattached to the walls with

wrote in a letter, ‘Damascus may have mosaicists to look after

metal hooks set in another layer of reinforced concrete.83 At

the conservation of its mosaics in the future.’ 78 This project

that stage, any remaining small gaps caused by the restoration

was shelved during the Second World War when structural

were again filled with mosaic cubes (Figure 13). Entirely new

work was carried out on the Minaret of Jesus and on the north

panels were also created (Figure 14), particularly for the west

arcade, and emergency repairs were made to the mosaics of

vestibule (Figure 15), the adjoining river mosaic (Figure 16),

the northwest corner.

the transept façade, and the domed chamber on columns

79

In 1944, Syria gained its independence from the French

known as Bayt al-Māl.

Mandate. By the 1950s, attention was returning to the mosaics

While these procedures seem invasive by current standards,

as part of a broader initiative to restore or replace masonry,

they reflected common practice at the time. The detachment

columns, gates and other damaged elements in the mosque, as

method and the resetting of panels in cement with metal pins

summarily recorded in 1961 by Makīn al-Muʾayyad, erstwhile

were used on most major monuments at Ravenna from the

engineer of the Direction of Religious Endowments (Awqaf).

1910s to the 1970s.84 In the early twentieth century, Corrado

This phase of intensive work under the young Syrian Arab

Ricci had introduced the marking out of new areas with a line

80

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chapter 1  •  Palimpsests in Stone and Layered Texts

37

of red tesserae; the same procedure was employed in some

were gathered in boxes, and the French took some away during

panels at Damascus. Italian restorers commonly added new

the Mandate.87 To this day, the Louvre in Paris holds some

areas of mosaics to fill gaps, an operation sometimes motivated

1,400 tesserae from the mosque in small fragments set in their

by the structural consolidation of the panel. Both al-Rīḥāwī and

original plaster.88 Ongoing scientific analysis by the museum

al-Muʾayyad mention similar imperatives for Damascus. It was

may eventually provide evidence about their provenance and

in the 1970s that the integrity of mosaics as artworks became a

manufacture, although it is unlikely to resolve the vexed issue

growing concern in Italy, so that new techniques were devised

of the mosaicists’ origin.

to retain the setting bed during detachment. Work in situ was preferred unless absolutely essential, and the scope and impact

underway, states that they extended to the northeast corner,

of any interventions was minimised.

the west arcade, and Bāb al-Barīd.89 Al-Muʾayyad, in 1961,

Cesare Brandi, an influential restorer who directed the

suggested a broader scope by noting that they were to be

Istituto Centrale del Restauro in Rome, had travelled to

undertaken ‘in all parts of the mosque’.90 Today, on the west

Jerusalem in 1956 to assess the mosaics at the Dome of the

arcade and the small fragments of the east arcade wall, one

Rock, then under the jurisdiction of the Hashemite Kingdom

can clearly see the concrete and metal pins, now corroded,

of Jordan. The restoration of that monument was steered by

where the mosaic has broken away (Figure 17). The masonry

an Egyptian committee and largely funded by Egypt. Since

of the Bayt al-Māl and transept façade is completely concealed

Syria and Egypt had nominally merged to form the United Arab

with modern mosaics, leaving no gaps to allow such a visual

Republic in 1958–61, it is conceivable that expertise was shared

assessment.

85

across both sites—but if so, the collaboration is not attested. On

In sum, the mosaics as they stand today on the west arcade,

the contrary, al-Rīḥāwī boasts that the works were undertaken

west wall, and probably in the rest of the mosque, have been

‘without relying on a foreign expert,’ albeit several years before

removed from the walls and stripped of their original mortar.

their completion. This does not mean that techniques were

New compositions were created to replace areas of loss and

not acquired from abroad, one way or another.

extant panel sections from the Umayyad to medieval periods

86

In the context of the period, the work undertaken at

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Al-Rīḥāwī, writing in 1960 while the restorations were still

were lightly reworked in a way that may not be perceptible

Damascus was unusual mainly for the extent of the new

to the naked eye—or even through materials analysis, since

mosaic compositions and for the apparent lack of detailed

original tesserae were reused in places. Columns and masonry

documentation about the process. A further account published

could likewise be invasively restored: in at least one instance,

in 1965 by ʿAbd al-Laṭīf Qazīhā, an engineer in charge of the site

a historical column from the Mosque of Tankiz (1317) was used

in the early 1960s, adds further details to al-Rīḥāwī’s. Qazīhā

to replace a damaged column at the Umayyad Mosque.91 These

specifies that a furnace was built to produce over twenty types

interventions invite particular caution about using the current

of tesserae, while the silver and gold tesserae were imported

state of the building and its decoration as a basis for study.

from Italy and Germany. Original tesserae that had fallen from the walls had been collected over the years, and these were

Photographs of the 1920s to 1940s

also reused for repairs at the west gate known as Bāb al-Barīd:

How to distinguish original panels from modern recreations?

in other words, some twentieth-century interventions in this

As noted, in some cases the restorers marked out new areas

area cannot be distinguished through materials alone. Qazīhā

with a red line, but this was not done systematically. Early

also notes that, as a game, local boys used to hit the already

photographs are therefore, once again, key documents for

damaged panels with stones in order to detach tesserae; these

analysing the mosaics. After the First World War, as Islamic

38

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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p  figure 17 West courtyard pier with mosaics set in modern concrete. Alain George, 2010.

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chapter 1  •  Palimpsests in Stone and Layered Texts

39

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40

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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p  figure 18 Reproductions of the mosaic panels on the west courtyard wall being painted on paper, 1928–29. © Paris, Musée du Louvre, Phototèque du Départment des Arts de l’Islam, Archives de Lorey, PAI 1059.

art was emerging as a field of modern historical research,

Their respective materials—texts and buildings—share the

K.A.C. Creswell produced an extensive photographic record

fundamental problematiques of memory, erasure, and rewriting.

of the monument at several intervals between the 1920s and

In the Umayyad Mosque, furthermore, these two realities fed

1940s; this body of work was donated, along with the rest of

into each other. From Ibn al-Muʿallā in the ninth century to

his archive, to the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, and a large

Ibn Kannān in the eighteenth, nearly every Syrian scholar

collection of his prints also exists at the Harvard Fine Arts

who wrote about the mosque had ambled in its courtyard

Library. Other images were taken by Eustache de Lorey, on

and prayed within its walls, witnessing its current state, or

whose initiative nine real-size reproductions of mosaic panels

‘instance’, as they sought to learn about its past. The narratives

on canvas were painted between October 1928 and September

they crafted also shaped the perception of travellers, such

1929 by Fehmi Kabbani, Kamal Kallass, and Nazmi Khair under

as al-Muqaddasī and Ibn Jubayr, and most of all locals. The

the supervision of Lucien Cavro (Figure 18). Their particular

framework set by texts nourished a growing reverence towards

value resides in the level of detail, which records single

the building and oriented attitudes towards its restoration.

tesserae, and colour; they are now kept at the Louvre. The

The mosque and its historiography thus came to form a single

archive of the French architect Michel Ecochard, preserved

compound of unusual temporal and spatial density.

92

at the Aga Khan Documentation Center, also contains several

When it comes to the eighth-century state of the building,

rare images datable to the 1940s. In the 1960s to 2000s, several

two turning points should be noted: the fire of 1069, which

Syrian scholars, notably Adnan Bounni, ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Rīḥāwī

destroyed a largely preserved Umayyad monument, thereby

and Muṭīʿ Ḥāfiẓ published early images of the mosque, some

increasing the value of prior textual accounts; and the fire of

their own work, others anonymous.93 Given the spread of

1893, which was followed by intrusive modern restorations,

tourism and portable cameras in the twentieth century, many

leaving early photographs as a key record of what was lost.

more photographs from this period must exist in Damascus and

This last fire also marks a change of epoch: it occurred at a

worldwide. The corpus collected in this book is therefore only

time when the perception of the monument’s history was still

the beginning of what could become a larger effort.

steeped in local narratives but the status of traditional modes of learning was receding. Thus, Damascene élites elected

pppp

to rebuild the mosque as a facsimile and avert a reinforced

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concrete rebuilding, but they also showed less reverence than Over the long history of the Umayyad Mosque, disasters and

earlier generations for its historic remains. Paradoxically,

decay led to one major intervention after the other. Many

much loss of early material was guided by the search for the

of these were themselves erased or concealed in their turn.

‘authentic’ Umayyad Mosque, particularly in the 1950s and

These constant evolutions, together with the natural wear

1960s. There is much to be gained, at our point in time, from

of materials, give the monument a deeply accretive nature,

re-embracing the monument in its full complexity. But Umayyad

turning it into an almost organic repository of human

and later layers of building were, of course, not the first in

endeavours in this particular place over the centuries. It is

the history of the site. In order to comprehend the events that

no coincidence that the concept of the palimpsest has been

unfolded in 705, we now need to reach further back in time,

of interest to both literary and architectural historians.

towards the Roman and Christian eras.

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chapter 1  •  Palimpsests in Stone and Layered Texts

41

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2 Tangled Memories: The Temple, Church, and First Mosque

T

he Great Mosque of Damascus is one of the oldest continuously used cultic sites in the world. It was already ancient in the eighth century. A temple had

stood there in high antiquity, but the documented history of the site really begins with the first century CE, when the Romans built a massive Temple of Jupiter, the walls of which largely remain as the mosque enclosure of today. With the triumphant rise of Christianity in the fourth century, the Damascene sacred enclosure was closed to pagan cult and reconsecrated to the new religion. Finally, in the seventh century, as armies proclaiming the nascent faith of Islam seized Damascus, they established next to this church a first mosque that would later be remembered

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for its associations with Companions of the Prophet. The three centuries between the closure of the temple and the construction of al-Walīd’s mosque were among the most p  The gate of the outer temple enclosure or peribolos with the inner enclosure, or temenos, in the background. The temenos is now the mosque wall. Detail of a photograph by K.A.C. Creswell, early twentieth century. Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, EA.CA.5459. © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford.

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momentous in the long history of the site. In what follows, I seek to recover glimpses of this period. Using overlooked archaeological evidence about the cella, the inner sanctuary of the Roman temple, I will first attempt to estimate its position, size, and height, before turning my attention to the church. Its location, as established nearly a century ago by Creswell, will be confirmed.1 Its form, however, is a more complex matter.

43

p figure 19 Tetradrachm with profile portrait of Antiochus XII (obverse) and cult statue of Hadad (reverse). Damascus, 85‒84 or 84‒83 BCE. From Houghton, Lorber, and Hoover, Seleucid Coins, Pt. II, SC 2472.2.

The Cella of the Roman Temple

with embellishments around the time of Septimius Severus

The Damascene temple was built by the Romans in the first

and frames of its four gates, and segments of its original masonry

century CE for the cult of Jupiter, assimilated with the Greek

including most of the west wall up to three stone courses above

(r. 193–211).10 It retains the layout of the Roman wall; the positions

god Zeus and the Semitic god of thunder Hadad, who had

the projecting pilasters; the centre and west of the south wall

probably been worshipped on this site for over a millennium.

below the windows; the north and centre of the east wall; and

The temple consisted of two massive concentric walls: the

the lower courses of the east and west corners of the north wall.11

inner enclosure, or temenos (158 × 99 m), largely preserved

The rest of its perimeter reflects later rebuilding, mostly from

as the walls of the Umayyad Mosque; and the outer enclosure,

the medieval period.

2

or peribolos (393 × 315 m at its largest extent), of which scantier remains are scattered throughout the old city. The

Layout of the Site

slightly trapezoidal shape of the Damascene peribolos has

The sacrificial altar probably stood in the centre of the

earned it the modern denomination Gamma, after the Greek

temenos, at the intersection of the axes defined by its four

letter of the same form. With its 124,000 square metres, the

gates, as was common in Roman temples. Its broad orientation

peribolos had the largest footprint of any in the Mediterranean

seems to be confirmed by a subterranean passageway under

world, with the exception of Herod’s Temple in Jerusalem.

the east temenos gate excavated between 1992 and 1994 (Figure

The temenos was primarily intended for rituals performed

20).12 This would have been used to bring sacrificial beasts into

on the altar, under the gaze of a statue or image housed in

the temenos, as they could not easily climb monumental stairs

the cella, a part of the precinct normally reserved to the

and might have damaged them.

3

4

priesthood. Coins minted at Damascus by Antiochius XII show 5

an image of Hadad based on the cult statue as it existed in

The Ten Books on Architecture, a treatise dedicated to Augustus

the first century BCE: a bearded figure standing on a pedestal

at about the time the Damascene temple was being built.

flanked by two bulls, carrying an ear of wheat in the left hand

Vitruvius notes that the cella of a temple and its cult statue

(Figure 19).

should face the western quarter of the sky: this implies a

6

The exact function of the peribolos beyond the temenos, Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

This configuration resonates with a remark in Vitruvius’

theoretical preference for setting the building in the east side

whether for worship or commercial fairs, has been debated.

of the temenos, with the gates opening towards the centre.13

A dozen inscriptions related to the temple have been found

However, he adds:

7

in different parts of the precinct. Four of them have dates between 327 and 402 of the Seleucid era (15–91 CE).8 The Roman

But if the nature of the site is such as to forbid this,

temple was therefore probably begun at the very beginning of

then the principle of determining the quarter should be

the imperial period under Augustus (r. 31 BCE–14 CE), a dating

changed, so that the widest possible view of the city may

confirmed by stylistic analyses of the ornamental stonework.

be had from the sanctuaries of the gods.14

9

The mosque wall as it stands today has undergone numerous repairs and partial reconstructions over the centuries, starting

44

the umayyad mosque of damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

In practice, Roman temple orientation varied widely and

p  figure 20 Underground stairs below the east temenos gate, Bāb Jayrūn, excavated in 1992‒94. From Bounni, ‘Du temple païen à la mosquée’, fig. 6.

was often towards the east in Syria.15 The principle stated by

of the Khaḍrāʾ [in the south], the Palace of the Two Orphans

Vitruvius—to dominate local topography—is applicable at

(qaṣr al-yatīmayn), the Gold Stone (ḥajar al-dhahab), or Bāb

Damascus. The west wall of the temenos is close, in its current

al-Farādīs [in the north], entry is made at ground level, with

state, to the Roman street level, since it is still uncovered down

no stairs.18

to the base. The prayer hall has also essentially retained its Roman floor level, whereas the street behind it is now several metres higher. Bāb Jayrūn, the east temenos gate, is 5.4  m

In 1897, Archibald Campbell Dickie counted thirty-two steps.19 In 581/1184, Ibn Jubayr gave this further account:

above the Roman street level, to which it was connected by a monumental porch and stairway.16 The eastern temenos must

The most imposing [gate] to look upon is the vestibule

thus have been built on a raised platform.

connected with Bāb Jayrūn. Going forth from this door,

Bāb Jayrūn was the most monumental gate of the Roman temenos and its processional entryway. Standing on top of a hill

one comes to a long and broad portico at the front of which are five arched doorways with six tall columns.20

that sloped down towards the east of Damascus, it remained a Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

major landmark well into the Islamic period. The processional street leading to it, the via sacra of Roman times, has a marked

In 1855, J.L. Porter gave a very similar but more detailed description:

gradient to this day (Figure 21). The earliest source to discuss the gate, al-Masʿūdī, writing in 332/944, links it to ‘Iram of the

Before the eastern gate, called Bab Jeirûn, is a rather curious

Pillars’, the fabled Qurʾanic palace, but provides little by way of

portico. It is shut in by a solid wall at the sides and angles;

a description. Two centuries later, al-Idrīsī (d. 548/1154) noted:

but in front has six columns supporting semi-circular arches;

17

the central arch being nearly double the span of the others. If approaching it [the mosque] from the side of Bāb Jayrūn,

The columns, like those of the interior, are Corinthian; but

one climbs up a large and wide stairway of some thirty

while the latter are in general well-proportioned and finely

marble steps; but from Bāb al-Barīd [in the west], the Dome

executed, those are of a debased style.21

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chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

45

p  figure 21 (left) Bāb Jayrūn exterior, present day. Ross Burns/Manar al-Athar, 2008.

Richard Phené Spiers, who visited Damascus in 1866, noted

width of the central arch, as described by Porter, only becomes

that the portico had collapsed in 1858. Some of its column bases

apparent without it. Thus, in its Roman (and Umayyad) state,

remained in the early twentieth century. Today, the lateral

Bāb Jayrūn probably had four columns and five arches.

22

walls to the north and south still stand, extensively repaired,

The portico roofing is not described by the sources, but

with their Roman engaged pilasters (Figure 22). This, together

according to Porter, the central arch was nearly twice the width

with the position of columns recorded in early publications,

of the others, which suggests a ‘Syrian’ type of pediment.24 One of

makes it possible to estimate the original dimensions of the

the best-preserved examples belongs to the Damascene temple

portico: it was 18.39  m deep from temenos wall to outer pilaster

enclosure itself: the west peribolos gate adjoining the modern

and about 28  m wide from wall to wall.

Sūq al-Ḥamīdiyye, which originally had four columns framed

23

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p  figure 22 (above) Bāb Jayrūn, gate visible on the left and the remains of the north portico wall on the right. Sean Leatherbury/ Manar al-Athar, 2010.

Ibn Jubayr counted five arches in the portico, whereas Ibn

by two pillars with engaged semi-columns (Figure 24). Its width,

Baṭṭūṭa and Porter saw six columns, which would suggest seven

based on Dickie’s measurements, is about 24  m which is close to

arches. Because it is framed by walls, Creswell assumed that

the 28  m of Bāb Jayrūn.25 Both gates may thus have been broadly

there was a flat architrave rather than an arch at each end of

comparable in design, with two engaged columns and four

the gate. But Porter recorded five columns on his schematic

freestanding ones, which tallies with the above total of six.

ground plan, including one that nearly faced the axis between Bāb Jayrūn and the east peribolos gate (Figure 23). That column

The 1962–63 Soundings

must have been added later for structural support, as its position

The Roman structures within the temenos have never been

jarred with the alignment of the Roman colonnade. The larger

documented or indeed seen, except for a fleeting glimpse

46

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

p  figure 23 (above) Ground plan of the mosque, J.L. Porter, Five Years in Damascus, vol. 1, between pages 60 and 61.

p  figure 24 (below) West peribolos entrance, view from the east. Alain George, 2010.

caught between 1962 and 1963. At that time, archaeological soundings revealed the foundations of an ancient building between the treasury on columns known as the Bayt al-Māl and the prayer hall façade. These were on a massive scale, over 4  m wide, and were unearthed across a length of 20  m along the east–west axis, leaving their extension buried towards the centre of the courtyard (Figures 25, 26, 27 and 28). These foundations formed a corner just to the north of the Umayyad Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

triple arch leading to the west entrance vestibule (Bāb al-Barīd) and were surrounded by a pit filled with earth and rubble. A platform stood within these peripheral foundations and was linked to them by two narrow underground bridges (Figures 25 and 26). A massive fluted column fragment had crashed onto the floor of the platform, probably after a fall from a great height. The importance of these findings must have immediately struck the archaeologists involved, but their work came to an abrupt end due to an unspecified conflict of interests— possibly with the direction of Islamic religious endowments,

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chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

47

original publications are hard to find, and each image contains

p  figure 25 Excavations in the Mosque courtyard, 1962–63. View from the centre of the north arcade roof. From Ḥāfiẓ, Al-jāmiʿ al-umawī, 164.

fragments of evidence not seen in the others. The fifth image, from Akili’s book, was too small to allow its inclusion here: it shows a perspective similar to that in Ḥāfiẓ’s image (Figure 25),

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

but with a wider angle. It is not known whether additional the Awqaf, which has authority over the mosque.26 This ill-fated

records of the sounding exist, and the current situation in

campaign was not to be published and the earliest photograph

Syria has made it impossible to investigate private and public

that I know of only surfaced two decades later among a series of

archives in Damascus. One is left to mine this very limited

others in a book by Muḥammad Muṭīʿ Ḥāfiẓ, without comment

documentation for potential insights on the pre-Islamic

(Figure 25). Another two decades would elapse before Adnan

history of the site.

27

Bounni (1926–2008), the long-time Director of Excavations at the Syrian Department of Antiquities and Museums, published three

Identification of the Remains

further images accompanied by a few lines of commentary in a

Three indications of scale were provided by Bounni: the width

general article about the mosque (Figures 26, 27 and 28).28 A fifth

of the foundations (about 4  m), the length over which they were

photograph appears in Talal Akili’s recent book on the mosque.

excavated (20  m, presumably along the east–west axis, albeit

29

These five images represent nearly all the available information about the remains. Four of them are reproduced here since the

48

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

without reaching the end of the structure) and the diameter of the column shaft (about 1.80  m).30 Further elements that appear

p figure 26 (above left) Excavations in the Mosque courtyard, 1962–63. View from the centre of the prayer hall façade. From Bounni, ‘Du temple païen à la mosquée’, fig. 2.

p figure 27 (above right) Excavations in the Mosque courtyard, 1962–63. View from the west end of the prayer hall roof. From Bounni, ‘Du temple païen à la mosquée’, fig. 3.

p figure 28 (right) Excavations in the Mosque courtyard, 1962–63. View from the northwest. From Bounni, ‘Du temple païen à la mosquée’, fig. 4.

p figure 29 (below) Excavations in the Mosque courtyard, 1962–63. Photograph with outline of key lengths. From Bounni, ‘Du temple païen à la mosquée’, fig. 2.

in the photographs also have known dimensions: the columns of the domed Bayt al-Māl rise 4.56 m from floor level to the top of capitals;31 the adjoining arcade columns measure 6.79 m to the top of the impost.32 The foundation wall next to the inner pit is six to seven

B

stone courses wide: this must be the structure said by Bounni to have measured about 4 m, since its width is nearly equal to Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

the height of the Bayt al-Māl columns (Figure 29, A). However,

D

these foundations extend outwards for another 2 m with a slight differential in level, as can be seen most clearly on the west

D

side, which runs parallel to the courtyard colonnade (B). They may be even larger: in the photographs, their continuation is concealed on one side by the courtyard flooring, and on

C

A

the other by rubble from the excavations. In either case, the width of the original foundations must have been at least 6 m (A+B). Their depth, in turn, was no less than 4 m (C), since it can be seen to match the height of the Bayt al-Māl columns,

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

chapter 2 • tangled memories

49

p  figure 30 (below) Foundations of cella at the Temple of Bel, Palmyra, 32 CE. From Seyrig, Amy, and Will, Le temple de Bêl, 2, pl. 10.

p  figure 31 (opposite left) Foundations of northwest cella corner at the Temple of Bel, Palmyra, 32 CE. From Seyrig, Amy, and Will, Le temple de Bêl, 1, pl. 10.1.

but again its full extent may have been larger. Above the

both sites share a massive outer foundation rectangle for the

foundations, one can discern several pipes, probably Islamic,

peristyle (A, B, and C in Figure 29), similar foundations for the

running from west to east within a thin layer of sandy rubble

cella walls (Figure 31), perpendicular foundation bridges to link

or soil (Figure 28).

these two parts of the design (Figure 29, D, and Figure 30), and

The scale of these foundations evokes the most monumental Roman architecture. At the Temple of Bel in Palmyra,

smaller rubble stones for the cella floor (Figure 28). The foundations of early Christian buildings have rarely

soundings have revealed a wall-like facing extending 13 to 15  m

been documented archaeologically but most churches, not

below ground level, down to a bedrock of compact clay (Figure

being as tall as the cellas of major temples, generally did not

30). As in Damascus, there were two distinct foundation

require such massive substructures. The largest Christian

walls, one for the cella wall and the other for the columns that

buildings, however, should be considered as possible exceptions

surrounded them (the peristyle). These were probably followed

to the rule. The Nea Church built by Justinian (r. 527–65) in

by a stepped base (the crepidoma). Similarly, at the Temple

Jerusalem must have been among the most monumental of its

of Artemis at Gerasa, the peristyle and cella walls stand on

age: partial excavations have suggested dimensions of more

foundation walls about 2.4  m thick. Between these foundations

than 100 x 52  m (5,200 sq. m) for the main body of the basilica,

are passageways and chambers entered down steps. The

and nearly 140 x 52  m (7,280 sq. m) if one includes the narthex

parallel between Damascus and Palmyra is particularly close:

and atrium.36 This makes the main body alone nearly equal in

33

34

35

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p  figure 32 (opposite right) Chamber to the south of Bāb al-Barīd along the west temenos wall. From Bounni, ‘Du temple païen à la mosquée’, fig. 7.

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

size to the prayer hall at the Mosque of Damascus (about 136 x 37  m, 5,032 sq. m) and the entire building larger than a football pitch (105 x 68  m, 7,140 sq. m).37 In the Nea, the foundation wall segment from which the main arcade must have sprung was wide (2.4  m), but less so than in the Damascus soundings (at least 4  m); it could still have supported a very tall structure.38 Only the much more compact

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apse wall had wider foundations (6.50  m).39 Because the church was built on a natural hill, on one side its foundations required

Footprint of the Cella

the construction of a massive vaulted structure that was later

Judging from the pattern typical of other temples of the Syrian

turned into a water cistern. In other parts of the building, the

region, the cella in Damascus would have been bisected by

wall foundations reached down to the bedrock. They formed,

the east–west axis between Bāb al-Barīd and Bāb Jayrūn.41 The

in the words of the chief excavator, ‘a network of “boxes”

foundations form a corner that is aligned with the north pillar

reaching a uniform height, which were subsequently filled

of Bāb al-Barīd (Figure 26). The two rooms abutting the west

with tremendous amounts of earth fills’. Thus, the scale and

temenos wall have massive ashlar masonry consistent with a

construction technique of its foundations differ from those

Roman date (Figure 32).42 Their recess forms the vestibule of

revealed by the 1962–63 soundings at Damascus. Although

Bāb al-Barīd, which must therefore have framed the cella wall

the available data is limited, it points to the likelihood of the

in Roman times, giving the latter a width of about 13  m.43 To

excavated foundations being those of a major Roman temple.

reach the full cella width, one must add about 1.50  m for each

This conclusion seems reinforced, again tentatively,

pit and at least another 2  m for the peristyle columns and their

by the impact of the massive Roman shaft fragment that

bases. This adds up to no less than 20  m.

40

became lodged deep in the foundations: its presence there can scarcely be explained if these foundations are post-Roman.

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

The extent of the cella towards the centre of the temenos in the east is unknown. Vitruvius gives the ideal proportions

chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

51

Temple

A. Column diameter

B. Column height

C. Ratio of column height to diameter

D. Cella walls

E. Cella within peristyle

F. Cella height

G. Temenos size

H. Peribolos size

BAALBEK ‘Bacchus’ 2nd century

1.79   m (peristyle and corner, plain); 1.65  m (anta, fluted)

17.59   m (peristyle); 16.09 (anta)

9.83 (peristyle); 9.75 (anta)

22.26 × 46.55  m

33.47 × 65.30  m

≃ 26.50  m





BAALBEK Jupiter 1st century

2.08  m (peristyle, plain) 1.78  m (anta, fluted)

19.76  m (peristyle)

9.5 (peristyle)



44.98 × 85.02  m

≃ 32  m

101 × 105  m (forecourt only)



DAMASCUS Jupiter 1st‒2nd century

≃ 1.80  m





≃ 13  m (width)

>20  m (width)



99 × 158  m

393 × 315  m (max.)

GERASA Artemis 2nd century

1.48 to 1.50  m

13.07 to 13.25  m

8.71 to 8.95

13.37 × 24.15  m (excl. antae)

22.6 × 40.1  m



88 × 124  m

121 × 161  m

PALMYRA Bel 32 CE

1.36  m

15.81  m

11.63

14.58 × 40.21  m

30.05 × 55.60  m

≃ 24  m (to top of pediment, excl. stepped base)

ca. 200 × 200  m



p  table 2 Dimensions of the Damascene cella and of other Roman temples from the eastern Mediterranean.44

of temples as 2:1 for the peristyle and 5:4 for the cella walls.

diameter of about 1.80  m is smaller than that of the plain

In practice, the proportions of the largest temples with

peristyle columns at the Temple of Jupiter in Baalbek (2.08  m),

peristyles were often close to 2:1, as at the temples of Jupiter

and virtually identical to that of the fluted columns that project

and ‘Bacchus’ in Baalbek and the Temple of Artemis in Gerasa.

at the front of the same temple, the anta (1.78  m). The peristyle

Different values are also attested: for instance, the ratio

columns of the ‘Temple of Bacchus’ in Baalbek are of the same

was unusually large at the Temple of Bel (close to 11:4) and

scale (1.79  m). The Damascene shaft otherwise exceeds the

conversely, some temples had a more compact footprint. At

column size of other Roman temples in this region (Table 2), or

Damascus, the north and south temenos gates are slightly off-

indeed elsewhere. The columns of the porch at the Pantheon in

centre (they currently face the east wall of the transept rather

Rome, for instance, have a diameter of ‘only’ 1.48  m, although

than its central door), probably because the altar stood on their

being granite monoliths, they presented a technical challenge

axis: this could suggest relatively elongated cella proportions,

different to composite stone columns.47

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45

although the idea is speculative.

In major temples of Roman Syria, the ratio of column diameter to height was between about 1:9 and 1:11 (Table 2).

Cella Elevation and Proportions

This largely overlaps with the theoretical claims of Vitruvius,

The fluted shaft fragment discovered among the foundations

who gives a range of proportions between 1:8 and 1:10.48

can provide evidence about the height of the cella.46 Its massive

Therefore the Damascus fragment probably belonged to a shaft

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

with a height between about 14  m (if the proportion was 1:8) and

The Church within the Temenos and the First Mosque

20  m (if it was 1:11). To this should be added the height of the column base (according to Vitruvius, half the width of a column,

In the fourth century, the fortunes of Christians in the Roman

hence about 90  cm in the present case), and the capital (which

Empire shifted dramatically. After centuries of persecution, their

was equal to the column width at the base in the Corinthian

faith was officially recognised at Milan in 313 by the Roman

order). This would put the total height of the original columns

emperors Constantine and Licinius. Constantine gradually

at Damascus between 16.50 and 22.50  m—and probably at the

asserted his own Christian faith and placed legal restrictions

lower end of this range, since even the gigantic columns at

on blood sacrifice, although temples remained open and other

Baalbek did not reach 20  m (Table 2, column B). Judging from

ceremonies, such as libation and the offering of incense, were

other temples, the entablature and pediment may have added

still permitted.54 In Jerusalem, the Temple of Aphrodite had

nearly 10  m to the elevation.50 These figures, which can only

been built by Hadrian (r. 117–38) on Golgotha, the site of the

serve to give an order of magnitude, suggest a cella height of

Crucifixion, thereby putting it off limits for Christian worship.

at least 26  m without counting the podium or stepped base

Constantine destroyed it and built in its place the Church of the

(crepidoma), for which the evidence is missing. The apex of

Holy Sepulchre, the first major imperially sponsored Christian

this building must thus have soared above the Roman temenos,

monument. This was a bold measure in a hitherto pagan

which currently has a height of nearly 11  m, although it has lost

world, which set a precedent for the closure and destruction

some of its crowning parts. The temple precinct would have

of temples, especially on Biblical sites.

49

51

dominated the city not only by its sheer mass, but also by its

was probably not an immediate target for conversion. As the

to the east.

fourth century wore on however, the official Roman stance

The cella may have had fluted columns only, as at the

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The Temple of Damascus, being devoid of such associations,

height, especially if approached from the processional route

towards pagan cults gradually hardened. The Theodosian Code

Temple of Bel in Palmyra, or a combination of fluted and plain

records in chronological order laws promulgated between the

columns, as at the temples of ‘Bacchus’ and Jupiter in Baalbek.

reigns of Constantine (who was sole emperor from 324 until

Even though its height must have been comparable to that

his death in 337), and Theodosius (375–95): pagan sacrifice

of both Heliopolitan sanctuaries, it was slightly over half the

was outlawed in 341 and an imperial decree of 346 stipulated

width of the Temple of Bacchus, making it appear taller but

that ‘the temples shall be immediately closed in all places

less massive. Similar configurations can be observed at the

and in all cities, and access to them forbidden, so as to deny

temples of Bel at Palmyra and Artemis at Gerasa, albeit with

to all abandoned men the opportunity to commit sin’.55 From

less accentuated heights. Indeed, in order to gain an idea of the

356, under Constantius II (r. 337–61), the making of sacrificial

scale of the cella within the temenos, one need look no further

offerings and the worship of idols became punishable by death.

than the transept of the Umayyad Mosque: its width of 22.10  m

It is difficult to know how far these measures were applied

is close to our estimate for the cella peristyle (over 20  m), and

in societies that remained largely pagan, and the fate of the

its height of 30.84  m to the crown of the pediment makes it

Damascene temple in this period is unknown.

taller than the cella might have been, but not by a large margin

After a period of renewed official backing under Julian (later

(unless one includes the transept dome, which would have risen

known as ‘the Apostate’, r. 360–63),56 then of toleration under

some 10  m above the gable).52 This surprising convergence may

the co-emperors Valens (364–78) and Valentinian I (364–75),

not be entirely coincidental, as we shall see.

the tide turned irreversibly against pagan worship under

53

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Theodosius. Between 391 and 392, he made it illegal to enter

chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

53

a temple or approach a shrine and, in addition to sacrifice,

metres.57 Cella conversions could also involve the dismantling

proscribed more benign forms of pagan worship such as

of the inner walls combined with either the walling of the

incense burning and giving gifts to idols. It is also during his

surrounding columns or the construction of lateral aisles and

reign that, according to textual sources, the Temple of Jupiter

walls.58 The aim was to enlarge a space originally designed to

at Damascus was turned into a church.

house a cult statue, but too exiguous for a congregation. The conversion of temples to Christian use was, furthermore, often

Textual Narratives of Conversion

preceded by periods of abandonment—which was also the long-

How was the site transformed for Christian worship? The

term fate of many such precincts.59 With these possibilities in mind, let us turn to textual

archaeology of temple conversion suggests three main scenarios: the destruction of the cella and its replacement

accounts of the conversion. Three extant Christian sources

by a church, the closure of the cella and construction of an

assert that Theodosius was responsible for the conversion of

adjacent church, as at the Temple of Jupiter in Baalbek, or

the Damascene temple into a church: the Armenian chronicle

the conversion of the cella into a church, as at the Temple

of Movses Xorenac‘i (Moses of Khoren, fifth century), the

of Bel in Palmyra—where this transformation was marked

Greek chronicle of John Malalas (ca. 490–after 570), and the

by the addition of Christian frescoes up to a height of eight

anonymous Greek Chronicon Paschale (seventh century).

Movses Xorenacʻi

John Malalas

Chronicon Paschale

(Armenian, fifth century)

(Greek, ca. 490‒after 570)

(Greek, seventh century)

As soon as he began to reign, he

In the time of these consuls [Ausonius

[Theodosius] immediately returned

and Olybrius], Theodosius the emperor

the churches to the Orthodox, issuing

gave the churches to the Orthodox,

rescripts everywhere and expelling

after enacting rescripts everywhere,

the Arians. The emperor crowned

and expelled from them the so-called

his two sons…

Arian Exokionites, and he razed the

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shrines of the Hellenes to the ground. He [Theodosius] tore down to the

The emperor Theodosius razed all the

The celebrated Constantine, while he

ground the temples of the idols,

shrines of the Hellenes to the ground.

was emperor, only closed the temples

which had only been closed by Saint

He also destroyed (κατέλυσε) the large

and shrines of the Hellenes; this

Constantine, those dedicated to the

and famous temple of Helioupolis,

Theodosius also destroyed (κατέλυσεν)

sun and to Artemis and to Aphrodite

known as Trilithon, and made it a

them, including the Temple of Balanius

in Byzantium. He likewise destroyed

church for the Christians. Likewise

at Heliopolis, the great and renowned

(awereac‘) the Temple of Damascus

he made (έποίησεν) the Temple of

Trilithon, and made it a Christian church.

and made it into a church, and did

Damascus a Christian church. He made

Likewise too he made (έποίησεν) the

the same to the Temple of Heliopolis,

many other temples into churches and

temple at Damascus a Christian church.

the great and famous Trilithon of

Christianity advanced further during

And Christian affairs were further exalted

Lebanon.

his reign.

in the course of his reign.62

60

54

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p  figure 33 Ruins of the Temple of Jupiter at Baalbek with the Christian basilica in the temenos, late fourth to midfifth century CE. The level of destruction of the two temples at that time is uncertain. Visualisation by Friedrich Ragette. From Ragette, Baalbek, 70.

The Greek versions are virtually identical with regard to Theodosius. The version of Movses Xorenacʻi, though written

also assert that Theodosius ‘razed the shrines of the Hellenes

in Armenian, has the same content and structure—the temples

to the ground (καταστρέφω)’; this implies that destruction was

of the Acropolis at Constantinople, which appear in this text,

the intended meaning in the case of Damascus, a conclusion

are also mentioned a few lines later by Malalas. Its Greek

supported by the more explicit Armenian wording awereac‘

derivation seems confirmed by the use of the Armenian

(‘he destroyed’).64

zerek‘k‘areann, ‘three-stoned’, to refer to Baalbek: this is a calque Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

etymologically means ‘to pull apart’, ‘to dismantle’. Both sources

The evidence from Baalbek, situated only some 50  km

of the Greek Trilithon, the name given to the three massive

to the northwest of Damascus, invites a more cautious

foundation stones for which the Heliopolitan sanctuary was

interpretation since the famous Trilithon, the Temple of Jupiter

famous. These three versions thus appear to stem from the

Heliopolitanus, was never destroyed and six gigantic columns

same Greek source, which each writer has lightly edited to fit

from its south peristyle side still stand today, while much of the

his own narrative.

adjoining ‘Temple of Bacchus’ also remains. It is conceivable

63

Both Greek versions state that Theodosius ‘made’ (έποίησεν) the Damascene temple into a church, a generic term which notionally could convey different types of conversion. The verb used in the preceding sentence about Baalbek (καταλύω)

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

that these temples underwent some partial degradation at the time, although there is no clear evidence that they did.65 A three-aisled early Christian basilica was built in the forecourt of the Trilithon (Figure 33).66 The remains of this

chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

55

building were excavated and documented in the early twentieth

There is there a monastery at the second milestone,

century, then removed to reach the Roman strata below. The

where Saint Paul was converted in the street which is

church had been built atop the monumental pagan altar, which

called Straight, where many miracles are wrought.70

was razed, and from which stones were reused for the basilica. According to the Acts of the Apostles, Christ appeared to

The hexagonal entrance court to the Roman sanctuary was roofed and the church apse made to encroach on the stairs of

Saul (the future Paul) on the road to Damascus, in a vision of

the cella and obstruct access to it. Symbolically, these gestures

such radiance that he was thrown to the ground and left blind

enacted the consecration of the site to Christian worship and

for three days. His eyesight was miraculously restored by a

the triumph of the new religion of the empire. In a second

Christian called Ananias in the house of Judas, a Jew who lived

stage, the apse was moved from the west to the east, leading to

on Straight Street. The Piacenza pilgrim mentions a monastery

the impractical arrangement of a monument facing away from

of Saint Paul on the same street, implying that he was standing

the main entrance porch. While most scholars see the basilica

literally steps away from the Damascene temenos. But instead

as Theodosian, it has recently been argued that some aspects of

of mentioning it, he moves on to Baalbek and Emesa (Homs)

the decoration and structure point to a mid-fifth century date.

in the next sentence.

67

This brings into question the assertions of the sources even

After the above accounts of temple conversion, the first

about the moment of conversion, and would suggest a period of

source to record the existence of the church within the

abandonment prior to the reconsecration of the site.

Damascene temenos was De locis sanctis, a Latin treatise on

The material remains at Baalbek reveal a reality more

the Holy Land written by Adomnán (d. 704), the abbot of Iona

complex than the texts would suggest. The common source

in far-flung Scotland. Adomnán names Arculf, a bishop from

shared by Movses Xorenacʻi, John Malalas and the Chronicon

Gaul, as his informant. The identity of Arculf and his very

Paschale was making a statement about the triumph of

existence have been questioned,71 but whatever Adomnán’s

Christianity rather than architecture. Their combined evidence

source may have been, it is clear that he possessed information

cannot therefore be exploited to understand the nature of the

about the eastern Mediterranean around 670, during the

church inside the temenos.

reign of Muʿāwiya (who is named in the text).72 The passage on Damascus, which occurs between the sections on Galilee and

An Elusive Church

Tyre, reads as follows:

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None of the early Christian writers who mention Damascene churches refer to a sanctuary within the temenos. Procopius,

The great royal city of Damascus, as Arculf relates, who

writing about the buildings of Justinian I, lists a Church of

lodged for some days in it, is situated on a broad plain,

Leontius founded by this emperor and presumably dedicated

surrounded by an ample circuit of walls, and fortified

to the famous Syrian saint buried at Tripoli in Lebanon.

moreover by several towers, with several olive orchards

Anastasius of Sinai (fl. ca. 649–700) also mentions a Court of

in the territory surrounding the walls. Four great rivers,

Saint Cyprian in Damascus, without any further detail. The

which flow through it, make it pleasingly fertile. There

Piacenza pilgrim (ca. 570), like Sophronius (early seventh

the king of the Saracens reigns, having acquired his

century) and Willibald (720s) after him, primarily connects

empire. There, too, a great church has been founded in

the city with the conversion of Saint Paul:

honour of the holy John the Baptist. The unbelieving

68

69

Saracens have also constructed a kind of church in this same city, which they frequent.73

56

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Adomnán, writing from the British Isles a mere two to four

Alexandria, and expanded from the eleventh century onwards,

decades into the Umayyad period, correctly notes that the

we also read: ‘It was a very beautiful church, the like of which

Arabs had established their capital at Damascus. He refers

could not be found in Syria.’80 Without exception, these vague

to a ‘kind of church’ (quaedam eclesia) that they built, in other

portrayals form part of entries about its destruction. They are

words the first mosque. He is also the first author to mention

rhetorical tools depicting al-Walīd as moved by a base feeling

that a church in Damascus was named after the Baptist. He

of envy towards the greatness of Christian accomplishments,

does not allude to the form of either building or to their relative

in what seems like aggrandisement after the fact.

locations which, from the account alone, could be construed as

In sum, the church within the temenos has left only the faintest of traces in the pre-Islamic historical record.

belonging to different sites. Two Syriac sources, Michael the Syrian (d. 1199) and the

Religious travellers did not stop there, or if they did, what they

anonymous Chronicle of 1234, report that in Damascus during

encountered did not seem worthy of their notice. Damascus in

the caliphate of ʿUthmān (r. 23–35/644–56), ʿAmr ibn Saʿd

the sixth to eighth centuries was mainly of interest to Christians

‘ordered all crosses to be extirpated and effaced’ from the

for its associations with Saint Paul and Straight Street.

public sphere, and so ‘one Jew had climbed onto the roof of the great temple of John the Baptist (hayklō rabō d-yuḥanōn

Location of the Church

maʿmdōnō) and had broken off the cross’. Like Adomnán,

The only discursive space in which further memories of the

they name the church after the Baptist, but this has limited

church are preserved is in the Arab-Muslim tradition. While

evidential value as, by their period, the name had also become

al-Walīd’s three panegyrists paint an eloquent (and disparaging)

current in Arabic sources.75

image of Muslim-Christian cohabitation in the temenos during

74

It was only after its destruction that the church started being

the first seven decades of Islam, they do not venture into a

widely mentioned by Christian writers. The earliest account

description of the church. From an early date however, the

may have been by Theophilus of Edessa (695–775), although his

Syrian historiographical tradition showed an interest in its

account of the event cannot be precisely reconstructed from later

location, and to a lesser extent its form. Anecdotes recorded

citations of his (lost) Syriac chronicle. Theophanes Confessor

by ninth-century traditionists have the Companions ʿAbd Allāh

(d. 818), writing in Greek from the region of Constantinople, set

ibn Masʿūd and ʿAṭiyya ibn Qays teaching on the steps of the

the tone for later Christian narratives by declaring:

church in the seventh century. This could imply the existence

76

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of a crepidoma, podium, or entrance stairway into the building; Walīd seized the most holy cathedral of Damascus. The

but the references are laconic and the detail may simply have

wretched man did this out of envy of the Christians,

been added for narrative effect.81 The following anecdote was

because this church was surpassingly beautiful.77

recorded by Ibn ʿAsākir (499–571/1105–76), followed by others, on the authority of Yaʿqūb ibn Sufyān al-Fasawī (also al-Basawī,

Later Syriac writers call it the ‘great and splendid temple of

d. 277/891):

Saint John’ (Chronicle of 1234, and probably Dionysius of Tell Maḥrē, fl. 818–45), or simply the ‘great church’ (ʿidtō rabtō) of

Abū al-Qāsim ibn al-Samarqandī told us, Abū Bakr ibn

Damascus (Michael the Syrian).78 The Arabic equivalent of

al-Ṭabarī declared, Abū al-Ḥusayn ibn al-Faḍl declared,

the latter expression (al-bīʿa al-kabīra) was used by Agapius

ʿAbd Allāh ibn Jaʿfar declared, Yaʿqūb ibn Sufyān said,

(Ar. Maḥbūb, writing in the 940s). In a later recension of

I asked Hishām ibn ʿAmmār about the story of the mosque

the history composed in 935–40 by Eutychius, patriarch of

of Damascus and the destruction of the church. He said:

79

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57

… Its gate [of the church] was what is now the qibla of the

memories were cultivated by local circles in the ninth century

mosque, the mihrab in which people pray.

is confirmed by Abū ʿUbayd ibn Sallām (d. 224/839), who notes

82

at the end of a story about the church: ‘They showed me its Yaʿqūb ibn Sufyān is a plausible source for this information:

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originally from Fasā in Fars (Iran), he is known from his own

location there, and the side it was on before its destruction.’86 Al-Fasawī’s account resonates with the most conspicuous

works to have travelled to Damascus in 217/832–33, 219/834–35

remnant of the church: the Greek biblical inscription over

and 241/855–56.83 His presence there is corroborated by the

the triple gate that marked the southern temenos entrance,

local scholar Abū Zurʿa, who also cites the same transmitter,

(Figure 34).87 Of the four Roman monumental gateways, only

Hishām ibn ʿAmmār, for some of his recollections about

this one has a Christian inscription, which confirms a shift of

Damascus. Hishām (153–245/770–859) began his instruction

emphasis from Bāb Jayrūn, the processional entry to the east of

in the late eighth century with Damascene authorities, some

the Roman temple, towards the south gate. What did people see

of whom had been born in the Umayyad era. The anecdote

from this vantage point in the seventh century? Let us turn to a

thus reflects a local transmission chain with a relatively short

passage from Ibn Kathīr (ca. 700–74/1300–73):

84

85

generational span. The fact that it purports to record, the location of the entrance gate to the church and first mosque,

The site of this mosque [of Damascus] used to be a church

belongs to the public realm: it would have been known to

called the Church of John (kanīsat yūḥannā). When the

anyone living in Damascus before 705. That such topographical

Companions conquered Damascus, they divided it in half.

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p  figure 34 Detail of central gate lintel with Greek inscription, triple gate of south temenos wall. Alain George, 2010.

They took the eastern side and made it into a mosque, and

Ibn Kathīr and Ibn Shākir are late writers, and unlike

the west side remained a church from the year 14 [635–36]

Ibn ʿAsākir, they do not cite their sources, so that one could

until that year [i.e. 86/705].88

suspect a process of ‘growing backward’, a phrase coined by Rafael Talmon to describe religious narratives that

The account can, at first sight, seem to imply that a large

become increasingly detailed with successive generations of

church building was divided between Christians and Muslims.

transmitters.91 On the other hand, through comparisons with

But, as long ago argued by Creswell, the whole temenos area

the extant works of Abū Zurʿa, Ibn al-Fayḍ al-Ghassānī and

is the ‘church’ in this Arabic text. The same concept operated

al-Rabaʿī, some of their accounts can be shown to preserve

in reverse in the (lost) foundation inscription of the Umayyad

ample early material. Erroneous information can nevertheless

Mosque, which identified the whole site as the ‘mosque’

appear in these same works, which invites constant caution in

replacing ‘the church that was in it’. Al-Nābigha had likewise

approaching their contents. For instance, Ibn Kathīr states at

proclaimed in the same years: ‘You plucked their church from

one point in his chronicle that ʿAbd al-Malik built the Dome of

out our mosque’ (v. 12).

the Rock, but elsewhere he mistakenly attributes it to al-Walīd.92

89

Ibn Kathīr’s statement thus asserts that the church stood in

On their own merits these two anecdotes should neither be

the west side of the temenos, and the first mosque in the east.

accepted, nor rejected out of hand; further sources should be

A passage attributed by Ibn Shākir (686–764/1287–1363) to Ibn

interrogated on this question.

ʿAsākir, and which occurs in some manuscripts of the latter’s History of Damascus, provides further details about this spatial

The First Mosque and the Gate of the Khaḍrāʾ

configuration:

The passage above attributed to Ibn ʿAsākir refers to the second mihrab of the Umayyad Mosque, which lies to the east of

After him [Abū ʿUbayda, one of the Companions credited

the central mihrab and is known today as the Mihrab of the

with the conquest of Damascus], the Companions stood

Companions (miḥrāb al-ṣaḥāba). In the earliest detailed description

in the spot called Mihrab of the Companions. The wall

of the mosque, al-Muqaddasī (late tenth century) notes:

had not yet been carved to create a concave mihrab, but they held their prayers in this blessed spot. Muslims and

To the left [of the central mihrab] is another mihrab,

Christians entered by the same door, which was that

inferior to the first, for the authorities. Its centre had

of the original temple, on the qibla side where there is

crumbled (tashaʿʿat) so I heard that 500 dinars were spent

now the large mihrab. Then the Christians turned to the

to restore it.93

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west towards their church, and the Muslims to the right towards their mosque.90

Thus, in the tenth century, an ‘inferior’ mihrab on the left side of the prayer hall was reserved for the ruler, rather than

The passage, which is echoed in Ibn Kathīr, posits a coherent

the larger, more lavish central mihrab built by al-Walīd. The

spatial scheme with the church again in the west half of the

large sum spent on its repair confirms its status, even though

temenos, the first mosque in the southeastern part where the

al-Muqaddasī does not associate it with the Companions. The

‘Mihrab of the Companions’ stands today, and Muʿāwiya’s palace

first text to make this connection may arguably be a passage

abutting its wall to the south. It echoes al-Fasawī’s assertion

by Ibn ʿAsākir about the Qulayla, the famous pearl that used

that people used to enter this area through the triple gate on the

to hang in the mosque. In an account of its theft at the time of

south side.

the Abbasid caliph al-Amīn (r. 193–98/809–13), he writes that it

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chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

59

‘used to be in the Mihrab of the Companions’.94 It is impossible

is the area in front of the mihrab reserved for the ruler and his

to establish whether this mention belongs to an early form of

entourage, often demarcated by a screen or platform in early

the anecdote or was added in the course of later transmissions

Islam. Al-Muqaddasī is probably here referring to the central

to identify the location. The only certainty is that it carried this

mihrab, hence the transept.

name by the time of Ibn ʿAsākir in the twelfth century, when

A few decades later, in the early eleventh century, al-Rabaʿī

ʿAlī al-Harawī also identified a Maqsura of the Companions in

stated that Bāb al-Khaḍrāʾ (the ‘Gate of the Khaḍrāʾ’) stood ‘after

the mosque.

the maqsura’ if one came from Bāb al-Sāʿāt.100 Since the latter

95

Beyond this landmark, the sources preserve virtually no

gate was on the west half of the qibla wall, this sequence places

memory of a seventh-century mosque. Al-Farazdaq calls it ‘a

Bāb al-Khaḍrāʾ in its east half, after the transept. Ibn Jubayr

mosque where fragrant words are read’ (v. 23), but this does not

visited the mosque in 581/1184, at a time when it had acquired

necessarily imply the existence of a building since, as already

a third mihrab on the west side. His account reflects the same

noted, the word ‘mosque’ was used to encompass the whole

spatial configuration:

temenos in this period. An anecdote recorded by Ibn al-Fayḍ al-Ghassānī states that ‘ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Marwān often attended

The blessed mosque has three maqsuras. One is the

the circle of Umm al-Dardāʾ at the back (muʾakhkhar) of the

Maqsura of the Companions—may God hold them in His

Mosque of Damascus when he was caliph’. Umm al-Dardāʾ,

favour—which was the first maqsura ever built in Islam.

a wife of the Companion Abū al-Dardāʾ, was an important

It was erected by Muʿāwiya ibn Abī Sufyān—may God hold

early hadith transmitter, so the reference to the ‘back of the

him in His favour. Beside its mihrab, to the right of him

mosque’ stands as a narrative device to assert moral hierarchy.

who looks to the qibla, is the iron gate by which Muʿāwiya

It is ostensibly not about space, and even if taken at face value,

used to come into the maqsura and to the mihrab. Facing

would not necessarily imply the existence of a dedicated

this mihrab, towards the right, is the place of prayer

building. The only source to make this claim remains Adomnán,

(muṣallā) of Abū al-Dardāʾ—may God hold him in His

who describes it laconically as a ‘kind of church’. It seems

favour. Behind it used to be the palace (dār) of Muʿāwiya—

plausible that a building was erected in front of the eastern

may God hold him in His favour—which is now the great

mihrab, if only to shelter worshippers from the elements;

row (simāṭ) of coppersmiths. It runs along the qibla wall

but if so, like the first mosque on Temple Mount in Jerusalem,

of the mosque, and there is no more beautiful-looking

it has left barely any trace in Muslim historical memory.97

row than this, nor bigger in length and breadth. Behind

96

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The Khaḍrāʾ was the famed Damascene palace of Muʿāwiya

it and close-by is the cavalry barrack of Muʿāwiya, which

(r. 41–60/661–80) and later Umayyad caliphs; its name literally

today is inhabited, and in which the cloth-fullers have a

means ‘the green’, after the colour of its dome (which may

place. The length of this Maqsura of the Companions is

in fact have been a hue closer to blue). It lost its status as the

forty-four spans (shibr) and its breadth is half the length.101

nerve centre of the Muslim empire after the fall of the dynasty By then, the eastern mihrab and maqsura had become

in 750 but continued to stand until its destruction in the fire of 1069, serving variously as a barracks, a mint, and a prison.

firmly associated with the Companions, and a nearby spot

Several sources state that the Khaḍrāʾ was connected to the

commemorated Abū al-Dardāʾ. To its right, hence in the

mosque through a dedicated gateway. Al-Muqaddasī observes:

direction of the central mihrab, stood the iron gate through

‘From the Khaḍrāʾ, which is the palace of the authorities, are

which Muʿāwiya entered the building for prayer. Immediately

plated and gilded doors leading to the maqsura’. The maqsura

behind this wall were the remains of his palace, the Khaḍrāʾ,

98

99

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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p  figure 35 Roman triple gate of south temenos, central gate. Adnan Nasser, 2019.

an arcade that seems to have run between the qibla wall and

down part of the qibla wall. It is a fine door built with carved

cavalry barracks. Different accounts all place the gate between

stone, flanked by two smaller doors, to its right and left.105

the east mihrab and the eastern boundary of the transept, a suitable position for access to both the central mihrab and the

the smaller door to the left as being open: this suggests that it

Mihrab of the Companions. The masonry of this wall is Roman up to the windowsills.

had been walled up by then, perhaps during one of the several

The only opening that interrupts the ashlar courses of the

restorations recorded for the marble panelling between 1269

temenos is the east door of the Roman triple gate: photographs of

and 1340.106 The reason is unknown, though at some point the

the exposed stonework and a stone-by-stone architectural survey

street level may have become too high, given that it currently

show no traces of another sealed gate between that section and

stands three metres above the prayer hall floor.

the southeast corner.

102

The west and central openings of the

A range of independent sources thus converge on a single

triple gate were walled up in the Umayyad period, together with

spatial configuration involving a Mihrab of the Companions in

its three windows, using massive ashlars that are nearly flush

the eastern part of the qibla wall, Muʿāwiya’s palace behind it,

with the temenos (Figure 35).

103

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The description of the Roman triple gate does not single out

The east gate follows a different

and a door—probably the east door of the Roman triple gate—

pattern, being deeply recessed (Figure 36) and filled with

linking the two.107 These elements seem to reflect a long memory

randomly cut stones (Figure 37). This gate, in other words, must

of space, an idea reinforced by the toponymy of Damascus,

have remained in service after the construction of the Umayyad

where several streets and locations carried related names long

104

Mosque. It is likely to be the Bāb al-Khaḍrāʾ of the sources.

after the palace was destroyed. As late as the eighteenth century,

By the fourteenth century, Ibn Shākir could remark about

al-Budayrī al-Ḥallāq still knew the area behind the eastern part

the Roman temple:

of the qibla wall as dār muʿāwiya: the ‘palace of Muʿāwiya’, the same expression used by Ibn Jubayr half a millennium before.108

Its gate used to open towards the side of the qibla, where the

There are, in sum, strong grounds for asserting that the first

mihrab is today, as we witnessed in person when they tore

mosque occupied the eastern half of the temenos and this,

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chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

61

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p  figure 36 (above) Roman triple gate of south temenos, east gate. Adnan Nasser, 2019. p  figure 37 (left) Roman triple gate of south temenos, east gate, detail. Adnan Nasser, 2019.

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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in turn, reinforces the likelihood that the church stood in its

‘Inner Church’ (al-kanīsa al-dākhila) of Muslim sources, a choice

western half, as stated by Ibn Kathīr and Ibn Shākir.

that al-Walīd was able to impose because the former, unlike the

The shift of the main entrance from the east side to the

latter, was not protected by treaty. The same idea is repeated by

south by the Christians was not self-evident. Had purely spatial

a second early Damascene writer, Ibn al-Muʿallā (d. 286/900).111

considerations prevailed, the east gate (Bāb Jayrūn) would have

Just before the coming of Islam, another Damascene,

remained the obvious choice since it was on the east–west axis.

Sophronius (fl. ca. 581–639), implied the existence of a

This solution was probably avoided to give the church, which

sanctuary dedicated to the cult of Saint Thomas at Damascus:

already stood on the site of the cella, a different entry route from the one that had been used for temple processions.

In Damascus, this saint manifests manifold powers and frequent, stupendous miracles… The apostle is in

The Church and the Cella

extraordinary esteem amongst Damascenes, who harvest

The positioning of the Roman cella had been dictated by the

from him healing and grace.112

requirements of pagan ritual, with the processional route leading from the east gate to the sacrificial altar at the centre of

Several later Arabic sources also mention a Church of

the temenos. Had it been razed to make way for a new building,

Thomas located near the eponymous Bāb Tūmā, the ‘Gate of

Christian patrons would have had the vast perimeter of the

Thomas’, on the eastern city wall.113 It was burnt by Yemeni

temple enclosure at their disposal.109 In such a context, what

troops putting down a pro-Umayyad revolt in 176/793.114 As late

rationale might have led them to build the church in the eastern

as the seventeenth century, Jean de Thévenot saw its ruins ‘right

half of the temenos? The question is worth asking in the light of

outside’ the gate.115 But only al-Fasawī, echoed by the much later

one detail from the early report by al-Fasawī partially cited above:

Ibn Kathīr, provides a rationale for the alleged choice of the Christians in the Umayyad period: the Church of Thomas was

I asked Hishām ibn ʿAmmār about the story of the mosque of

larger than the church within the temenos.116 While the tone and

Damascus and the destruction of the church. He said:

content of their negotiations with al-Walīd were prone to later

Al-Walīd told the Christians of Damascus: ‘Whatever you

reshaping, this particular assertion reflects, like the comments

decide: since we took the Church of Thomas (kanīsat

on its location and entrance, a relatively stable memory of space.

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tūmā) by force and the Inner Church (al-kanīsa al-dākhila)

As already noted, the transmission chain for this account

by treaty, I will destroy the Church of Thomas’.

is local and relatively authoritative: al-Fasawī’s source, the

Hishām said:

Damascene traditionist Hishām ibn ʿAmmār (153–245/770–

The latter was larger than the Inner Church.

859), was born shortly after the Umayyad period. It implies

He said:

that, despite the size of the temenos, the church within it

So they consented for him to destroy the Inner Church

was relatively small. This could arguably have been true of

and integrate it into the mosque.

a building erected around the reign of Theodosius, but the

He said:

explanation does not sit comfortably with the socio-political

Its gate was what is now the qibla of the mosque,

climate of the fourth to fifth centuries. Damascus was the chief

the mihrab in which people pray.110

city of the province of Libanensis,117 and its temple stood on a par with those of Baalbek, Palmyra, and Jerusalem. The newly

The Christians would thus have opted to preserve the Church of Thomas rather than the church within the temenos, the

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consecrated church would have carried the symbolic weight of subjugating the pagan gods and their cult. At Baalbek, a site

chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

63

already noted for its parallel trajectory with Damascus, the

referenced. Jarīr emphasizes the lexical range of height,

basilica was placed in front of the abandoned Temple of Jupiter,

with the verb ‘to raise’ (rafaʿa) in one verse and ‘to dwarf’ or

blocking its entrance and, with its considerable bulk (about

‘to soar above’ (ʿalā) in the next. The resulting image is of a

57 × 36  m), physically occupying the forecourt.

new building—al-Walīd’s mosque and its transept—rising

118

The stakes of conversion were high, and a new Damascene church might have been expected to rival or outdo the temple in its monumentality—and probably to sit at the centre of the

above its predecessor. It implies a sense of height for the destroyed church. Arabic sources converge on one main narrative for the

temenos, where it would have dominated the space while also

destruction of the church. According to al-Balādhurī, after

sitting atop the former pagan altar, just as at Baalbek. In this

unsuccessful attempts by Muʿāwiya and ʿAbd al-Malik,

position, it would also have been visible from all four entrance gates, hence from major streets in the walled city. Its position

in his turn, al-Walīd ibn ʿAbd al-Malik called the Christians

on the east side and its relatively small size invite consideration

and offered them large sums for the church, and when they

of a second hypothesis: as with the Temple of Bel in Palmyra, the

refused, he threatened them, saying: ‘If ye do not agree,

church of Damascus may have been a conversion of the cella,

I will surely tear it down’. To this someone replied: ‘He,

a tall but exiguous building originally designed to house a cult

Commander of the Believers, who tears down a church will

statue. This idea resonates with Jarīr, who proclaims:

lose his wits and be affected with some blight’. Al-Walīd, being angered at what was said, ordered that a pickaxe

11. Al-Walīd the Caliph, son of a Caliph,

(miʿwal) be brought and began demolishing the walls with

has built on the greatest edifice!

his own hand, while he had a robe of yellow silk on him.

12. Your heritage now dwarfs the one you had raised;

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Yours are the brimming valley-basins.

He then called workmen and house-razers and they pulled the church down. Thus it was included in the mosque.119

Given the polysemic nature of Arabic poetry, these verses

This account, also given in abridged versions by Ibn al-Faqīh

may be understood on two levels: on the one hand, al-Walīd

(d. after 290/903) and al-Muhallabī (d. 380/990),120 is dramatised

‘has built on the greatest edifice’ (v. 11), which evokes his

for narrative effect. The portrayal of the Christians’ response

dynastic legacy, to give Muslims (addressed in the plural ‘your’)

aims to expose as unfounded the belief that anyone who

a heritage that ‘now dwarfs the one you had raised’. On the

violates a church will be met with divine wrath. Al-Walīd and

other hand, the various concepts of having ‘built’ on an ‘edifice’

his pickaxe seem, in performative terms, like a convenient

and of ‘heritage’ are all expressed through the same noun bināʾ,

vector to depict the act of destruction. At first sight, this is an

‘building’. The verses are thus open to a more literal reading:

unconvincing historical account. Al-Balādhurī’s contemporary (ca. 219–315/835–927), himself

11. Al-Walīd the Caliph, son of a Caliph, has raised (rafaʿa) a building over the greatest building!

a Damascene, repeats the story with additions and nuances that make it worth citing in full:

12. Your building now dwarfs the one you had honoured; Yours are the brimming valley-basins.

When al-Walīd ibn ʿAbd al-Malik decided to destroy the church of Saint John and add it to the mosque, he entered

In the context of a poem on the mosque and church, it is difficult to escape the conclusion that both are being

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the church and went up a polygonal121 tower (manāra) known as ‘[the Tower of] the Clocks’, where a monk (rāhib)

had taken refuge in a shelter (ṣawmaʿa).122 Hand on his nape, al-Walīd brought the vociferating monk down the tower, then he moved on to destroy the church. A group of Christian carpenters told him: ‘We dare not initiate its destruction, O commander of the faithful, as we fear stumbling or being hit by something’. Al-Walīd said: ‘How

17. He inherits the reins and lances of power; a house of deeds that is high to scale. 18. I see buildings devoid of their folk, brought down; but the site of your throne will not be razed. 19. He rose from high ground to soar for the good, and light where the Aʿyāṣ had stood, immune.

wary and fearful you are! Servant, give me the pickaxe (miʿwal)’. Then he was handed a ladder (sullam) which

The poet proclaims that al-Walīd has inherited a ‘house of

he placed on the altar chamber (miḥrāb al-madhbaḥ). He

deeds that is high to scale’, a phrase extolling the greatness

climbed up and hit the altar until he made a large dent on

of the Umayyad House. Once again, the poem is polysemic,

it. The Muslims then climbed up and destroyed it… Yaḥyā

and a more literal reading conveys the image of a caliph who,

ibn Yaḥyā said: ‘I saw al-Walīd ibn ʿAbd al-Malik do this to

having inherited the ‘reins and lances of power’, ‘expands into

the church of the mosque of Damascus’.

the house of a noble deed with a tall ladder’ (intamā ilā bayti

123

makrumatin rafīʿi al-sullam, v. 17). The building is then emptied While this version is, at a glance, not fundamentally different from al-Balādhurī’s, some details have changed: al-Walīd’s

way for al-Walīd to metaphorically rise ‘from high ground to

robe is omitted, the ‘workmen and house-razers’ have become

soar for the good, and light where the Aʿyāṣ had stood, immune’

‘carpenters’ and an altercation between al-Walīd and a monk has

(v. 19). The Aʿyāṣ are the branch of the Umayyad clan to which

been added, along with his climb up a ‘ladder’ to start destroying

both al-Walīd and the early caliph ʿUthmān belonged. While

the ‘altar chamber’.

124

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(khawat) and brought down (tahaddamat) (v. 18), opening the

From Ibn al-Fayḍ’s perspective, there

their mention continues the dynastic metaphor, the patronym

was little incentive to introduce details that would, if anything,

literally means ‘knots’ or ‘entanglement’. It is given here in a

confuse his ninth-century audience. The point could have been

possessive form (aʿyāṣahu) that accentuates its nominal value.

made more effectively by simply asserting that the caliph began

Verse 19 can thus also be read: ‘He let go of those who escaped

striking the monument: this is essentially the approach taken by

(taraka al-nujāt) and undid the knot with its impregnable

al-Balādhurī, who reinforces it through the mention of al-Walīd’s

entanglement (ḥalla ḥaythu tamannaʿat aʿyāṣahu)’.

yellow silk robe, an anodyne detail that aids visualisation while

Once viewed in this light, the verses strikingly echo Ibn

giving the impression of an eyewitness account. The luxury of

al-Fayḍ’s account: the ladder (sullam) laid against a ‘house’ in

the robe also implies profligacy, a trait commonly associated

one case and an ‘altar chamber’ in the other; the emptying and

with the Umayyads by Abbasid-era writers as part of complex

destruction of buildings, while those who oppose the caliph are

strategies of character building.

left to go unharmed, as seems to be the case with Ibn al-Fayḍ’s

125

Whereas in al-Balādhurī’s version al-Walīd is driven into

monk; and the whole episode amounting to the untying by

action by anger, Ibn al-Fayḍ portrays him as decisive and

al-Walīd of an intractable Gordian knot. The theme is developed

steadfast in the face of Christian superstition. Each account

further by Jarīr in subsequent verses:

thus betrays a different sensibility towards the Umayyads. Ibn al-Fayḍ’s may seem no more deserving of serious consideration than al-Balādhurī’s until one considers the verses of Jarīr about this same event:

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

23. You leapt at the Christians—one bound; on landing, it caused the mountains of Daylam to shake! 24. The edifice of the church was razed by force; there was crushing defeat for the Slit-nosed (al-akhram)!

chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

65

The caliph ‘leapt at the Christians’ and the edifice of the

out this operation required no more than ‘two workmen’s pay’,

church was ‘razed by force’, two provocative statements

even though the columns had a massive circumference of

that amount to a defeat of al-akhram. This term designates a

16 cubits (about 7  m) hence a diameter of some 2.2  m, which

defeated enemy mutilated by his victors, most commonly by

is comparable to—and even larger than—the shaft fragment

cutting his nose. In the present context, it had more specific

unearthed at the Mosque of Damascus.127 The archaeology of

connotations to which I shall return. Jarīr then implies that

the Temple of Zeus at Cyrene in modern Libya has revealed a

armed forces (‘battalions’ with ‘their banners’) seized the

similar method of destruction, this time during a Jewish revolt

temenos by force:

in the early second century, which suggests an established technique rather than an ad hoc innovation.128

26. And when the battalions displayed their banners,

The first stage of such a demolition—the setting up of timbers—might naturally involve carpenters. This could also

noble eagles, hovering aloft, 27. A ram-skull crashed on [enemy] heads; they scattered;

explain why the fluted shaft fragment at Damascus was lodged deep into the ground after what must have been a dizzying fall;

its palate survived intact.

its grooves are quarter-spherical at one end, which implies These commonalties with Ibn al-Fayḍ’s account may be

that they may have belonged to the top or bottom of a column

explained in one of two ways: either the text contains an

(Figures 25 and 26). This again echoes Theodoret’s account of

unstated element of gloss on the poem, which it partly aims

the destruction at Apamaea: ‘The crash, which was tremendous,

to explicate; or it reflects parallel historical memories of this

was heard throughout the town, and all ran to see the sight.’129

event. In Ibn al-Fayḍ’s account, the demolition is initially

Ibn al-Fayḍ’s text asserts that al-Walīd climbed onto the ‘altar

assigned to carpenters, craftsmen whose skills do not seem

chamber’ (miḥrāb al-madhbaḥ) to initiate the destruction (a

relevant to this task. Al-Balādhurī more understandably calls

statue is also involved in some late, and probably unreliable,

them ‘workmen and house-razers’. But while workers with

versions).130 In the context of early church architecture, it could

pickaxes and hammers could destroy a building on the scale

bring to mind the apse—a standard feature of basilicas, but

of a basilica, a massive Roman cella would have presented a

also of converted temples—or possibly a canopy within the

different challenge. Theodoret of Cyrrhus (fifth century) notes

building.131 One of the earliest extant church canopies, that

about Apamaea in his own time:

on the north aisle of Sant’Apollinare in Classe at Ravenna,

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is datable by inscription to 806–10 CE (Figure 38).132 From An attempt was made to destroy the vast and magnificent

the fourth century onwards, numerous others are attested

shrine of Jupiter, but the building was so firm and solid that

archaeologically and through textual sources, notably in the

to break up its closely compacted stones seemed beyond

Syrian region.133 Such a furnishing may have existed in the

the power of man; for they were huge and well and truly

Damascene church, whether or not it was a conversion of the

laid, and moreover clamped fast with iron and lead.

cella. For instance, when the Temple of Bel at Palmyra was

126

turned into a church, a semi-circular structure was attached to The solution to this problem was ingenious: the architraves

the east wall some four metres above ground, probably to serve

of three massive peristyle columns were propped up with

as a canopy for the altar or the bishop’s cathedra (Figure 39).134

timbers before cuts were made into the columns. The timbers

The large square niche of the adyton, the holiest space housing

were burnt, which caused the columns to collapse, bringing

the cult statue or image, was also preserved. In other temples,

down the cella walls with them. The craftsman who carried

the latter could itself be a canopy (Figure 40).135

66

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

p  figure 38 Altar canopy on the north aisle, Sant’Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna, added 806–10 CE, Sailko CC BY 4.0.

Thus, several details in Ibn al-Fayḍ’s account that may seem redundant on their own terms are corroborated by external evidence. They are inherently unlikely to have been invented for narrative effect. The chain of transmission for the story is short and essentially contained within a single family: Ibn al-Fayḍ received it from Ibrāhīm ibn Hishām al-Ghassānī whose father Hishām heard it from his own father Yaḥyā ibn Yaḥyā, the witness of the event. Both Ibrāhīm and Hishām were hadith transmitters in Damascus, and Yaḥyā ibn Yaḥyā (ca. 65–135/685–753) is indeed remembered by other sources as the son of a member of Marwān’s police (shurṭa).136 He was appointed to the governorship of Mosul under ʿUmar ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz (r. 99–101/717–20) and became judge (qadi) in Damascus for some years under Hishām (r. 105–25/724–43). He thus belonged to Umayyad ruling circles and would have been a young adult in 705. Al-Balādhurī’s account, by contrast, is traced back to Medinan and Iraqi circles.137 In sum, Ibn al-Fayḍ’s story may contain an echo of events as they unfolded on that day. If so, this kernel was later shaped into a literary artefact by oral transmission and, depending on the author, by pro- or anti-Umayyad biases. The presence of carpenters in Ibn al-Fayḍ’s anecdote would then imply a structure with massive freestanding columns—the cella—since the technique described by Theodoret could not be

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The form of the ‘altar chamber’ cannot ultimately be

used to destroy a wall, and would have been unnecessary for

determined, but whatever it may have been, it is plausible that

a smaller basilican building. The conversion of the cella into

al-Walīd should have concentrated his initial attack on this

a church would also be the most convincing explanation for

part of the church. In Theodoret’s account about Apamaea,

the small size attributed to it by Muslim sources and the height

the timbers would not burn because the fire was put out by a

implied by Jarīr.138 This hypothesis has a cluster of evidence

black demon residing within the Temple of Zeus, so the bishop,

assembled around it—but evidence so thin that it is bound to

Marcellus, blessed water on a church altar, prayed upon it and

remain speculative.

ordered a deacon to ‘sprinkle it [on the temple] in faith and then apply the flame’. It was only then that the destruction

pppp

was effected, ‘in an instant’. Just as the power of Christian prayer enacted upon a church altar in Apamaea overcame the

The chequered history of the Roman sacred enclosure at

remnants of pagan religion, so al-Walīd might have sought to

Damascus was one of conflict and mutual accommodation

negate the aura of that holiest part of the church at Damascus

followed by successive formulations and reformulations of

by striking it first.

the past by Muslims and Christians. The evidence from the

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chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

67

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p  figure 39 Trace of semi-circular canopy on east cella wall, Temple of Bel, Palmyra, before 729 CE. From Seyrig, Amy, and Will, Le temple de Bêl, vol. 1, 158.

p  figure 40 Hypothetical reconstruction of the adyton at the Temple of Bacchus, Baalbek, first century CE. From Wiegand et al., Baalbek, vol. 2, Taf. 17.

68

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:04.

1962–63 excavations, scant though it is, makes it possible to

church in the same half of the temenos as the cella; indeed, it

determine the location of the cella in the western half of the

could arguably have been the cella itself, or a reworked version

temenos, across the courtyard from its processional gate in

of it. But, crucially, Christian interventions, whatever their exact

the east, Bāb Jayrūn, and to tentatively estimate its massive

nature, did not create a structure of such symbolic weight as to

scale, towering over Roman Damascus and placing it on a par

overwhelm the pagan past.

with the greatest temples of the age. The Romans must have

When Muslims conquered the city, they left the existing

carried out an extensive levelling of the site to make way for

configuration in place and established a first mosque in the

their massive platform and monument: the only pre-existing

eastern half of the enclosure. This mosque has barely left any

remain identified so far is a sphinx carved in relief on a basalt

traces beyond the location of its mihrab on the qibla wall and

slab, probably in the early first millennium BCE, which was

the likely use by Umayyad rulers of a nearby Roman door

inserted in the lower courses of the northeast temenos tower.139

to access it from their palace. Al-Walīd’s destruction of the

However, given that most Roman structures, including much

church and foundation of the Umayyad Mosque were the most

of the temenos itself, were eventually lost, it is difficult to tell

significant erasure and reinscription on the site since Roman

whether other remains from high antiquity were integrated

times—and the most seminal. During two crucial transitions—

into the temple.

from the temple to the church and from the church to the

The site was reconsecrated for Christian worship around the

Umayyad Mosque—the site witnessed a cycle of violence and banishment of the defeated faith. The late antique temenos

Christians kept the awe-inspiring walls and gates of the temenos,

thus emerges as a site of conflicts that erupted at turning points

but emphasized the south wall as its principal entrance in order

in the ebb and flow of dominant creeds. It is now time to delve

to mark a new physical and spiritual orientation. Arabic sources,

deeper into the climactic event that forms the crux of this story:

physical remains, and toponymic markers converge to place the

the destruction of the church.

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reign of Theodosius. Probably driven by practical concerns,

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chapter 2  •  Tangled Memories

69

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3 The Politics of Buildings: The Destruction of the Church and Construction of the Mosque

T

oWards the end of 705, the young caliph al-Walīd ordered his troops to seize and destroy the church within the temenos. The act, ill-advised for some,

divinely guided for others, upset the balance of MuslimChristian relations in the Umayyad Empire. So unusual was this hostile appropriation, and so aggrieved were the Christians, that a crisis erupted in Damascus and sent ripples beyond its epicentre. Three major Umayyad poets, Jarīr, al-Farazdaq, and al-Nābigha al-Shaybānī, were soon called upon to vindicate the caliph’s act in verse. Their panegyrics, which could reach far and wide by virtue of their immateriality, have the power

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to bring us back to the heat of this troubled moment. It is with them that this chapter begins. The destruction of the church left an empty site at the heart of Damascus. The next step for al-Walīd and his administration was to mobilise workers and gather materials for their new building. The construction of this mosque, along with a string p Request for materials for the Great Mosque of Damascus by the Umayyad governor of Egypt, Qurra ibn Sharīk, Aphrodito papyrus, issued in 710. Detail of Figure 41.

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of others in the provinces, required a strong logistical backbone that can be documented through Umayyad administrative papyri from Aphrodito. The cost would be astronomical, but the authorities were in a new-found position to extract regular

71

tax in both money and kind from most provinces. According

south. Christians, whether they faced east or west, prostrated

to Greek and Arabic sources, the Byzantine Emperor Justinian

themselves in front of al-ṣanam: the idol, a Qurʾanic term laden

II contributed craftsmen and materials to the construction of

with pagan connotations, and which in this context could refer

the mosque. The claim, which may seem dubious at first sight,

to an icon, a statue, or a cross.1 To this experience, al-Farazdaq

finds intriguing resonances in the three poems.

adds the dimension of sound, with the clappers of Christian worship responding to the recitation of the Qurʾan. He lays another violent charge against Christians by naming them

The Three Poems, the Foundation Inscription, and the Destruction of the Church

‘Acolytes of the Cross’ and implies that companies of ‘Readers who do not sleep’ had already been established to recite the Qurʾan day and night. Several of the same themes are echoed

The Arabic historical tradition asserts that, having decided

by al-Nābigha:

to destroy the church, al-Walīd stepped into the temenos to break the deadlock that had built up with the Christians and instigate the process by force. As the previous chapter has shown, this narrative may contain a historical core. But its

13. When People of the Book would pray, the chanting bishops echoed back; 14. Dissonance foreign, with pious acts;

earliest recensions date to the ninth century, whereas the three

like swallows chattering at dawn.

poems were composed for al-Walīd himself in the aftermath of

15. Now prayer of Holy Truth holds sway;

the crisis. By virtue of their literary form and context, they are

discerned is God’s authentic Word.

less linear and more allusive than prose accounts. Each of them also has a different thematic emphasis, yet they stand as the echo chambers of a shared discourse.

The words of Muslim prayer reverberate, this time, with Christian chanting in a barbarian tongue, probably Greek, mockingly likened to the squeaking of swallows. Ritual and

The Destruction as Divine Wisdom

aurality, rather than buildings and dogma, underlie these

The first half of al-Farazdaq’s poem (vv. 1–17) is a multi-layered

portrayals of worship. Between the lines of their polemics

eulogy of the Umayyads, with an emphasis on ʿUthmān and the

emerge glimpses of daily life in the seventh-century temenos.

Marwānid branch of the Umayyad clan, to which al-Walīd and

Most Arabic and Syriac sources converge to place the Muslim

his father ʿAbd al-Malik belonged. He then turns to the church:

conquest of Damascus in 13/635 or 14/636.2 The narrative involves two Companions of the Prophet as its main protagonists: Khālid

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18. You divided Christians in their churches from those who pray before dawn, and after dusk. 19. Together at worship, faces turned two ways: toward God, or toward the Idol. 20. How should clappers struck by Acolytes of the Cross intrude on Readers who do not sleep?

ibn al-Walīd, a controversial figure in Muslim tradition because of his opposition to Islam prior to conversion, and the more consensual Abū ʿUbayda ibn al-Jarrāḥ. Just as one commander and his troops entered Damascus by treaty through one gate, the other subjugated the city by force through another. Beyond this narrative skeleton, the sources are at variance on the respective roles of Khālid and Abū ʿUbayda, as well as

Al-Farazdaq paints an image of the Damascene temenos

the identification of the side of the city conquered by force.3

as it existed in the first decades of Islam, when the church

Anecdotal though the difference might seem, at the time of

stood next to the first mosque. Muslims prayed towards the

al-Walīd it would have determined whether the church was

72

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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protected by treaty (if it belonged to the half of the city that had

palace of rulers who were proclaiming a nascent monotheistic

surrendered), or had been left to the Christians as a goodwill

faith, Islam, and whose empire already stretched from Iran

gesture (if it belonged to the other half, conquered by arms).

to North Africa. The existence of a first mosque on the same

One is left with the sense that the conquest of Damascus

site, probably a modest structure, did not suffice to alter the

resulted in a complex settlement, and that its precise details

imbalance.

had become muddled by the early Abbasid period. The earliest

According to al-Balādhurī (d. 279/893) and al-Muhallabī

extant Arabic annalistic history, by Khalīfa ibn Khayyāṭ (Basran,

(d. 380/990), Muʿāwiya and ʿAbd al-Malik successively tried

d. 240/855), already records three versions of the event.

to persuade the Christians to sell them the grounds of the

4

In the Arabic sources, the narrative of this conquest

Damascene church. Al-Balādhurī’s version runs as follows:

continues with the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius (r. 610–41) mounting a major offensive against the Muslim armies, which

When Muʿāwiya ibn Abī Sufyān came to power, he wished

retreated to Jabiya in the Golan, before inflicting a heavy defeat

to add the Church of John (yūḥannā) to the mosque in

on the Byzantines at the nearby Yarmuk River. A few months

Damascus. The Christians refused, so he refrained. Then,

after the initial campaign Damascus was seized again, this time

in his own day, ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Marwān requested for it

decisively, around Dhū al-Qaʿda 15/December 636. The city

to be added to the mosque and offered them money, but

and its administrative region (jund) were governed for three

they refused to hand it over to him.8

5

years by Yazīd ibn Abī Sufyān, who established his headquarters in a palace adjacent to the southern part of the Damascene

policies towards Christians, particularly in Syria.9 The years

sources. Upon his death in 18/639, Yazīd was succeeded by his

60–65/680–85 were marked by the brief reigns of his son Yazīd I

brother Muʿāwiya, who had opposed the Prophet in Mecca

(r. 60–64/680–83) and grandson Muʿāwiya II (r. 64/683–84)

before becoming one of his secretaries and a Companion.

followed by Marwān ibn al-Ḥakam (r. 64–65/684–85), who

The situation of the Damascene temenos during those years

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Muʿāwiya’s rule had been largely built upon consensual

temenos: the famed Khaḍrāʾ (‘the Green’) of later Arabic

installed the Marwānid branch of the Umayyad dynasty.

was far from exceptional. In most Syrian cities conquered by

Upon his accession to the caliphal office in 65/685, Marwān’s

treaty such as Aleppo, Homs, Diyarbakir, Edessa, Amman,

son ʿAbd al-Malik fought to prevail on his rival in Mecca, Ibn

and Rusafa, the churches were not seized by Muslims, who

al-Zubayr, in the Second Civil War (fitna). Having emerged

sometimes prayed in them, nor were they physically divided.

victorious in 72/691–92, he engaged in major construction

Instead, as shown by Mattia Guidetti, a congregational mosque

works in Jerusalem and Mecca. In this newly acquired position

was typically built near the main church, on land belonging to

of strength, it is plausible that he again sought to purchase

the latter’s precinct. In several cities this spatial configuration

the temenos enclosure from the Christians, and some sources

still prevailed in the later medieval period, when churches fell

also assert that he bought the Khaḍrāʾ, Muʿāwiya’s former

into disuse because of dwindling Christian populations.

palace, from the latter’s grandson Khālid ibn Yazīd.10 But, if

6

In 40/661, Muʿāwiya received the oath of allegiance in

the Christians refused to cede the church, his position was not

Jerusalem and Damascus became the capital of the Muslim

secure enough to coerce them into doing so. The move would

empire, at least for those factions that accepted his claim to the

have appeared particularly risky since it contravened a building

caliphate. From that time onwards, the shared temenos must

block of the Umayyad social order: respect for Christian property

have become a thorn in the side of Umayyad rulers: a church

and cultic rights. Yet this is precisely what al-Walīd did

now stood as the major religious monument abutting the

a decade or two later, as forcefully asserted by Jarīr:

7

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chapter 3  •   the politics of buildings

73

23. You leapt at the Christians—one bound; on landing, it caused the mountains of Daylam to shake! 24. The edifice of the church was razed by force;

strayed there, and We bore witness to their judgement; and We made Solomon to understand it, and unto each gave We judgement and knowledge (Q. 21:78-79).

there was crushing defeat for the Slit-nosed! 25. Your Lord showed you, when you broke their cross, bright guidance; you knew what we did not; 26. And when the battalions displayed their banners, noble eagles, hovering aloft, 27. A ram-skull crashed on [enemy] heads; they scattered; its palate survived intact. 28. Crushing stone of the wars when wars ignite! Rain of Life when the ailing want for support!

These two verses were interpreted in Muslim tradition, starting with the earliest extant Qurʾan commentary by al-Farrāʾ (144–207/761–822) in a way that is consistent with the poem. David was once asked to arbitrate on a complaint about sheep that went astray at night and ate the vines in an adjacent plot of land. He ruled that the animals should be given to the petitioner, but Solomon suggested that he should instead be granted the milk, wool and progeny of the sheep until the damage had been repaid—a supremely fair exercise

The young caliph is portrayed sending armed troops

of judgement.11 Just as in the Qurʾan, God made Solomon

(‘battalions’ with ‘their banners’) into the site to disperse the

understand how to rule over this intractable dilemma, so He

Christians; he intervenes in person to resolve the situation.

did with al-Walīd when it came to the church, a point driven

After al-Farazdaq’s attack on the ‘idol’ and al-Nābigha’s disdain

home by al-Farazdaq in calquing the phrase fahhamaka Allāh

for Christian chant, Jarīr takes aim at the cross, which is

(v. 23) on the Qurʾan’s fahhamnāhā sulaymān (‘We made Solomon

destroyed by the caliph. Al-Walīd’s violent acts were ordained

to understand it’, Q. 21:79). Solomon was the archetype of the

through a ‘bright guidance’ (nūr al-hudā) as he ‘knew what we

just ruler and builder in early Islam.12 Al-Walīd is thus portrayed

did not’ (ʿalimta mā lam naʿlam), a Qurʾanic expression that

as acting in this crisis not out of youthful folly, but with a

blurs the boundaries of the source of this ‘guidance’ between

wisdom superior even to that of ʿAbd al-Malik, a recognised

God and the caliph. Like Jarīr, al-Farazdaq goes to some lengths

leader implicitly compared here with David. The image, which

to justify al-Walīd’s act as he proclaims:

is again echoed by Jarīr,13 seems to imply that al-Walīd’s act was perceived by at least some Arab Muslims as impulsive, if not

21. You were inspired to rid them [the ‘Readers who do not sleep’] of these

reckless. The poets were being called upon to reshape—and sublimate—the narrative.

with the wisdom, when they judged on the sheep and Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

the tilth, 22. Of David and [Solomon,] Right-guided King, who awarded their lambs and the wool of the shear. 23. God inspired you to extirpate their church

The Church, Justinian II, and Maslama’s Anatolian Campaigns The poems situate the seizure of the church in the context of war with Byzantium, a theme developed most extensively by al-Nābigha:

from a mosque where fragrant words are read. 5. A hailstorm-strike disgraced Ṭuranda;

This is an allusion to a passage from the Qurʾan:

troops not led by luckless fools. 6. There, Blessed Maslama did stand

And David and Solomon—when they gave judgement concerning the tillage, when the sheep of the people

74

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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to pound her sides with boulder-rock; 7. A clamorous host surrounding her,

Byzantine emperor Justinian II (r. 685–95, 705–11), whose nose

as fibre rings the crowns of palm,

and tongue were cut in front of the populace at the hippodrome

8. To scale her wall from every side till those within were stricken, grieved, 9. Her folk between slain and despoiled, and those whose arms were crossed with thongs. 10. Steady, you crop-nosed sniveller! Will the stroke of your Lord, once aimed, be turned?

of Constantinople in 695, and who was thereafter known in Greek as rhinotmetos (‘cut-nose’). Following his mutilation, Justinian was exiled to Cherson in modern Ukraine, on the Byzantine frontier, and eventually sought refuge at the Khazar court where he married the khagan’s sister, later known as Theodora. With the support of the Bulgars, he regained control

Maslama ibn ʿAbd al-Malik, the famous military commander and al-Walīd’s half-brother, has just seized Ṭuranda, a town

It is worth pausing to consider the chronological implications

near Malatya in southeastern Anatolia. According to the

of his appearance in the poems of Jarīr and al-Nābigha. Justinian

Syriac Chronicle of 819, composed shortly after that date,

was killed at the end of 711 near Constantinople, his head

probably at Qartmin in southeastern Turkey, in the year 1021

paraded in Ravenna and Rome, and according to one version,

AG (October 709–September 710), ‘he [Maslama] besieged the

his body thrown into the sea.20 News of his death cannot have

fortress of Turanda and the cities of Amasiya and Mostiya. He

taken long to reach Damascus, especially at a time of heightened

destroyed them and brought back as captives all who were in

conflict. Both poems are thus unlikely to be much later than the

them’. Michael the Syrian (twelfth century) records similar

beginning of 712, and al-Nābigha depicts as a recent event the

information under the year 1022 AG (October 710–September

siege of Ṭuranda, which the sources cited above place between

711).15 Al-Ṭabarī, probably referring to the same campaign,

October 709 and September 711. His verses about the ornament

notes that Maslama seized several towns near Malatya in 93/

of the mosque also suggest that he saw it as a nearly finished

October 711–October 712. This may have been the second time

building. His poem may thus date to around 711–12. Jarīr and

that Ṭuranda was seized by Muslims as other sources record its

al-Farazdaq, by contrast, do not allude in any clear way to the

capture in 83/702–3 or 84/703–4 by ʿAbd Allāh ibn ʿAbd al-Malik,

new mosque, presumably because its construction was not far

another brother of al-Walīd and Maslama.

advanced. Their two poems are unlikely to be later than 711,

14

16

17

The poem alludes to the breaching of the city walls by hurling massive stones, presumably with catapults or

and probably closer in time to the Damascene crisis. Strikingly, both Jarīr and al-Nābigha present the destruction

mangonels—war machines also used used during the civil

of the church as a personal defeat for Justinian. Jarīr does so in

war at Mecca in the 680s and the siege of Constantinople in

the most direct terms (v. 24), while al-Nābigha links the rivalry

99/717–18. Loss of freedom and terror await the vanquished,

more specifically to Maslama’s campaign in Anatolia (vv. 5–10),

al-Nābigha thunders (v. 9), before conjuring the powerful image

which would culminate with the siege of Constantinople in

of a ‘crop-nosed sniveller’ crying over this devastating loss

99/717–18, shortly after al-Walīd’s death. Caught in the midst

(v. 10). Would it have happened without God’s decree, he asks

of these larger conflicts were Christian populations, from the

rhetorically? This statement is directly echoed by the verse of

captives of Ṭuranda to the faithful at the church of Damascus

Jarīr (v. 24) discussed above: ‘The edifice of the church was

(al-Nābigha, v. 11): ‘The Christians pray God’s aid for us, it

razed by force; there was crushing defeat for the Slit-nosed

seems; but God knows best what ribs conceal’. These three

(al-akhram)!’

social groups—Umayyad ruling élites, Christians from their

18

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of Constantinople around July or August 705.19

Enigmatic though both invectives may seem, their target would have been plain to contemporary audiences: the

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:30.

empire, and, through Justinian II, Byzantine élites—are thus pitted against each other in the poems.

chapter 3  •  The Politics of Buildings

75

The (Lost) Foundation Inscription and the Date of the Mosque

2 February 707: this date provides a firm terminus ante quem

The poems are not the only known contemporary

for the destruction of the church.25 Allowing time for logistical

proclamations about these events that survive. The foundation

requests to be formulated in Damascus and to reach Egypt, one

inscription of the Umayyad Mosque, originally laid out in gold-

can infer that it must have happened before the end of 706. The

on-blue mosaic in the prayer hall, was lost at an early date,

first Arabic historian to mention the Umayyad Mosque, Khalīfa

but its contents were recorded in textual sources. The earliest

ibn Khayyāṭ, states, without referring to the inscription, that

version is a citation of the historian Yaʿqūb ibn Sufyān al-

construction began in 87 AH (23 December 705–11 December

Fasawī (d. ca. 277/891) by Ibn ʿAsākir (499–571/1105–76). It states

706), which seems to corroborate al-Masʿūdī’s reading.26 Other

that after a long compilation of Qurʾanic verses, to which we

Arabic sources give dates between 86/705 and 88/706–7.27

shall return, the text ended with these words:

However, al-Balādhurī and Abū al-Faraj Qudāma ibn Jaʿfar al-Kātib (d. 337/949) state that in the mosque itself, next to the

The servant of God al-Walīd, commander of the faithful,

ceiling of ‘the arcade of the qibla, towards the minaret’, was an

ordered in Dhū al-Qaʿda of the year 86 [October–

inscription stating that ‘the commander of the faithful al-Walīd

November 705] the construction of this mosque and the

ordered its construction in 86 [January–December 705]’.28 This

destruction of the church which was in it.21

second Umayyad inscription (now also lost) was carved on a marble panel at one end of the prayer hall, on the arcade

The date recorded by al-Fasawī is only a month after the death

adjacent to the qibla wall. Its recorded date, which agrees with

of ʿAbd al-Malik, al-Walīd’s father and predecessor as caliph,

al-Fasawī’s reading, carries more weight than those contained in

which the sources converge to place in the middle of Shawwal

annalistic texts such as Khalīfa’s, as it outwardly stems from an

86/October 705. Such a tight sequence of events resonates

epigraphic source. Most Syriac chronicles, using the Seleucid

with al-Farazdaq’s vivid evocation of his funeral procession and

calendar, converge to place the destruction of the church in

burial (vv. 11–13) as a prelude to verses on the destruction of the

1017 AG (October 705–September 706), a date compatible with

church. But al-Masʿūdī, who visited Damascus in 332/944, gives

al-Fasawī’s reading, but not al-Masʿūdī’s.29 These Christian sources

this slightly different record of the text:

relate the event to the death of ʿAbd al-Malik and al-Walīd’s

22

accession to power.30 Thus, the weight of the evidence leans in The servant of God al-Walīd, commander of the faithful,

favour of the demolition taking place shortly after the death

ordered in Dhū al-Ḥijja 87 [November–December 706] the

of ʿAbd al-Malik, at the end of 86 AH, between October and

construction of this mosque and the destruction of the

December 705.

church which was in it. Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

23

Remarkably, in their foundation inscription, the patrons of the Umayyad Mosque placed this event on an equal footing to

In early Kufic script, the phrases Dhū al-ḥijja and Dhū al-qaʿda

the construction of the mosque.31 The statement would have

(for the month) could look similar in broad outline, and so

stood at the very heart of the new building, above the central

could the numbers sabʿ (seven) and sitt (six) in the year, except

mihrab and the head of the prayer leader, who would usually

for the last letter. From a distance, one could conceivably have

have been the caliph himself in Umayyad times. By choosing

mistaken one for the other. But which is the correct version? The

this wording, the patrons were consciously singling out this

answer is inherently elusive due to the lack of primary evidence.

destructive act for posterity.

24

The earliest administrative papyrus from Aphrodito in Egypt with a request concerning the mosque was issued on

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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The public declaration of the inscription thus nailed a point of contention that was also fiercely vindicated by the semi-

public declarations of the three poems. These offer a vivid

gate of the transept and the installation of columns—required

image of two phases in the life of the temenos: shared worship

large numbers of low-skill labourers. Then came the stone

by Christians and Muslims in the church and first mosque, now

masons, carpenters, and smiths for the roofing, and finally the

violently decried; then the forced destruction of the church

mosaicists, the marble workers, and the specialised carpenters

following al-Walīd’s decisive intervention, which is portrayed

and wood painters for the ceilings. Numerous foremen must

against a background of war with Byzantium. Underlying these

also have been active at every stage. These workers represented

events are the lurking role of Justinian II as a protagonist, and

many mouths to feed in Damascus, a relatively small city at the

the uneasy position of Christians within the escalating crisis.

time. Besides the tools, the list of essential materials was long:

Did the emperor of distant Constantinople really get involved in

limestone for the ashlars, lime for the mortar and plaster, sand

a Damascene crisis? If so, why imply a link with local Christians?

or raw glass slabs for the mosaics, marble for the floors and

Before turning to these questions, let us pursue the story where

dado, jewels for the famed vine frieze, teak for the ceilings, lead

we left it, as the clamour in the temenos fell silent.

for the roof tiles, gold in large amounts for various features of the ornament, and so on.35 To their number, one should add a regular supply of disposable items, such as ropes, baskets, and

The Aphrodito Papyri and the Logistics of Construction

timbers for scaffolding and arch centering.36 Transport entailed a complexity of its own: materials had to be loaded onto and offloaded from beasts of burden, notably camels, with sledges

The events of 705 left a hollow site at the heart of Damascus—

attached to carry larger items. The animals were led across

in the words of Jarīr, ‘buildings devoid of their folk, brought

different terrains, with some legs of the journey made on sea-

down’ (v. 18). Soon the rubble must have been cleared away

going ships and river barges.37 Roads in the vicinity of Damascus

and usable materials such as ashlars and columns set aside.32

must have been regularly congested with this two-way traffic.

Once a masterplan was agreed for al-Walīd’s mosque, a steady

Each different item had to be stockpiled in sufficient quantities

supply of workers and materials had to be secured for each

to avoid stalling the work. Fortunately, contemporary documents

construction stage. The temenos imposed the shape and size

survive to provide glimpses of the logistical processes whereby

of the design, but it was also a major asset since the most

men and materials were obtained.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

labour-intensive parts of the work—the foundations, platform, and enclosure wall—had already been built by the Romans.

Supply Networks for Labour and Materials

Substantial new foundations may only have been required for the

The Aphrodito Papyri are an administrative archive stemming

transept, with its soaring walls and dome. Indeed, Arabic sources

from the pagarchy of Aphrodito (Ar. Ishqawa, modern Kom

only place this type of work in its perimeter.

Ishqaw), between Sohag and Bawit in Middle Egypt.38 While

33

The new mosque also required much less wall construction

most of its contents are from the sixth century, some four

than a church of its size because most roofed areas rested

hundred published documents, now dispersed between

on Roman columns and colonnettes. New masonry was

collections worldwide, date to the early eighth century—notably

mainly needed for the superimposed rows of arches and their

the governorships of ʿAbd Allāh ibn ʿAbd al-Malik (86–90/705–9),

elevation, the transept and its dome, the upper elevation of

al-Walīd’s half-brother, and Qurra ibn Sharīk (90–96/709–14),

the temenos on the qibla—and, if this structure was built

which coincide with the construction of the mosque.39 Half

by the Umayyads, the north minaret.34 The first phases of

a dozen of them relate directly to this project.40 They contain

work—probably the excavations in front of the triple Roman

requests for workers, maintenance stipends and, in one case,

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:30.

chapter 3  •  The Politics of Buildings

77

Shelfmark

Date

Request

Duration

Local agent

Supervisor(s)

Monthly salary or unit price

Morelli No.

P. Lond. IV 1433

2 Feb. 707, 7 Feb. 707, 20 Mar. 707

Requisition of one worker with food stipend

8 months

Enoch, son of Theodorus, messenger

-

½ 1/16 dinar

A.1

P. Lond. IV 1433

24 Aug. 707

Part of the dotation for 40 craftsmen

6 months

Enoch, son of Victor, payment intermediary

-

1 1/3 dinar

A.2

P. Lond. IV 1433

31 Aug. 707

Salary and food stipend of a messenger

4 months

-

-

½ dinar

A.3

P. Lond. IV 1334 + P. Ross. Georg. IV 3

11 Feb. 709

Requisition of one sawyer with salary, food stipend in money and maintenance

6 months

-

Yazīd ibn Tamīm

-

A.4

P. Lond. IV 1341 + P. Lond. IV 1411

3 Nov. 709

Salary and food stipend of a sawyer

6 months

-

-

Possibly 1 1/3 dinar

A.6

P. Lond. IV 1397

Ca. 709-10

Advance of 10 dinars, which are late, for the food stipend of craftsmen

-

-

-

-

A.7

P. Lond. IV 1368

20 Oct. 710

47 litrae of chains

-

-

ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn … ‘of the Commander of the Faithful’

-

A.8

ʿUbayd ibn Hurmuz p  table 3 Requests for the Great Mosque of Damascus, Aphrodito papyri, 710. From Morelli, ‘Legname’, 173–75.

47 litrae (about 15–20  kg) of chains (Table 3 and Figure 41).41

Basilios, the pagarch of Aphrodito, dispatched his agents

These formed part of the annual ‘fiscal package’ paid by each

to collect money or materials, or to get the requisitioned

district, a mix of taxes in money and in kind calculated on the

person to travel to the allocated site. In relation to Damascus,

basis of the population register and land cadastre.

for instance, a certain Enoch, son of Victor was instructed to

The administrative unit to which the Aphrodito Papyri

serve as payment intermediary in a salary collection for forty

belonged, the pagarchy, was the smallest in Egypt, coming

craftsmen, while Enoch, son of Theodorus was the messenger

below the levels of the eparchy, province, and empire. The

for labour requisitions in 707 (Table 3, A.1, A.2). In several

documents carry orders from the governor, based on requests

cases, we also hear of fugitives running away from their allotted

sent by supervisors in Damascus, to the pagarch, who in his

tasks. While the position of pagarch was one of local power

turn conveyed them to local towns, villages, and monasteries,

and status, it entailed constant negotiation with, and coercion

each one named individually with the required contribution.

of, the local population, but also deliberate inertia towards

The orders reflect the extended reach of the fiscal system under

the Muslim authorities.44 These processes appear to have

the reigns of ʿAbd al-Malik and al-Walīd, when population

been rooted in the corvée system of Roman Egypt, which

censuses and land surveys were periodically carried out in

is mostly known in relation to agriculture, dikes, and the

different provinces. These involved such coercive measures

postal service.45

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42

as the return of all persons to their village or town of origin in order to be registered along with their father and children.

43

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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The papyri convey three broad types of requests: for labour, maintenance payments, and materials. The requisition periods,

p figure 41 Papyrus issued by Qurra ibn Sharīk, governor of Egypt, to the pagarch of Aphrodito, 20 October 710. The document conveys a request by ‘ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn…’ and ʿUbayd ibn Hurmuz for 47 litrae of chains for the Great Mosque of Damascus. London, British Library, P. Lond. IV 1368. © The British Library Board.

(Table 3, a.2, a.6).47 The ratio between the lowest and highest of these payments is slightly under 3:1. Thus, salaried work was imposed for a fixed period, and funded by the community dispatching these men as a form of taxation. Materials were sourced through the same system, as tax in kind. Construction Supervisors At the apex of this command chain were the supervisors working on the actual sites who identified forthcoming needs and communicated them to the governor, who in turn relayed them to the pagarch. Letters thus travelled from Damascus to the provincial capital and onwards to local administrative units in a system premised on the smooth running of the postal service (barīd)—a complex infrastructure of roads, milestones, mounts, and manned stations, expanded and systematised under ʿAbd al-Malik and al-Walīd.48 The papyri contain the names of three supervisors (έπικείµενοι) involved in work on the Great Mosque of Damascus. The first two, ‘ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn … of the Commander of the Faithful’ and ʿUbayd ibn Hurmuz, are those by whom the mosque ‘is being built’ according to the request for 47 litrae of chains

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(Table 3, a.8, and Figure 41).49 ʿUbayd ibn Hurmuz seems to in this small corpus, vary from three months to a year. It is

be otherwise unknown in the textual record. The patronym

also possible that some craftsmen stayed for longer, but that

of ʿAbd al-Raḥmān is not legible in the document, but Harold

their expenses were collected on a yearly basis; this may be

Idris Bell and Federico Morelli tentatively identified him with

why money was requested to support some workers for

ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Salmān and ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Salma,

twelve months, without any mention of their requisition. In

who appear in other papyri respectively as the supervisor of a

addition to paying for their transportation, local communities

palace (location unknown, 709), and a treasury, possibly the

had to bear the cost of their salaries and food, summed up

Bayt al-Māl at Damascus or another public building (probably

as ‘oil and salt’ in some documents. The lowest attested

707–8).50 In any case, as noted by Bell, the suffix appended to

payment, at half a dinar per month including the food stipend,

his name (‘of the Commander of the Faithful’) implies that he

is for a messenger on the site of the Mosque of Damascus

was probably a mawlā of al-Walīd, since this was by far the most

(Table 3, a.3), a less qualified and presumably less taxing job

common bond of clientelage.51

46

than manual labour. Skilled craftsmen (τεχνίται) received

More solid evidence emerges for the third supervisor,

total monthly payments between a dinar and a quarter for a

Yazīd ibn Tamīm, who issued the request for a sawyer in 709

carpenter at Jerusalem and a dinar and a third for a sawyer

(Table 3, a.4).52 He is remembered by Ibn ʿAsākir in relation to

and other unspecified craftsmen at the mosque of Damascus

the destruction of the Damascene church:

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:30.

chapter 3 • the politics of buildings

79

p  figure 42 Executive stamp of Yazīd ibn Tamīm. Egypt, late Umayyad period. Glass, diameter 3   cm.

Ibn ʿAsākir’s text, based on the authority of Ibn al-Muʿallā (d. 286/900), states that those summoned by Yazīd for the destruction were Jewish, which would have helped al-Walīd sidestep Christians fears about this undertaking. According to another early writer, Ibn al-Fayḍ (d. 315/928), it was Muslims who carried out the destruction; it is not possible to assert which of the two reports is correct, and indeed they are not necessarily contradictory.57 The direct source of Ibn ʿAsākir’s anecdote on the destruction of the church is given as ʿAbd Tammām said, Abū Bakr Yaḥyā ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn al-Ḥārith

al-Raḥmān ibn ʿĀmir al-Yaḥṣubī, the brother of the eminent

told me, from ʿAbd al-Raḥīm ibn ʿUmar al-Māzinī, they said,

Damascene Qurʾan reader ʿAbd Allāh ibn ʿĀmir al-Yaḥṣubī.58

through Aḥmad ibn al-Muʿallā ibn Yazīd al-Asadī, Shayba

Al-Dhahabī writes about his more famous sibling:

ibn al-Walīd al-Qurashī told me, my father related to me, from ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn ʿĀmir al-Yaḥṣubī, when he recalled the

Yaḥyā al-Dhimārī said: Ibn ʿĀmir was judge of the district

episode of al-Walīd’s destruction of the church of Damascus so

(jund) [of Damascus]. He was involved in the construction

he could build the mosque:

of the mosque and was head of the mosque: he never saw

Then he turned to Yazīd ibn Tamīm who was part of his

an innovation (bidʿa) there without changing it.59

fiscal administration and said: ‘Send for the Jews so they come and destroy it’. He did so, and the Jews came to

According to Muslim tradition, Ibn ʿĀmir was born around 21/642 and learned to recite the Qurʾan from Companions of the

destroy it.53

Prophet that include, in some versions, ʿUthmān (d. 35/656). He Ibn ʿAsākir asserts that Yazīd was a member of the fiscal administration (kharāj). It is plausible that having been called

118/29 January 736.60 If he did play a role in the construction

upon to have the Damascene church destroyed towards the

of the mosque, his concerns are likely to have been religious

end of 705, he should have been involved in the logistics of

rather than logistical, as when work began around 706, he

building some two years later. Elsewhere, Ibn ʿAsākir notes that

would already have been elderly and a prominent authority on

Yazīd was a client (mawlā) of the secretary ʿUbayd Allāh ibn

the Qurʾan. His headship of the mosque started, according to

Naṣr ibn al-Ḥajjāj ibn ʿIlāṭ al-Sulamī, a member of Muʿāwiya’s

al-Fasawī, during the days of ʿAbd al-Malik and continued after

administration. This convergence highlights the astonishing

the inauguration of the Umayyad Mosque. This might explain

accuracy of some information preserved in the Syrian historical

why he was given some oversight over the construction of the

tradition. Several Umayyad glass weights and executive stamps

new building.61

54

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died a near-centenarian on 10 Muharram (the day of ʿĀshūrāʾ)

from Egypt also bear the name Yazīd ibn Tamīm, and these may

There is, however, one difficulty with this report: as

represent evidence of his continued role in the administration

leader of the mosque, Ibn ʿĀmir’s purported severity against

(Figure 42). However as they are probably of late Umayyad

innovation (bidʿa) seems to be at odds with his apparent lack of

date, the identification of this Yazīd with that of the papyrus

objection to its novelty and wealth. His attitude was so severe

and texts would require him to have had a very long career,

that he sparked controversy when he beat another respected

which is possible but not certain. That connection therefore

Qurʾan reader, ʿAṭiyya ibn Qays, for raising his hands at the

remains speculative.

wrong time during prayer.62 Ibn ʿĀmir had close links to the

55

56

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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Umayyads, who appointed him as qadi in Damascus, and

Hurmuz—can be accepted with confidence, while those of the

there is no way to ascertain whether his row with ʿAṭiyya had

traditionalists ʿAbd Allāh ibn ʿĀmir and Zayd ibn Wāqid, as well

a personal dimension, and whether he was as concerned with

as al-Walīd’s brother Sulaymān, remain uncertain. If any of

architectural ornament as he seems to have been with ritual.

the latter did play a role, it was probably more consultative

Ibn al-Muʿallā, as again cited by Ibn ʿAsākir, relates another

than logistical.

anecdote in which ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn ʿĀmir, the brother, recalls that the men initially tasked with destroying the church

Beyond Aphrodito

were Yazīd ibn Tamīm and Abū Nāʾil. The transmission chain

The Aphrodito Papyri are only the partial archive of a small

for this story is short and familial: the author heard it from

provincial district in Egypt.69 The workers and materials listed

Yazīd’s great-grandson Shayba ibn al-Walīd, whose father

in them are but a drop in the ocean of a project on this scale.

(Yazīd’s grandson) had heard it from an elderly ʿAbd al-Raḥmān.

Systems of forced labour broadly resembling the one reflected in

Ibn Kathīr (ca. 700–74/1300–73) also asserts, without giving a

the Aphrodito Papyri must have been used to extract resources

transmission chain, that during this crisis al-Walīd ordered Abū

from other districts and provinces, although the administrative

Nāʾil to ‘hit the Christians until they made their way out’, which

procedures will have varied. Evidence of this exists for Anjar,

echoes Jarīr’s poem (vv. 26-27). Abū Nāʾil is remembered by the

a palatial city in modern Lebanon about 60  km northwest of

early historian Khalīfa ibn Khayyāṭ as chief of police (shurṭa)

Damascus, probably built during al-Walīd’s reign with two

under both this caliph and his father ʿAbd al-Malik. Al-Walīd

palaces, a mosque, and rows of shops. The Aphrodito Papyri

eventually replaced him in that post, which confirms that he

contain a message from a certain ʿUbayd ibn Shuʿayb about a

was active at the beginning of his reign. Thus, different sources

worker who returned from that site to Fustat.70 At Kamed,

paint a coherent picture of Umayyad officials involved in the

a quarry on the western slopes of the Anti-Lebanon mountain

crisis, with Yazīd ibn Tamīm’s role emerging with relative clarity.

range, over thirty Syriac inscriptions have been carved by

63

64

65

The sources name at least two other supervisors: Zayd ibn Wāqid (d. 138/756) was an established Damascene hadith

Iraq.71 Thus, manpower for this project was supplied from at

transmitter who features in the sources as the eyewitness of

least these two provinces, whether the authors of the Kamed

the discovery by al-Walīd of the Baptist’s relics in the mosque

inscriptions were conscripted or had come of their own will.72

precinct.66 In the earliest recorded version of this story, Zayd

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workers probably active at Anjar, many of them from northern

Indeed, even if expanded across the provinces, forced labour

begins his account by noting: ‘Al-Walīd put me in charge of the

cannot have fulfilled all the requirements of a major building

workers for the construction of the Great Mosque of Damascus.’67

project. Some workers and supplies must have been obtained

Since as we shall see, the historicity of the whole anecdote is

through regular hire and payment. If other materials and

open to doubt and there is no other evidence to link Zayd to the

artefacts came as spoils of war, many more must have been

construction of the mosque, this claim remains conjectural.

purchased. For instance teak, the timber used for the ceilings

Ibn Kathīr also asserts that al-Walīd put his brother Sulaymān

at Damascus and other mosques of the period, probably had to

(r. 96–99/715–17) in charge of the works, to which he would

be imported from India or Southeast Asia.73 The precious stones

have put the finishing touches in 715, at the very beginning of

inlaid into the vine frieze and mihrab must also have been

his reign.68 There is no way to ascertain the authenticity of this

sourced through other means.

claim, which is not echoed by earlier sources. In the final analysis, the three names given in the Aphrodito Papyri—Yazīd ibn Tamīm, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān, and ʿUbayd ibn

George, A. (2021). The umayyad mosque of damascus : Art, faith and empire in early islam. Gingko Press, Incorporated. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-12 10:50:30.

The use of both forced and voluntary labour as manpower is suggested, in a slightly earlier context, by a Christian account written around 638 that is preserved in a Georgian version.

chapter 3  •  The Politics of Buildings

81

It states that at the time of the Muslim conquest of Jerusalem,

The completion of this string of buildings within a decade

an archdeacon named John worked as a marble layer on

appears a feat not only of architectural creation, but also of

the building of the first mosque on Temple Mount; his

administration.

excommunication by Sophronius received divine sanction

Conversely, the Aphrodito Papyri shed light on the

when his leg became gangrenous and eventually killed him.

situation of ordinary Christians faced with a declining status,

John, we are told, had willingly entered into the service

a hardening tax policy and increasing demand for forced

of Muslims as they ‘took with them men, some by force,

labour. Some of them may also have relished the opportunities

others by their own will in order to clean this place and

presented by Umayyad patronage and felt the appeal of the

build this damned thing destined for their prayer which

Islamic religious message, even if Muslim authorities were

they call mosque’. Indeed, mechanisms similar to those

not actively seeking conversions in this period. It is also in this

of forced labour were at play in the market, as indicated by

broader context that one should view the connection between

Egyptian papyri of the fifth to seventh centuries that preserve

Justinian II and the 705 crisis implied by the poems of Jarīr and

correspondence between patrons and their agents about

al-Nābigha. In order to assess this issue, we need to retrace our

workers, their salaries, maintenance allowances, and the

steps to the previous decade.

74

transport of materials. It is difficult to assess whether the 75

chance survival of Basilios’ archive at Aphrodito skews the

Justinian II and Umayyad Building Projects

available evidence towards forced labour, or whether the Umayyads were heavily reliant on this system because of the scale of al-Walīd’s projects, and possibly also due to the

Gethsemane and the Columns of Mecca

reluctance of the largely Christian population to work on them.

In his entry for the year 6183 AM (September 691–August 692), Theophanes Confessor (d. 818), a chronicler active near

The logistics must, at any rate, have been considerable

Constantinople, writes:

and highly rationalised in order for the apposite teams and

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materials to be mobilised, particularly when one considers the time it took for messages entrusted to the postal service

ʿAbd al-Malik sent orders to rebuild the temple at Mecca.

to reach any given province, for the requests to be fulfilled

He wanted to take away pillars from holy Gethsemane

locally, and for workers or materials to travel back to the site.

but Sergius, the son of Manṣūr, a Christian who was

Each region will have gathered a particular set of skills. To

public finance minister and was very friendly with ʿAbd

give but one example, the Red Monastery near Sohag in the

al-Malik, and his co-leader of the Palestinian Christians,

region of Aphrodito, has extensive figural wall paintings and

Patricius, surnamed Klausus, asked him not to do this, but

marbling that may have been created by local craftsmen. To

to persuade Justinian through their request to send other

muster resources at the level of detail reflected in the papyri

columns in place of these. This was done.78

76

(for example, a sawyer for six months, with a set salary and allowance) would have required, for a project like Damascus,

In 692, having just prevailed over Ibn al-Zubayr in Mecca,

a whole team of supervisors versed in fiscal administration and

ʿAbd al-Malik sought to take columns from the Church

conversant with the requirements of the site. The full complexity

of Gethsemane on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem for

of this organisation becomes apparent when one considers that

use in the Masjid al-Haram, the sanctuary of the Kaʿba in

al-Walīd was concurrently building not one, but eight or more

Mecca. The timing was propitious: in the same year, he had

mosques, along with a range of palaces and other structures.

emerged victorious from the Second Civil War and was able

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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to manoeuvre himself out of the exorbitant annual tribute

Al-Walīd thus razed the Masjid al-Haram to build it anew, and

he had been forced to pay Justinian II since 685—the sources

he would have been the first to bring marble columns to this

mention 1,000 gold coins, a horse and a slave per day.79 By having

sanctuary. Their arrival in Mecca, presumably from the port

columns sent to the holiest Muslim site, he was effectively

of Jeddah, each harnessed to several camels, would not have

extracting a concession in return for refraining from destroying

gone unnoticed amongst the populace; this probably explains

that church. Indeed, Theophanes lists this episode immediately

why the detail stuck in local historical memory, with al-Azraqī’s

after the end of the tribute payments to Justinian, as if to imply

sources forming a purely Meccan chain of transmission.

that both events reflected the same shift in the balance of power. This account finds an echo, at the receiving end, in the

The accounts of both Theophanes and al-Azraqī are credible on their own terms, but they leave a decade-long gap between

Meccan chronicle of Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad al-Azraqī

the dispatch of the columns around 692 and their sighting in

(d. 222/837) as cited by his grandson Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd Allāh:

Mecca between 705 and 715. Al-Azraqī may of course have mistakenly ascribed this event to the reign of al-Walīd instead

My grandfather said …:

of ʿAbd al-Malik, but the historical context lends some weight to

Then [after Ibn al-Zubayr’s defeat] ʿAbd al-Malik built in it

his dating. The logistics required to transport columns to Mecca

[the Masjid al-Haram]. He did not enlarge it but raised its

were considerable: after being loaded onto ships, whether in

walls, gave it a teak ceiling, and built it beautifully.

the Umayyad or Byzantine Empire, they had to be transported

My grandfather said, Sufyān ibn ʿUyayna told us, from Saʿīd

across southern Palestine, the Sinai, or Egypt, then transferred

ibn Farwa, from his father:

to new ships in the Red Sea and finally carried across the 90  km

I was involved in work on the mosque at the time of ʿAbd

of desert that separate Jeddah from Mecca. Al-Walīd, having

al-Malik ibn Marwān.

developed extensive supply networks to support his large-scale architectural programme across Syria, Egypt, Yemen, and the

He said: They applied to each column capital fifty mithqāls of gold.

80

Hijaz, would have been better equipped than his father to accomplish this, and al-Azraqī also implies that he imported

ʿAbd al-Malik thus raised the walls of the Meccan sanctuary

marble slabs and mosaics for the Masjid al-Haram. But there

and added to its decoration. The arrival of marble columns in

could be a simpler explanation: the columns dispatched by

Mecca is recorded a few years later:

al-Walīd may not have been the ones obtained from Justinian.

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Having reached its initial port of call in Palestine or Egypt, the Abū Muḥammad Isḥāq ibn Aḥmad told us, Abū al-Walīd told

original shipment may simply have been re-routed to another

us, my grandfather said:

destination. Evidence about the Gethsemane columns may help

Then al-Walīd ibn ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Marwān built the

to clarify the issue.

Masjid al-Haram. He built and decorated mosques. He

Two churches were associated with Gethsemane in the

demolished ʿAbd al-Malik’s work and rebuilt it to the

early Islamic period: the Church of the Agony and the Tomb

highest standard. He was the first to transport marble

of Mary. While the former was set in a cave, the latter was

columns there. He made it [the Masjid al-Haram] with a

a large building and in an allusive miracle story, Gregory of

single arcade of marble columns and teak ceilings, and

Tours (d. ca. 594) implies that it had enormous columns.83 It

gilded the column capitals in sheets of the finest brass

may have been looted or destroyed during the Sasanian sack of

(al-shabah min al-ṣufr). He covered the inside of the

Jerusalem in 614, but if so, it had been rebuilt by the Umayyad

81

mosque with marble, and the spandrels with mosaics.

82

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period since Muʿāwiya prayed there after receiving the oath

chapter 3  •  The Politics of Buildings

83

p  figure 43 Green and red marble columns, Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem, 72/691–92. Said Nuseibeh, 2006.

of allegiance in 661. This church appears to have remained a

porches (Figure 43).86 Could the columns of Gethsemane

shared site of Christian-Muslim pilgrimage for most of its later

have been intended for this monument rather than for

history. Adomnán (d. 704) describes it as a round church with

distant Mecca? If so, the Dome of the Rock might have been

four altars and an underground crypt housing the tomb. It

the destination of Justinian II’s shipment although logistical

had lost its roof by the time Bernard the Monk saw it around

obstacles would still have remained. When Justinian I (r. 527–65)

870. In 569/1173, after it had been rebuilt by the Crusaders,

built the massive Nea Church in Jerusalem, Procopius reported:

ʿAlī al-Harawī saw ‘sixteen columns, eight red and eight green’

‘the site itself, being inland very far from the sea and walled

under the dome and ‘six imposing columns’ at each of the

about on all sides by quite steep hills, … made it impossible for

four gates. It is likely, if only for practical reasons, that any

those who were preparing the foundations to bring columns

available earlier columns were used to rebuild the lower and

from outside.’87 The same difficulty may have been encountered

upper church. Al-Harawī seems to have seen such architectural

in the following century, although Roman builders had

vestiges scattered about as he remarked: ‘there are here many

succeeded in bringing marble monoliths into the city for their

wondrous columns and other building remains.’ In sum,

projects and the Umayyads reportedly brought columns from

in the late seventh century, the Church of Gethsemane was a

Antioch to Damascus.88 In the absence of more solid evidence,

building on two levels with a centralised design and remarkable

the trajectories of these different columns remain unclear.

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84

85

columns, some of which may have been made of red and green marble. The Dome of the Rock was built in 72/691–92 by ʿAbd al-

At any rate, the Gethsemane episode shows that Justinian II had successfully intervened to protect a church in the Islamic empire around 692. When al-Walīd decided to destroy the

Malik on Temple Mount, just across the Kidron Valley from

Damascene church a decade later, this event was still a

Gethsemane. It contains rare red and green columns with white

recent memory among Umayyad ruling élites, and a potential

spots and specks, both within the building and in its entrance

precedent for the protagonists involved in the new crisis.

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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Justinian II and the Mosque of Damascus

concealed from your father, it is a stain on you. I am

According to later Arabic sources, Justinian II also became

sending you what you requested’.

involved in the aftermath of the 705 crisis. The story first

As he [al-Walīd] wished to draw up a response, men of

emerges in the ninth century with Ibn Qutayba and Ibn al-Faqīh

judgement convened with him in the mosque enclosure to

and occurs also in Syrian historiographical works, notably by Ibn

deliberate. Al-Farazdaq joined them, saying: ‘What is on

ʿAsākir and Ibn Kathīr. Ibn ʿAsākir’s version, reported on the

people’s minds? I see them assembled in circles’. He was

authority of an early source, Ibn al-Muʿallā, is the most complete:

told: ‘The cause is such and such’.

89

He said: ‘I will give him an answer from the Book of God, Tammām said, Abū Bakr Yaḥyā ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn al-Ḥārith

Blessed and Exalted be He. God, Exalted be He, said: ‘And

told me, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān—the correct name is ʿAbd al-Raḥīm

We made Solomon to understand it, and unto each gave

—ibn ʿUmar al-Māzinī said, Ibn al-Muʿallā said, Hammām

We judgement and knowledge’ [Q. 21:79].91

ibn Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Bāqī al-Qurashī told me, my father told me, Marwān ibn ʿAbd al-Malik ibn ʿAbd Allāh

Justinian reprimands the young caliph for diverging from his

ibn ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Marwān told me:

father’s policy, while at the same time acceding to his demand.

Having decided to build the Mosque of Damascus, al-Walīd

The form of the statement seems paradoxical, with the

ibn ʿAbd al-Malik required numerous craftsmen. He wrote

emperor arguing that if ʿAbd al-Malik knew that the destruction

to the Tyrant [the Byzantine Emperor]: ‘Send me two

was the right course of action, he wrongly abstained from it,

hundred craftsmen from among the Rūm [Romans]:

while belittling al-Walīd for understanding what his father did

I wish to build a mosque like no one has ever built before

not. The versions of Ibn al-Faqīh and Ibn Kathīr more logically

or ever will. If you do not proceed, you shall be overtaken

assert that if ʿAbd al-Malik was in the right, then al-Walīd

by armies, and I shall destroy the churches in my land,

was in the wrong, and vice-versa.92 In either case, the gist of

including the Church of Jerusalem, the Church of Edessa,

the statement is that ʿAbd al-Malik had chosen to safeguard

and other monuments (āthār) of the Rūm’.

churches (with Gethsemane as a possible reference point)

90

and to refrain from attacking core territories of the Byzantine The story relates a political escalation: al-Walīd, having presumably destroyed the Damascene church, requires

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Justinian II to dispatch two hundred skilled craftsmen lest

Empire. Justinian is therefore prompting al-Walīd to follow his father’s example while, crucially, also giving in to his demand. The passage continues with a portrayal of the caliph’s

he (al-Walīd) should multiply church demolitions in his

embarrassment. Al-Farazdaq’s literary genius allowed him

lands, targeting the ‘Church of Jerusalem’ (probably the

to turn the tables on Justinian, both verbally and morally, by

Holy Sepulchre) and the ‘Church of Edessa’ (the famed great

citing the Qurʾanic verse about Solomon and the shearing of

cathedral of that city), and launch his armies against the

the sheep. The latent narrative flavour of the text raises the

Byzantine Empire. The anecdote continues:

possibility that it is a later, implicit gloss on al-Farazdaq’s poem and its calque of Q. 21:78–79 (vv. 21–23). The imprint

The Tyrant wished to steer him away from its

of this ‘scripting’ is apparent in Justinian’s response, which

construction and to reduce his determination, so

conveniently paraphrases the Qurʾan but lacks clarity and

he wrote back: ‘By God, if your father was made to

picks an unspecified subject (referred to as ‘it’) as the target of

understand it and refrained from it, it is a stain on him;

the emperor’s ire. Yet the anecdote also captures the political

while if you were made to understand it and it was

dynamics of the moment like no other.

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chapter 3  •  The Politics of Buildings

85

While the degree of verbal aggression attributed to al-Walīd might seem far-fetched, it is entirely consistent with the tone

(ca. 59–100/679–718), a figure we have already encountered on

of the three poems. When Jarīr (v. 24) and al-Nābigha (v. 10)

military campaign in Anatolia around 702–4, and as governor of

mock Justinian II, they leave untold the crux that links him,

Egypt in 705–9. He is named in several papyri from Aphrodito

the destruction of the church, and the Anatolian campaign.

that communicate requests for labour and materials for the

Ibn ʿAsākir’s story provides a plausible rationale for the

Mosque of Damascus (and the ‘Mosque of Jerusalem’).98 In a

intervening political sequence, which took place around 706‒7.

literary anecdote about his dismissal from the governorship in

The text implies that after the destruction of the church,

709, ʿAbd Allāh also joins Yaḥyā ibn Ḥanẓala, a person identified

al-Walīd blatantly provoked Justinian by requiring craftsmen

in three of the Aphrodito Papyri as the supervisor of building

for the very mosque that would replace it, backing this

works of the governor’s palace in that city, for a promenade in

offensive request with threats that more churches would be

Giza near Fustat.99 ʿAbd Allāh belonged to the inner circle of the

razed, including major ones if necessary. Christian chronicles

ruling élite that shaped these events, and it is credible that if

precisely assert that the caliph destroyed several buildings in

an exchange with Justinian II occurred, his son and grandson

Damascus at the beginning of his reign—no further exactions

would have known about it.

are mentioned after that, which suggests that they stopped.

93

In the text, even Justinian’s alleged response spells out

In the tenth century, al-Masʿūdī also stated that al-Walīd had

a plausible diplomatic manoeuvre in which he grudgingly

taken ‘wondrous columns’ from the Church of Mary at Antioch

concedes to al-Walīd’s core demand, the dispatch of craftsmen,

(then a frontier city in the Umayyad Empire) for the Mosque

while seeking to steer him away from aggressive policies by

of Damascus.94

recalling ʿAbd al-Malik’s precedent.100 Whether or not the

The Byzantine Empire itself, al-Walīd claims in the letter,

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grandson of al-Walīd’s half-brother ʿAbd Allāh ibn ʿAbd al-Malik

emperor really accused al-Walīd in this way, the bold gesture

might also come under attack. Again, this resonates with the

of destroying the church must have prompted the perception,

political context: after making a first incursion in 86/2 January–

among some subjects, of a young and rash ruler. In this

22 December 705, Maslama fully launched his campaign

context, al-Farazdaq’s poem would have provided al-Walīd

into Anatolia and the Caucasus from 87/23 December 705–12

with verbal and moral ammunition, if primarily for Arab

December 706 according to Muslim sources, and about a year

Muslim consumption. His verses are echoed by al-Nābigha’s

later, in 1019 AG/October 707–September 708, according to

‘measured, sure’ caliph (v. 2), an image contravening the

Christian ones.95 In an anecdote attributed to Ṣafwān ibn Ṣāliḥ

impression of haste that events may have elicited.

(Damascene, ca. 167–238/783–853), soldiers on these campaigns

Seen from the perspective of Ibn ʿAsākir’s text, the

were required to carry back from the field ‘one qafīz of mosaics

destruction of the church triggered an escalating string

and a square cubit of marble’ for work at Damascus, thereby

of demands that may have served as the pretext for a full-

linking the war effort with the construction of the mosque.

blown attack on Anatolia and, eventually, Constantinople.

96

Ibn ʿAsākir’s narrative betrays a subtle understanding of the

The account does not explain why Justinian only got involved

political climate and developments of the 700s, even though

after the original event, rather than trying to pre-empt it.

its presentation may have been reframed in the course of oral

The destruction of the church may simply have happened

transmission and written composition. As noted above, the

too quickly for correspondence to travel back and forth to

anecdote was recorded on the authority of Ibn al-Muʿallā, the

Constantinople—thereby adding to perceptions of al-Walīd’s

author of the earliest known treatise on the construction of

impulsiveness, and leaving Justinian II to enter the fray one

the mosque. Its originator, Marwān ibn ʿAbd al-Malik, was a

step too late to set the pace.

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The Byzantine Mosaicists at Medina

agreement are worthy of notice: Ibn Zabāla states that Justinian

A third, better known episode recorded in the sources arguably

sent al-Walīd ten to twenty craftsmen with ‘loads of mosaic

may be related to this context of fraught Umayyad-Byzantine

cubes’ and ‘80,000 dinars as a subvention for you’105 This

relations. Its earliest version was given by Ibn Zabāla (d. after

resonates with the system of forced labour evidenced by the

199/814), the early historian of Medina, as cited by al-Samhūdī

Aphrodito Papyri; in other words, with the habitual procedure

(d. 911/1506):

whereby Umayyad administrators obtained craftsmen, materials, and money from their own provinces. The story presents a plausible form for the articulation of such requests.

They report:

Figures detailing expenses in building projects are inherently

Al-Walīd ibn ʿAbd al-Malik wrote to the King of the Rūm: ‘We wish to build the great mosque of our Prophet; aid us

unreliable, but they may be briefly considered for comparison.

to do so with workers and mosaic cubes’.

As already mentioned, in the 680s, Justinian II received an

They said:

annual tribute of 365,000 gold coins—more than four times

And he sent him loads of mosaic cubes and some twenty-

what he would have paid for the Medinan mosque two decades

odd workmen—but some say ten workmen, adding ‘I have

later.106 ʿAbd al-Malik additionally had to provide one horse and

sent to you ten who are equal to a hundred and 80,000

one slave per day and the whole ‘package’ was maintained over

dinars as a subvention for you.

not one, but some seven years, making the total sum vastly

101

larger than Justinian’s 80,000 gold coins. At the Mosque of The veracity of the anecdote is, once again, open to question.

stones, would alone have cost a comparable 70,000 dinars and

Prophet’s Mosque in Medina, since their craft was not native to

the two green columns in the transept, 1,500 dinars.107

the Hijaz; but they could have come from an Umayyad province

Ibn ʿAsākir, the source of the above information on the vine,

such as Syria or Egypt. Nonetheless, Hamilton Gibb argued for

also cites a total expenditure for the mosque of four hundred

its authenticity based on the early date of the source, a position

coffers of 14,000 dinars and two coffers of 28,000 dinars,

subsequently criticised by Marguerite Van Berchem.

102

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Damascus, the famous marble vine frieze inlaid with precious

Mosaicists had to be imported for the rebuilding of the

Why,

which adds up to 5,656,000 dinars (presumably above and

she asked, would the Byzantine emperor have acceded to such a

beyond forced labour and other forms of taxation). This sum

request in war time? Why, indeed, would the request have even

is about equal to the revenue of Basra for the year 670, given

been made in such a context? For Van Berchem, these questions

by al-Balādhurī as 60,000,000 dirhams (hence some 5,000,000

made the whole episode inherently implausible, whereas Gibb

to 6,000,000 dinars). According to the same source, 4,000,000

assumed that ‘a state of official war did not necessarily involve

dirhams (between 333,000 and 400,000 dinars) of that Basran

the suspension of all commercial or courtesy relations’.

103

He

income, hence about seven percent, were sent to the caliph in

cited, to support this point, a story according to which al-Walīd

Damascus, while the bulk of the money was reserved for the

stored 20,000 dinars’ worth of pepper at Fustat that he intended

essential function of military pay.108

to present to the Byzantine Emperor.104 Diplomatic niceties are an unlikely reason for Justinian to

These figures, drawn from unrelated sources (the Medinan Ibn Zabāla, the Iraqi al-Balādhurī, and the Syrian Ibn ʿAsākir),

have dispatched mosaicists to work on the Prophet’s Mosque,

imply consistent orders of magnitude. They suggest, for instance,

a core sanctuary of the new faith, given the destruction of the

that in order to build the Mosque of Damascus, al-Walīd had to

Damascene church and the degree of aggression expressed by

commit, over a period of ten years, the equivalent of his share

al-Walīd’s court poets towards him. The terms of the purported

of the revenue of a city the size of Basra. The multiplication

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chapter 3  •  The Politics of Buildings

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p  figure 44 Detail of upper tier, west courtyard arcade, Great Mosque of Damascus. Said Nuseibeh, 2006.

of these projects would indeed have drained public coffers,

have been a pig, the obvious choice if the intention was to

as asserted by several sources, but would still have been within

offend Muslims; second, and more importantly, the stones were

reach. What is more, successful military expansion towards the

probably reused from a Christian building within the temenos

west, north and east brought in a steady flow of booty.

and they contain a range of other signs also drawn in red, such

Al-Walīd’s stated demands on Justinian thus appear realistic.

as geometrical patterns and the Greek capital letter alpha.110

If he did make them, they would have been perceived as acts of

The animal sketch was drawn above one such occurrence of

extortion backed up by his political ascendancy. The reaction of

a letter and its hue is slightly lighter. In other words, these

the craftsmen dispatched to Medina, as recorded by Ibn Zabāla,

images may predate Islam, and their relevance to the Umayyad

may be read in this light:

period is uncertain. In either case, different sources converge to assert that

When these [Byzantine] craftsmen were working at the

Justinian II was coerced into contributing craftsmen, materials

mosque, they would be left alone on site, so one of them

and money to at least three Umayyad building projects: the

said: ‘I will urinate on the tomb of their prophet’. He got

Masjid al-Haram in Mecca (or possibly the Dome of the Rock)

into position just as some of his companions were trying

in 692 to save the Church of Gethsemane, the Prophet’s Mosque

to dissuade him. At the moment he was about to start,

in Medina around 707–9, and the Great Mosque of Damascus

he was lifted up and thrown down on his head, his brain

around 706 to prevent the destruction of further churches and

smashed. Some of these Christians converted to Islam

a military onslaught against Anatolia (which was nevertheless

as a result. One of the workers drew on the apex of five

launched that year or the following one). There are strong

arches on the qibla side of the courtyard façade the image

reasons for accepting the gist of these accounts as authentic.

of a pig. ʿUmar ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz discovered him, so he was

From Justinian’s perspective, the outcome of this policy was

beheaded. Some of the craftsmen who made the mosaics

reasonably successful in the 690s, but much less so in the 700s.

said: ‘We made it according to the images of the trees of paradise and its palaces’.109

The Banū Manṣūr Between the Umayyads and Heraclians The sources do not record comparable dealings with the

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Supernatural elements aside, the account echoes the

Umayyads under Leontius (r. 695–98) and Tiberius III

numerous cases of desertion reported in the Aphrodito Papyri.

(r. 698–705) while Justinian was in exile, or after his death in

There is bound to have been resentment among at least some

711.111 The apparent correlation of these events with Justinian’s

of the Christian craftsmen brought to this remote locale in

reigns may be the result not only of his policy decisions, but

the Arabian desert to rebuild, and to the highest standard,

also of Christian-Muslim dynamics at the Umayyad court.

a mosque associated with a holy figure, whose followers

In the Gethsemane episode of the 690s, Theophanes notes

challenged their empire and core aspects of their faith. In

that two prominent Christians from Greater Syria had taken

such conditions, small acts of defiance within the limits of

the initiative to seek his support. One of them, the ‘co-leader

their power may indeed have been attempted.

of the Palestinian Christians, Patricius, surnamed Klausus’,

At the Mosque of Damascus, the voussoirs of the upper

seems otherwise unknown.112 But the other, Sergius son of

west arcade contain an animal with two horns and four legs,

Manṣūr, was a key figure in the early Umayyad state, known to

sketchily outlined in red (Figure 44). One might be tempted

Muslim writers as the secretary Sarjūn ibn Manṣūr and mostly

to attribute it to an episode like the one mentioned above,

remembered today as the father (or grandfather) of Saint John

but this interpretation is not obvious. First, the animal cannot

of Damascus (d. between 749 and 753), a towering figure of

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eastern Christian theology. Their family, the Banū Manṣūr

Arabic sources to have been in charge of core offices of the

(‘sons of Manṣūr’), held a central position in Damascene

administration, such as tax collection and the army payroll,

politics across the century that straddled Byzantine and Muslim

between the reigns of Muʿāwiya and ʿAbd al-Malik.118 The

rule. Several of its members were prominent figures in Syrian

Gethsemane episode implies that in the 690s, he had open

Christian society well into the ninth century, although not

communication channels with Justinian II, just as his father

within the administration.113 The church within the temenos

had with Heraclius half a century earlier. Sarjūn’s demise is

was destroyed at the juncture between these two phases of

placed by most writers in the reign of ʿAbd al-Malik: depending

their history.

on the source, it was either caused by his death or by a shift to

The earliest reference to the Banū Manṣūr is related to the Muslim conquest of Damascus. Arabic sources state that the

A son of Sarjūn worked for some time in the service of the

surrender of the city, or at least half of it, in the 630s, was

Umayyads although, as with Manṣūr, his trace in the textual

negotiated by a Christian variously called a ‘monk’ (rāhib),

record is faint. He has generally been identified with John

‘bishop’ (usquf), ‘patriarch’ (biṭrīq), or ‘governor’ (ṣāḥib). Only

of Damascus who started his career in the Umayyad fiscal

two sources identify him by name. According to the Syriac

administration before embracing priesthood and moving to

Chronicle of 1234, he was ‘ the deacon John, son of Sarjūn,

Jerusalem at an unknown date; a recent study has suggested

himself a Damascene, who was loved and well-known among

that he may in fact have been Sarjūn’s grandson.120 Since Sarjūn

the Arabs’: this first name could reflect a confusion with his

was still active under ʿAbd al-Malik, there is every reason to

descendant John Damascene. Eutychius, writing around

think that, under either scenario, John was either employed at

935–40, names him as Manṣūr (and in later manuscripts of

the court or gravitated around Umayyad ruling circles when the

his work, ‘son of Sarjūn’), an official in charge of tax collection

crisis surrounding the church erupted.

114

115

since the reign of Maurice (582–602). After the Sasanian

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Arabic as the language of administration (the dīwān).119

One can begin to perceive the situation in which the Banū

conquest of the city in 612 and its recapture by the Byzantines

Manṣūr were caught at that time. Their prosperous family had

in 630, he became embroiled in a conflict with Heraclius over

overseen the collection of taxes from Christians on behalf of

tax handed to the Persians which, a few years later, prompted

Muslims, hence was naturally exposed to the hostility of their

him to open the gates of Damascus to the Arabs when they

coreligionists. The resentment can only have been exacerbated

reached its walls.

under al-Walīd, when some of the tax revenue was used to

116

Eutychius is a relatively late source, and while plausible, his account cannot be corroborated by other evidence. His mention of Manṣūr arguably may have been a later reworking of an

build his new mosque of Damascus and several churches were destroyed. The trajectory of Yazīd ibn Tamīm, the best-attested

early text that simply mentioned a Christian who negotiated

protagonist in the crisis surrounding the church, reflects

surrender of the city.117 The profile of the Banū Manṣūr emerges

the same dynamic in reverse. He had been a member of the

with greater clarity after the rise of the Umayyads. Sarjūn ibn

Umayyad fiscal administration (kharāj), an office hitherto

Manṣūr, presumably the son of the Manṣūr above, is said in

run by the Banū Manṣūr; but as the stand-off in the temenos

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chapter 3  •  The Politics of Buildings

89

reached its climax, he was reportedly among the first to hit

If the demise of the Banū Manṣūr did occur during those

the stones of the church, presumably against the will of his

years, their days in positions of power matched those of the

hierarchical superior, be it Sarjūn, his son, or his grandson.

Heraclian dynasty (610–711), of which Justinian II was the last

The sources do not reveal which course of action the Banū

ruler. This Heraclian connection may have contributed to

Manṣūr embraced during the crisis. One might logically ask

their relevance for the Umayyads—and its loss, to their eroded

whether, having witnessed the Gethsemane episode a decade

stature. At any rate, given John’s family background, his writings

earlier, they sought to prevent further exactions by persuading

offer an opposite perspective on the same socio-historical

Justinian II, as self-appointed protector of Chalcedonian

context as the poems—that of Christians increasingly demoted

Christians in the Muslim Empire, to accede to new requests

in the social fabric of the Umayyad Empire. They carry the

from al-Walīd. If they did, the chain reaction that ensued

reverse echo of hostile Muslim discourse towards their lot.

was a disaster of existential proportions for Byzantium.

The earliest of John’s three treatises in defence of icons must

This could explain why, in the four anathema brought

have been composed in the late 720s. Its articulate content

against John of Damascus at the council of Hiereia in 754,

suggests a prior period of intellectual maturation that brings

he is called out not just as a ‘worshipper of icons’, but also

their inception close to al-Walīd’s reign.124 In its opening pages,

a ‘conspirator against the Empire’.121 The perception of his

he writes:

treacherousness would only have been reinforced if his ancestor Manṣūr had indeed opened the gates of Damascus

I see the Church ... battered as by the surging sea

to the Arabs in the 630s.

overwhelming it with wave upon wave, tossed about

The role of the Banū Manṣūr in the rising hostilities with Justinian II is bound to remain speculative. One can be more

Compelled to speak by a fear that cannot be borne, I have

certain that they came out of the crisis weakened. They had

come forward, not putting the majesty of kings before

failed, despite their status, to avert this major setback for the

the truth, but hearing David, the divine ancestor, say,

Christians, and their authority over Muslim administrators

‘I spoke before kings and was not ashamed’, goaded more

like Yazīd ibn Tamīm could hardly recover from the blow.

and more to speak. For the word of a king exercises

Their position at the Umayyad court must have become all

terror over his subjects … It seems to me a calamity,

but untenable.

and more than a calamity, that the Church, adorned

John of Damascus was ordained by John V, the patriarch of

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and troubled by the grievous assault of wicked spirits…

with such privileges, and arrayed with traditions received

Jerusalem from 706 to 735, who revived a see that had been

from above by the most godly men, should return to

vacant since the death of Sophronius around 638. The accession

the poor elements, afraid where no fear was, and as if

of John V, the destruction of the church, the return to the

it did not know the true God, be suspicious of the snare

throne of Justinian II, and his heated diplomatic exchange

of idolatry and therefore decline in the smallest degree

with al-Walīd all occurred between late 705 and 707. This

from perfection.125

conjunction of events may have triggered John’s departure for Jerusalem.122 Indeed, textual references to the Banū Manṣūr

The ‘snare of idolatry’ echoes the three poets, particularly

at the Umayyad court are frequent until ʿAbd al-Malik’s reign,

al-Farazdaq: ‘Together at worship, faces turned two ways:

rare under al-Walīd, and virtually non-existent thereafter.123 The

toward God, or toward the Idol’ (v. 19). While one could link

violence of the Damascene crisis as it transpires from the three

the trials evoked by John and the ‘kings’ that caused them with

poems reinforces the likelihood of this chronology.

Constantinople, it seems more plausible that they reflected

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the situation in Syria.126 Likewise, the ‘surging sea’ battering

The poems suggest that these events were related to the

the Church ‘wave after wave’ resonates with the Damascene

military campaign launched against Byzantium during those

crisis, but also with a pattern of growing vexations against his

years, culminating in Maslama’s siege of Constantinople in

community during the same period.

99/717–18. Here again, the internal and external threads of the story connect, since the Aphrodito Papyri and other documents

pppp

record Umayyad shipbuilding efforts that fed into the same siege.127 On this occasion, the forced labour system showed

By delving into the logistics and politics of al-Walīd’s building

its limitations to the Umayyads as defecting Egyptian sailors

programme, a complex picture emerges. For the projects to

provided Leo III with vital intelligence that led to their defeat.128

be realised, a stable administration was required, alongside

Thus, Christians under Umayyad rule, especially those from

firm control of at least some provinces. Supervisors, at least

élite circles, had to negotiate their allegiances in a delicate

three of whom can be confidently identified, assessed and

balancing act. The fate of the Banū Manṣūr epitomises their

pre-empted needs on the ground for materials and for a

predicament in this tense period, and their vain attempts to

vast number of craftsmen: from unqualified labourers to

shape a favourable course of events.

accomplished mosaicists and marble workers. Provincial governors transmitted their requests to district authorities

Ultimately, the local Christian community was silenced in the destruction of the church, as literally expressed by al-Nābigha:

who negotiated their implementation with the population of their towns, villages, and monasteries. Through a system rooted in pre-Islamic fiscal organisation, labour was extracted

14. Dissonance foreign, with pious acts; like swallows chattering at dawn.

as a form of tax. The levy was coercive, so it must have been

15. Now prayer of Holy Truth holds sway;

largely resented, but was also salaried and hence not entirely

discerned is God’s authentic Word.

exploitative. After meeting the core priority of military pay, war booty and money sent from the provincial capitals generated additional streams of revenue. With these funds, the caliph and

was appropriated by Muslims, who articulated it for posterity.

his circle could finance additional labour and materials.

The accounts in the Syriac and Greek chronicles were

Three episodes related respectively by a Byzantine, a

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From that point onwards the narration of the destruction

discordant, but too laconic to leave a comparable imprint on

Damascene, and a Medinan source about Jerusalem, Damascus,

collective memories. However, a major Christian voice—that

and Medina, corroborate each other by involving Justinian II

of John Damascene—did arise from this context in defiance of

in Umayyad building projects. The three poems invite a

hardening Muslim attitudes. His familial acquaintance with the

reappraisal of their claims, which turn out to corroborate and

Umayyad élite in Damascus makes his perspective an apposite

echo one another. Justinian probably did contribute to these

counterpoint to Muslim declarations about the Damascene

projects, but not as an underhand continuation of diplomacy

church. The mosque, even before its completion, had come

in times of war, as assumed by Gibb: if he sent craftsmen and

to crystallise the shifting political and societal dynamics. The

materials to the Umayyads, it was instead under the threat of

destruction of the church thus emerges as an event of historical

war and of exactions against Christian buildings under their

proportions—a lasting trauma for some, and a victory to

control. The destruction of the church and construction of the

remember for others.

mosque were acts of power politics that resonated far beyond the site itself.

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chapter 3  •  The Politics of Buildings

91

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4 Silenced and Imagined Pasts: The Church in the Fabric of the Umayyad Mosque

T

he act of demolition by Al-Walīd was an imposition of raw power at the heart of Damascus. By openly defying Christian beliefs about the sacred

aura of their church, the young caliph was making a bold statement about Muslim religious and political authority. The Umayyads had to contend with the legacy of their violent takeover, for the church remained present in the minds of Christian, Muslim, and Jewish Damascenes who had witnessed its last moments. This is why it emerges as the core concern of the three Umayyad panegyrics composed on this occasion,

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above and beyond the mosque. The new building also contained within its fabric multiple echoes of its predecessor. The most monumental part of the mosque—the transept— was probably conceived in a dialectical relationship with the p  The chamber on columns in the courtyard known as Bayt al-Māl. Part of the structure may have been erected in the Christian era. Detail of a photograph by Francis Bedford, 1862. Royal Collection Trust, RCIN 2700961. © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021.

church. The vanished building has also left some material remains, but these are not always what they seem. One corner tower, despite being generally acknowledged as Roman, might have been an early Byzantine foundation. The copper revetment on several gates of the mosque, which is late Mamluk to early Ottoman, probably carries distant echoes of

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

93

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p  figure 45 Transept of the Umayyad Mosque. Alain George, 2010.

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the church.1 The relics of John the Baptist that are housed in a

Jarīr may provide a first inkling of their motivations when he

shrine within the prayer hall stand as the most obvious of these

declares in his poem about al-Walīd: ‘The Lord of the Throne

Christian remains, yet further probing reveals issues about

ordained that the Caliph be you; kingship is given; ascend to

the moment of their ‘invention’ (in the theological sense of

the pulpits, secure!’ (v. 16). There is no reason to link the verse

the term). And while the Bayt al-Māl—the famous treasury on

specifically to this inscription, but it reveals a contrasting

columns in the mosque courtyard—has been widely assumed

Umayyad perspective on the same themes. Kingship does not

to be an Umayyad or early Abbasid structure, it is in fact

belong eternally to Christ but is bestowed by God on the caliph,

the product of a layered history that may have begun in the

often addressed in panegyrics as khalīfat Allāh—literally, the

Christian era. I will now consider each of these elements in

Deputy of God.4 Blessings from the Throne of God, a symbol

turn before turning to their broader implications.

of absolute divine power for both Christians and Muslims, descend upon al-Walīd. The Arabic mosaic inscription on the inner side of the wall echoed this theme through its citation of

Scattered Echoes of the Church in the Mosque

the Throne Verse (Q. 2:255), which stated: ‘Who is there that shall intercede with Him save by His leave?’ This was probably

The Transept

understood at the time as an allusion to the Prophet, whose

The hollowed-out imprint of the church was placed at the

intercession on Judgement Day had been asserted a few years

heart of the new mosque by the Umayyads when they stated

earlier in the inscriptions at the Dome of the Rock.5 With

in its monumental inscription: ‘The servant of God al-Walīd,

the destruction of the church, the claims of this new Islamic

commander of the faithful, ordered … the construction of this

paradigm to religious legitimacy had been staked with utmost

mosque and the destruction of the church which was in it.’

force. To the dispossessed Christians, the Greek inscription

2

The declaration was placed on the qibla side of the transept,

must now have sounded dissonant with historical reality.

the tall gable of which soared over the prayer hall and temenos

Without needing to be being altered, it was turning into a

(Figure 45). One could not have chosen a more central position.

negative memorial of the church.

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Standing to the left of this inscription, the east door of the

The newly inaugurated transept must itself have evoked

Roman triple gate had become, since the days of Muʿāwiya, a

the demolished building for contemporaries. As discussed

reserved entrance for the ruler (Figure 36). Nevertheless, when

in Chapter 2, the church had been either a basilica or, more

the church was destroyed, the Greek biblical inscription above

probably, a conversion of the cella, the inner sanctum of

that triple gate was kept intact (Figure 34). Its text is divided

the Roman temple. In either case, it shared its architectonic

between Psalm 88:8 on the west door (‘You have taken from me

basis—a rectangular base crowned by a pediment—with the

my closest friends and have made me repulsive to them’), Psalm

transept. This is the way the central nave of early basilicas was

145:13 on the central door (Septuagint version, ‘Your kingdom,

built—as, for instance, at the relatively well-preserved church of

O Christ, is an everlasting kingdom, and Your dominion endures

Kharab Shams in northern Syria (Figure 46).6 The resemblance

through all generations’) and a fragmentary sentence echoing

would have been greater if the church was a converted cella

the Apocalypse on the Throne of God on the east door (‘The

because these structures projected their mass vertically, as with

eagle has adorned His throne; His reign…’).3 Since Greek was a

the Temple of Vienne in France (Figure 47), whereas basilicas

widespread language of liturgy and learning among Damascene

did so horizontally. Indeed, the foregoing study has shown

Christians, the Umayyads must have been aware of its contents.

that the cella had a footprint and elevation close to those of the

But they still chose to preserve it in this prominent position.

mosque transept, hence similar volumes.7

chapter 4  •  Silenced and Imagined Pasts

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

95

p  figure 46 (left) Church of Kharab Shams. Syria, fourth to fifth century. Jane Chick/Manar al-Athar, 2006.

p  figure 47 (below left) Cella at the Temple of Vienne, France, first century BCE–first century CE, as it stood around 1816. The walls, which were added in the sixth century to convert it into a church, have been removed since. From Laborde, Les monumens de la France, vol. 1, pl. XL.

Prophet’s Mosque in Medina, the arcade facing the mihrab was marked out by a shallow inner dome, a decorated wooden ceiling, and probably a floor raised about a metre above the rest of the prayer hall.9 In other eighth- and ninth-century mosques from al-Andalus to Iraq, the corresponding arcade was sometimes marked out by its decoration and accentuated width. But in all cases, the elevation barely rose above the rest of the prayer hall.10 At Damascus, by contrast, the transept, when measured to the tip of the gable, is nearly twice as tall as the courtyard façade below, without counting the dome.11 A conscious decision was thus made to mark the structure out by its height. But if its form echoed that of the church, it was only to depart from its model. The transept stood on a north–south axis, rather than the east–west one of the church, thereby reorienting the direction of prayer. It was extensively clad with exterior mosaics, which barely occurred in even the most lavish churches, and its interior was devoid of any cult images. Whereas the church had been relatively exiguous, the transept opened onto an immense covered hall and the whole temenos, now turned into a vast expanse for the congregation. Under either scenario—cella or basilica—contemporaries

The Greek and Arabic inscriptions, with their contrasting views

must have recognised a parallel between the old and new

of salvation history, affirmed the substance of the contrast.

structures. Jarīr explicitly compares them in his poem, making

Al-Farazdaq ascribes a corrective value to al-Walīd’s act:

the mosque overshadow the church through its height. Reading his verses literally:

18. You divided Christians in their churches from those who pray before dawn, and after dusk. 19. Together at worship, faces turned

11. Al-Walīd the Caliph, son of a Caliph, Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

has raised (rafaʿa) a building over the greatest building! 12. Your building now dwarfs (ʿalā) the one you had

two ways: toward God, or toward the Idol. 20. How should clappers struck by Acolytes of the Cross intrude on Readers who do not sleep?

honoured; Yours are the brimming valley-basins.

8

Thus, Umayyad-era declarations situate the mosque and its Al-Nābigha similarly emphasizes the upward reach of the

architecture in a relationship of physical and dialectic rivalry

transept by likening its dome to a beacon ‘illumining Mount

with the church. This is not the way most modern scholars have

Lebanon and the coastal Sīf’ (v. 21). The height of the Damascene

interpreted it, arguing instead that it was modelled on the Great

transept, far from being incidental, is a distinguishing feature

Palace of Constantinople and its famed vestibule, the Chalke

in early mosque architecture. In al-Walīd’s rebuilding of the

(‘Bronze Gate’), which was rebuilt after 532 by Justinian I as

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

an elevated structure with a cupola.12 This hypothesis poses a

would have resulted in a blatant imbalance.16 A description

formal difficulty as the Chalke has long been lost and is known

cited by Ibn Kathīr and Ibn Shākir confirms this:

only through very limited evidence: a sixth-century description by Procopius, two late antique images more or less closely

Al-Walīd built the northern minaret called Minaret of the

inspired by it, and recent archaeological excavations that may

Bride (miʾdhanat al-ʿarūs). As regards the east and west

have uncovered part of its foundations. The triangulation of

minarets, they already existed long before this, for there

this evidence to reach an understanding of the original palace

was a tower (ṣawmaʿa) of great height in each corner

is far from obvious.

of this temple built by the Greeks for [astronomical]

13

More importantly, the web of citations contained by the

observation. The two northern towers collapsed, whilst

Umayyad Mosque and its transept lead back to the recently

the two on the qibla side remain to this day. Part of the

destroyed church. It is primarily with this structure that the

eastern one burned after 740 [1339–40] so it was destroyed

new building had to contend, as the three poems emphatically

and rebuilt with money from the Christians, since they

show. The mosque embodied a bold affirmation of religious

had been accused of triggering the fire.17

legitimacy and orthopraxy on al-Walīd’s part, and it is unlikely that its model was a palace, however important, in distant

The Roman temple would have had four corner towers, of

Constantinople. If a further horizon for implicit comparisons

which only those on the south side remained, an assumption

existed, it may have opened onto the major churches of

shared by later Syrian historians such as Abū al-Tuqā al-Badrī

the Syrian region, such as the Holy Sepulchre and Nea in

(d. 894/1489), who writes: ‘It is said that both northern corners

Jerusalem. Even so, the Damascene church remained at the

[of the mosque] used to have similar towers [to the ones on

forefront of Umayyad concerns.

the south side] and that al-Walīd destroyed them’.18 He goes on

14

to assert that al-Walīd reused their stones to build two domed The Corner Towers

chambers in the courtyard—erroneously since, as we shall

In Umayyad times, the prayer hall was flanked by two corner

see, only one such chamber existed in early Islam. He also

towers rising to its east and west. Ibn Jubayr gave their earliest

notes about the corner towers: ‘These were built by the Greeks

relatively detailed description in 581/1184:

(al-yūnān) as towers (al-ṣawāmiʿ) for the striking of clappers

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

(al-nawāqīs) and astronomical observation (al-raṣd)’.19 His The mosque has three minarets. One on the west side

understanding of their function brings together astronomy,

is like a lofty tower with large apartments and spacious

which suggests the ancient Greeks (often called al-yūnān),

zawiyas [Sufi lodges], all leading to large doors and lived in

with the clappers of Christian cult (nawāqīs, sg. nāqūs). In

by strangers of pious mode of life… The second minaret is

al-Badrī’s mind, their origin may have been ancient or Christian:

on the west (sic) side after the same style, and the third is

the case is unclear and as a fifteenth-century Damascene,

on the north at the gate known as Bāb al-Nāṭifiyyin.

he simply may not have made much of this distinction.

15

The passage by Ibn Kathīr and Ibn Shākir cited above must The mosque, at that date, thus had three towers: the Islamic-

have been drawn from a common source. According to Ibn

era north minaret (which will be discussed in Chapter 5); and

Shākir, this was Ibn ʿAsākir, which is possible even though

two towers with rooms inhabited by ascetics. The text locates

it does not appear in the printed version of his History of

both towers on the west side, probably as a result of a slip since

Damascus. In the early tenth century, al-Masʿūdī wrote about

having two towers in the northwest and southwest corners

the Roman temple: ‘Its towers (ṣawāmiʿ) did not change: they

chapter 4  •  Silenced and Imagined Pasts

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

97

p  figure 48 (left) Southwest tower with west temenos below. Ross Burns/Manar al-Athar, 2007. p  figure 49 (below left) Transition between temenos and cubical elevation; detail of masonry of the southwest tower. Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 2009.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

p  figure 50 (below right) View of the southwest tower, looking down towards the south temenos with the prayer hall on the left. Lucien Golvin, before 1971.

98

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

p  figure 51 (left) Southwest tower with south temenos below and Umayyad masonry on the right. Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 2010.

p  figure 52 (above) Inscription from southwest cubical tower. From Herzfeld, ‘Damascus’, fig. 2.

currency in modern scholarship.23 However, they do not fit squarely with the evidence. The upper levels of masonry in the northeast and northwest corners show no remains of a previous elevation above the level of the temenos walls, which can be identified through their engaged pilasters. The southeast corner has been rebuilt in several phases from the medieval period onwards. The only tower that may preserve substantial pre-Islamic remains is therefore the one in the southwest corner. In its cubical elevation, the ashlars have the same height as in the temenos wall below, but they are also much less wide, and the masons inserted narrow slabs between some of them (Figures 48 and 49). The masonry bonds with the temenos are irregular and their respective wall surfaces were worked with distinct methods: rough hammering applied with a point chisel at a near right angle for the temenos ashlars, as opposed to bullnosed flattening with a shallow angle for the tower above.24 are the minarets (al-manāʾir) for the call to prayer to this day’.20

The ashlar hue is also whiter in the temenos and yellower in

While he did not specify their number, his use of the plural

the tower. A photograph taken from above by Lucien Golvin,

form (rather than the dual) could imply four towers; it is also

at a time when the structure was not roofed, reveals stonework

possible he was simply not concerned with such details and

made up of two walls, each with a regular exterior facing, an

only wanted to convey their age.

irregular interior, and a rubble fill between them (Figure 50).

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

A tradition about Judgement Day attributed to the Prophet

This technique generates a thickness close to that of the Roman

in the compilation by Muslim ibn al-Ḥajjāj (d. 261/875) has

masonry, with the vertical slabs serving to stabilise the rubble

been taken to imply the existence of the southeast tower in the

between stones. Given this array of differences, the tower is

ninth century: ‘At that time, God will send Christ, the son of

unlikely to be coeval with the Roman temenos.

Mary, and he will descend on the White Minaret in the east of

The hypothesis of two distinct phases, Roman for the base

Damascus between two yellow draperies.’ However the Arabic

and later for the cubical elevation, tallies with the observations

phrasing points to the east gate of Damascus rather than of

of Ernst Herzfeld, who collected half-a-dozen Greek masons’

21

the mosque, as confirmed by al-Rabaʿī and most later writers,

marks in the lower levels of the southwest tower, below the

who explicitly identify it with Bāb Sharqī, along the city walls.

height of the temenos, but none in the cubical elevation.25 The

The ideas implied in the other texts—that there were originally

temenos configuration which it implies, without towers, was

four corner towers, and that these were Roman—have gained

common for Roman sacred enclosures in Greater Syria.26

22

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

99

On its south side, the tower abuts an Umayyad section of the qibla wall. The masonry of these two parts is disjointed and features different ashlar sizes and cuts (Figure 51). A commission

stood alone on that wall by the ninth century, and this would explain the reference to a single Christian tower by Ibn al-Faqīh. While the material record suggests that the southwest tower

by al-Walīd is therefore unlikely, and an earlier or later date

is not Roman, Umayyad, or post-Fatimid, textual sources point

should be considered. Herzfeld recorded an Arabic inscription

to a pre-Islamic date. The weight of the evidence leans towards a

carved inside the tower, but above the level of the temenos wall,

Christian foundation between the fourth and seventh centuries

that reads: ‘God forgive the qadi Salmān ibn ʿAlī’ (Figure 52).

for this tower and its (now lost) counterpart in the southeast.32

He ascribed it to the Saljuq period on palaeographical grounds,

The texts by Ibn al-Fayḍ and Ibn al-Jubayr could also imply a

but it is in fact slightly earlier: the person named can be

continuity of use between the Christian and Islamic periods,

identified through a notice by Ibn ʿAsākir as the Damascene

with chambers in the tower used as dwellings for pious ascetics

qadi Salmān ibn ʿAlī ibn al-Nuʿmān, known as Abū al-Ḥasan

in both the early eighth and late twelfth centuries. The gap of

(fl. 409/1019). The structure must therefore have been standing

nearly half a millennium between these two occurrences makes

by the early Fatimid period, before the fire of 1069.

it uncertain whether the practice continued uninterrupted,

27

28

There is no reason to assert a priori that the tower was built by the Abbasids, given their general lack of interest in this monument. Indeed, writers of this period assumed that it

or enjoyed a resurgence as the mosque became more deeply embedded in the Muslim urban fabric. While the existence of a northeast and a northwest tower

was pre-Islamic, which they would not have done had it been

can be neither proved nor disproved, there would have been

recent. The assumption was clearly stated by al-Masʿūdī in the

little incentive to build them in this period. The southeast and

tenth century, and it seems to have been shared by writers of

southwest towers, by contrast, would have served the same

the ninth century. Ibn al-Fayḍ’s account of the destruction of

rationale as the Greek inscription on the triple gate of their

the church was noted in Chapter 2 for its historical value. It

wall: to shift the emphasis of the temenos away from the east,

mentions al-Walīd’s altercation with a Christian ascetic who

where the Roman processional route led to the monumental

dwelt in a shelter (ṣawmaʿa) in the tower (manāra) known as

Bāb Jayrūn, and towards the south, where Christians now

‘the Clocks’ (al-sāʿāt). As shown by Finbarr Barry Flood, the

entered the church. They were even better suited to the

public gate on the west side of the prayer hall was called ‘Gate

mosque given their alignment with the qibla wall and the way

of the Clocks’ in early Islam. Ibn al-Fayḍ, a Damascene, thus

they framed the transept. The reason for keeping them may

seems to be referring to the southwest tower and assuming its

therefore have been primarily practical.

29

existence before Islam. Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Ibn al-Faqīh, in turn, wrote: ‘The minaret (miʾdhana) in

The Mosque Doors

Damascus used to be an observation post (nāṭūr) for the

The wooden doors that lead into the temenos were repaired and

Romans (al-Rūm) in the Church of John the Baptist (yaḥyā).’

replaced time and again through the centuries, but they may

This statement echoes the later one by al-Badrī cited above, but

nevertheless carry a distant echo of the Christian sanctuary.

it asserts a Christian origin more clearly. Al-Dhahabī, echoed

Six doors on the west, east, and north sides are sheathed with

by several other writers, noted that the minaret (manāra)

nailed, embossed brass plaques, five of which have dates

collapsed in the earthquake of 233/847.31 The structure is

between 808/1405 and 820/1417, under the Mamluk Sultanate;

again not identified, but the damage suffered by the qibla wall

the sixth has cladding from 933/1527, in the early Ottoman

could point to one of its corner towers on the south side of the

period. A seventh Mamluk door at the centre of Bāb Jayrūn was

mosque. In other words, the southwest tower may already have

lost some time after the fire of 1893, but can be documented

30

100

the umayyad mosque of damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

Detail of Figure 3 (below) Mosque doors, second illuminated page from the Sanaa Qur’an.

p figure 53 (right) Bāb Jayrūn, north side entrance. Mamluk, reign of Muʾayyad Shaykh, 820/1417. Luitgard Mols, 2006.

through photographs.33 The leaves of Bāb al-Barīd have also undergone repairs in the last century: Makīn al-Muʾayyad notes that, in 1958, ‘after removing the damaged wood and copper, it was returned to its former state by putting back ornaments, decorations, and copper segments’.34 The statement is ambiguous as to whether any original materials were discarded in the process. In either case, the general composition was not altered. On each of the seven doors, the leaves are subdivided vertically into rectangular panels: three nearly square panels at Bāb Jayrūn (Figure 53) and Bāb al-Farādīs; two vertical ones separated by a narrow horizontal band in the central door at Bāb al-Barīd; and five panels in the two side doors at Bāb al-Barīd. The overall design is cruciform, like the square grids within each panel, which serve to frame decorative motifs— primarily rosettes, inscriptions and Mamluk blazons.35 This typology is unusual for the period, when metal doors typically had either concentric designs or grids of much smaller squares. But it closely echoes the mosque doors represented in an Umayyad Qurʾan discovered in Sanaa (detail

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

of Figure 3 below), which have one large central door and a

chapter 4 • silenced and imagined pasts

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

101

smaller side door to the left (only a small fragment remains

Inventing the Relics of the Baptist

of the third door, to the right). Both the real and depicted 36

doors are laid out in three rectangular panels subdivided into

Absence of the Relics in Christian Sources

rectangles that form a cross. The central panel of the main door

As shown in Chapter 2, the church within the temenos was

in the manuscript also has four gold dots that may, again, hark

barely noticed in Christian sources before the Islamic era.

back to a cruciform pattern.

After appearing in the Greek common source about the

Thus, as shown by Luitgard Mols, the Damascus doors are,

conversion of the Temple of Jupiter, it re-emerges with the

in all likelihood, based on Byzantine prototypes that once

mention by Adomnán (d. 704) of a Church of the Baptist in

adorned the temenos, either directly or through intermediary

Damascus, based on a testimony from around 670. The silence

replicas crafted after previous disasters. A similar practice is

is remarkable, given that the Damascene church was later

attested at the Great Mosque of Sanaa, which was also rebuilt

believed to have housed relics of John the Baptist’s head:

under al-Walīd and retains a Christian-era door on its qibla

these alone would have been worthy of notice in the Christian

wall. The idea also resonates with an assertion made by

landscape of late antiquity. The testimony of the Piacenza

al-Masʿūdī about Bāb Jayrūn:

pilgrim (ca. 570 CE) is significant in this respect. After a section

37

on Galilee, he writes about Damascus: This great edifice used to be the palace of that king [Jayrūn ibn Saʿd ibn ʿĀd]. It had wondrous copper doors (abwāb

There is there a monastery at the second milestone, where

min al-nuḥās), some of which remain in their original

Saint Paul was converted in the street which is called

place while others have become gates of the mosque.38

Straight, where many miracles are wrought. Thence we came to Heliopolis, and thence to Emesa, where there is

He thus assumed that the gates of the mosque once belonged to Iram of the Pillars, the fabled palace of the Qurʾan (Q. 89:6–8).

the head of John the Baptist in a glass jar, and we with our own eyes saw it within the jar and adored it.40

The anecdote reflects later dynamics of sanctification of the

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

site but for our present purposes, it shows that the antiquity

Like Sophronius a few decades after him,41 the Piacenza

of these doors was already recognised in the tenth century.39

pilgrim connects Damascus with the conversion of Saint

Older door sheathings may indeed have been preserved by the

Paul. Given his interest in the relics of the Baptist at Emesa

Umayyads because of their age and craftsmanship, or indeed

(Homs), it is improbable that he would have omitted their

as another victory symbol. In either case, their preservation

veneration at Damascus, had it occurred there, since he stood

was facilitated by the fact that their cross symbol, being made

mere paces away from the temenos on Straight Street. The

up of a square repeat pattern, is easily elided by the mind’s eye.

remaining evidence of their cult in the Christian era consists

The Sanaa Qurʾan illumination, which shows a polychromatic

of a statement by René Dussaud to the effect that the relics were

treatment of the door surfaces (detail of Figure 3, page 101),

seen at both Damascus and Emesa shortly before the Islamic

opens the possibility that these doors were painted.

conquest (duplication was, after all, not uncommon in the realm of relics).42 However, no reference to their presence at Damascus is to be found in Dussaud’s source, a lengthy Latin study of the three inventions of the relics published at Antwerp in 1707. The passage he cites relates a first invention of the relics at Jerusalem in the fourth century, when they were stolen

102

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

by a potter from Emesa. The second invention occurred in

Muslim Traditions About the Relics

that city around the mid-fifth century, and the third in Comana

As with the location of the church, Arabic Muslim sources

(Cappadocia) in the ninth century, before their translation to

contain more material than Christian ones about the relics

Constantinople. Damascus only features in these passages in

of Yaḥyā ibn Zakariyyā (‘John, son of Zechariah’, the Baptist’s

43

narratives of the Muslim conquest, not as the locale of the relics.

44

Other sources confirm their association, in the Syrian

name in the Qurʾan). The most extensive collection of traditions on the subject occurs in the Faḍāʾil al-Shām wa Dimashq

area, with Emesa and the region of Jerusalem, rather than

(‘Virtues of Syria and Damascus’) by al-Rabaʿī (Damascene,

Damascus. In the 720s, the English pilgrim Willibald, later

d. 444/1053). These are worth citing in full to convey the form

bishop of Eichstätt in Bavaria, saw at Emesa ‘a large church

in which they were compiled at that time. They are numbered

which Saint Helena built in honour of Saint John the Baptist,

here for ease of reference, with key names in bold type:

and his head, which is now in Syria, was there for a long time’.45 Days later, he spent a week in Damascus ‘where,’ he says, ‘Saint

1. Tammām ibn Muḥammad told us, Aḥmad ibn ʿAbd

Ananias rests’, which could imply a cult of the latter’s relics.

Allāh al-Qurashī narrated to us, my father told us, al-

Willibald also visited a church that commemorated Paul’s

Qāsim ibn ʿUthmān told us, al-Walīd [ibn Muslim] said:

conversion two miles outside the city but, like the Piacenza

I asked al-Awzāʿī: ‘Abū ʿAmr, where were you told the

pilgrim a century and a half earlier, he makes no mention of

head of Yaḥyā, son of Zakariyyā was?’ He said: ‘We

the Baptist in relation to Damascus. His statement about the

were told it was at the fourth column, which has a

translation of the relics from Emesa is echoed in Theophanes

basket capital’.

46

Confessor’s entry for the year 760–61 CE (6252 AM): 2. Tammām told us, Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad The head of the holy John the forerunner and Baptist was

ibn al-Muʿallā narrated to us, al-Qāsim ibn ʿUthmān

moved from the monastery of Spelaion [near Jerusalem]

narrated to us:

to his famous church in Emesa. A way down to it was

I heard al-Walīd ibn Muslim say, as a man asked

built, whereat the faithful have adored it until the present

him, ‘Abū al-ʿAbbās, where were you told the head of

for both its physical and spiritual sweet smell.

Yaḥyā, son of Zakariyyā, peace be upon him, was?’:

47

‘I was told there’, pointing towards the fourth column

A relic of the skull of the Baptist was thus moved from the

from the east pillar, with a basket capital.

region of Jerusalem to Emesa, and an underground crypt built Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

for it, in the mid-eighth century. These stories bear yet further

3. Tammām told us, Aḥmad narrated to us, Abū Shabīb

complexities: in an early version of the first invention, the relics

Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad ibn al-Muʿallā narrated to us,

were moved to Constantinople. According to the Chronicon

Aḥmad ibn al-Muʿallā narrated to us, Ism[ā]ʿīl ibn Abān

Paschale, relics of his body were ‘scattered around’ under Julian

told me, Zayd ibn Wāqid narrated to me:

(r. 360–63) from Sebaste in Palestine, where Willibald does,

I saw the head of Yaḥyā, son of Zakariyyā, peace be

however, report their presence. Perplexing though these

upon them. It was taken out of the pavement tile

itineraries may be, there is no indication that they were ever

(balāṭa)49 on the east qibla side, which is near the

related to Damascus. It is telling, in this respect, that even

column of Bajīla. It was placed under the column of

later Christian chronicles that mention the church within the

the Sakāsik.

48

temenos do not link it to these relics.

chapter 4  •  Silenced and Imagined Pasts

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

103

4. Tammām told us, Abū Bakr al-Birāmī narrated to us,

7. Abū al-Ḥusayn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb ibn Jaʿfar told us,

Abū Shabīb narrated to us, Muḥammad ibn H[ā]rūn

Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd Allāh al-Rabaʿī narrated to us,

narrated to us, ʿAbbās ibn al-Walīd narrated to us, I heard

Muḥammad ibn Yūsuf narrated to us, Aḥmad ibn

Saʿīd ibn al-Musayyab say:

Ibrāhīm al-Ghassānī narrated to us, my father narrated

When Bukht entered Damascus victorious and went

to me from his father, Zayd ibn Wāqid said:

up the stairs to enter the church which is now the

Al-Walīd had put me in charge of the workers for the

congregational mosque, he saw the blood of Yaḥyā,

construction of the great mosque of Damascus. We

son of Zakariyyā, peace be upon them, spout and

found a cave and informed al-Walīd about it. When

boil. He said: 75,000 were killed upon it before the

it was night he went down with a candle in his hand.

blood stood still.

It was a pretty church of three cubits [by three] in which was a coffer. He opened the coffer: in it was a

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

5. Abū Mushir said: The head of Yaḥyā, son of Zakariyyā, peace be upon

Zakariyyā. Al-Walīd ordered that it be returned to its

them, is under the column with a basket capital in

place and said: ‘Make the column above it distinct

the east of the mosque known as the column of the

from the others’. So they made a column with a

Sakāsik.

basket capital.50

6. Abū Qāsim ʿAbd al-Raḥm[ā]n ibn ʿUmar al-Imām told us,

104

basket, and in the basket the head of Yaḥyā, son of

Thus, by the eleventh century, the fourth column to the

Ibn Ḥabīb narrated to us, Abū ʿAbd al-Malik narrated to

east of a central pillar of the mosque had a basket capital, a

us, Mahdī ibn Jaʿfar narrated to us, al-Walīd ibn Muslim

type commonly attested in this period, notably at Jerusalem

narrated to us, Zayd ibn Wāqid narrated to us:

(Figure 54) and in Egypt.51 It was believed to mark the site

I saw the head of Yaḥyā, son of Zakariyyā, peace

of the Baptist’s relics (Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4). In its present form, the

be upon them, when they decided to build the

Shrine of the Baptist in the prayer hall (Figure 55) dates to the

mosque of Damascus. It was taken out from below

early twentieth century. It stands between the third and fourth

a pillar of the dome. The skin and hair on his head

columns from the transept, a position that corresponds to the

had not altered.

one cited in al-Rabaʿī’s accounts. The traditions cited above

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

p  figure 54 (opposite left) Basket capital, Al-Ḥaram al-Sharīf, Jerusalem. Melanie Gibson, 2019.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

p  figure 55 (opposite right) The Shrine of the Baptist, current state. Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 2009.

p  figure 56 (above right) The Shrine of the Baptist in the nineteenth century, viewed from the east. Maison Bonfils, 1866. Badr El-Hage Collection. p  figure 57 (right) The Shrine of the Baptist in the nineteenth century, viewed from the west. Sulayman Hakim, ca. 1890. Badr El-Hage Collection.

chapter 4  •  Silenced and Imagined Pasts

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

105

p  figure 58 Shrine of John the Baptist, cenotaph. Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 2009.

inscribed in white lettering: ‘O Zakariyyā, we give thee glad tidings of a son, whose name [shall be] Yaḥyā’ [Q. 19:7].55

Thus the cenotaph, which Ibn Baṭṭūṭa mistook for that of Zakariyyā, perhaps because of the inscription, lay between two columns, as it still does today (Figure 58). Two centuries earlier, in 581/1184, Ibn Jubayr had remarked about the shrines in the mosque: The first of these is the Shrine of the Head of Yaḥyā, son

also converge to imply that, again in the eleventh century, the

of Zakariyyā, peace be upon them. This is buried in the

column with a basket capital was named after the Sakāsik, a

south aisle of the venerated mosque in front of the pillar

Yemeni tribe of Kinda that supported the Umayyads (Nos. 3, 5).

to the right of the Maqsura of the Companions—may God

Like the space in the prayer hall named after the Bajīla (No. 3),

hold them in His favour. Over it is a wooden coffin (tābūt

a tribe from the region of Mecca, it points to the appropriation

khashab) in the sense of width from the column. Above

by different Arab factions of specific parts of the prayer hall,

it is a lamp that seems to be of hollow crystal, and like

a space at the heart of Muslim religious and political life in

a large drinking vessel. It is not known whether it is the

Damascus.

glass of Iraq or Tyre, or some other ware.56

52

The current columns within the prayer hall date to the aftermath of the fire that ravaged the mosque in 1893. No traces of a basket capital are apparent in earlier photographs,

from the transept: Ibn Jubayr thus seems to have already seen

even though the third and fourth columns have distinctive

the cenotaph in its current position. He also noted a distinctive

vaulted capitals (Figures 56 and 57). With their slender white

lamp above it, presumably hanging from the arch.

shafts, which are straight rather than flared at the centre, and

The traditions cited by al-Rabaʿī do not imply the existence of

the cursive inscription around their neck, these appear to be

a cenotaph in the early eleventh century, as they describe a spot

modern. In 1807, Domingo Badía y Leblich (alias Ali Bey) noted

only distinguished by a basket capital. This seems consistent

that the shrine consisted of a ‘wooden maisonette with jalousie

with its absence from al-Muqaddasī’s tenth-century description

windows, mouldings and ornaments in gold, and arabesque

of the mosque, even though he observed such minute details

paintings’. In photographs of the 1860s to 1870s, it had been

as the ornament of the gates and the apex of the dome. Because

replaced by a domed structure built of stone, which the current

the mosque remained close to its Umayyad state in the first

shrine imitates.

half of the eleventh century, the basket capital may have been

53

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The Mihrab of the Companions is in front of the fifth column

In the fourteenth century, according to Ibn Baṭṭūṭa, a cenotaph could be seen here:

erected at the time of al-Walīd. Whether its associations with Yaḥyā ibn Zakariyyā stretch that far back in time is a more complicated matter.

In the centre of the mosque is the Tomb of Zakariyyā (upon him be peace), surmounted by a coffin (tābūt)

written transmission and as such do not yield a single well-

set breadthwise between two pillars and covered by

defined narrative. Three of the seven anecdotes deal with the

an embroidered (muʿlam fīhi) black silk cloth. This is

location of the relics. They all feature an authority pointing to

54

106

Al-Rabaʿī’s anecdotes were shaped by generations of oral and

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

a spot within the mosque: first al-Awzāʿī (d. 157/774) (No. 1),

Sabaeans for their prayers. Then it came into the hands of

the most prominent pro-Umayyad theologian; then from

the Greeks, who practised their religion there. Then came

the next generation, the no less seminal al-Walīd ibn Muslim

the Jews and pagan kings. Yaḥyā ibn Zakariyyā, peace be

(d. ca. 194–95/810–12) (No. 2); and finally, again a generation

upon him, was killed in that time, and his head was hung

later, the religious scholar Abū Mushir al-Ghassānī (d. 218/834)

on the gate of this mosque called Bāb Jayrūn. The head of

(No. 5). All three scholars were Damascene. The first two

Yaḥyā ibn Zakariyyā was hung, then the head of al-Ḥusayn

anecdotes follow the narration of Tammām ibn Muḥammad

ibn ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib, God’s prayers be on him.62

57

58

(330–414/942–1023), a prominent Hadith scholar and Qurʾan reciter from Damascus.59 The third (No. 5) does not have a transmission chain, although it was already known to Ibn

tenth century onwards with the head of the Baptist, which

al-Faqīh in the ninth century.60 The traditions are primarily

Herod or the Romans hung in the doorway after killing him.

intended to validate a local belief about the location of the

This tradition incidentally confirms that the relics of the Shiʿite

relics and its link to the basket capital. They suggest that by

imam al-Ḥusayn were already linked with the east temenos

the eleventh century, this belief had become broadly accepted

wall by that time. Three centuries later, Yāqūt al-Rūmī

in local circles, but also that it still needed affirmation and was

(ca. 574–626/1179–1229) also identified the ‘small mosque

not entirely self-evident.

which is behind Jayrūn’ as the site of Yaḥyā ibn Zakariyyā’s

According to a fourth anecdote cited by al-Rabaʿī (No. 4),

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Bāb Jayrūn was thus associated by some historians of the

murder.63 These sources present an alternate narrative linking

when the Babylonians conquered Damascus, the blood of

the head of the Baptist to the east wall of the mosque. It may

John the Baptist was found to be spouting and boiling, only to

have enjoyed a substantial diffusion, but only among non-

be quenched by 75,000 deaths—a graphic image that makes

Damascenes. Notionally, the two stories could have been

for powerful storytelling. The relics are thereby associated

conflated by identifying the earlier Bāb Jayrūn relics with

with Bukht(-Naṣṣār), the Bible’s Nebuchadnezzar, who

those discovered by al-Walīd, but this did not happen, and

lived centuries before the Baptist. This blatantly ahistorical

the two traditions seem to have remained parallel.

anecdote is also the only one among al-Rabaʿī’s seven with

Al-Rabaʿī gives three more traditions stating that al-Walīd

a non-Damascene originator: Ibn al-Musayyab (d. 94/713),

discovered the relics underground in what was to become the

who was a second-generation Muslim (tābiʿī) from Medina.

prayer hall (Nos. 3, 6, 7). All three are presented as having been

His transmissions reached Damascus through his students,

witnessed by Zayd ibn Wāqid (d. 138/756), a Damascene religious

especially al-Zuhrī, a Medinan who moved to the Umayyad

scholar.64 At least two of them (Nos. 6, 7) had entered into

capital under ʿAbd al-Malik.61

circulation by the ninth century, when they were cited by Ibn

The mention of ‘stairs to enter the church’ could imply

al-Faqīh.65 Their most significant implication is obvious, but has

that the scene is to be set on the monumental steps of Bāb

so far been barely remarked on. According to Muslim tradition,

Jayrūn. A related story was reported by a string of writers from

the relics were invented in Umayyad times; hitherto they had

the tenth century onwards. According to the earliest version,

been unknown. Christian sources—or rather their silence on

by al-Balkhī (d. 322/934):

this subject—tally with this assumption, especially by contrast with their many references to the prominently displayed

There [in Damascus] stands a mosque with no equal in

relics at Emesa. By taking the Arabic texts at face value, one

age or size throughout Islam. The wall and dome above

might conclude that a skull was found in Umayyad times in an

the mihrab, towards the maqsura, were built by the

underground chamber opposite the south temenos entrance.

chapter 4  •  Silenced and Imagined Pasts

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

107

This could have been a forgotten funerary vault, the contents

through one Muḥammad ibn Yūsuf to reach Ismāʿīl ibn Abān

of which became associated with the Baptist by Muslims.

(d. 263/877), who is cited by Ibn ʿAsākir as a teacher of Ibn

However, the whole story rather appears as a vivid and

al-Muʿallā and a transmitter from Abū Mushir; it ends with Zayd

inherently unverifiable literary device.

ibn Wāqid, the presumed eyewitness.68 The time lag between

One tradition (No. 6) asserts that the relics originally lay below the pillar of the dome and another (No. 3), under a tile

filled thanks to Ibn ʿAsākir’s version of the anecdote, which gives

(balāṭa) at the meeting place of the Bajīla ‘on the east qibla

Ismāʿīl’s source as Muḥammad ibn ʿĀʾidh al-Qurashī (b. 150/768,

side’. Both seem to indicate the eastern pillars of the transept,

d. ca. 232–34/846–49). Ibn ʿĀʾidh, in turn, would have received it

which lie on the north–south axis of the temenos (Ground plan,

from al-Walīd ibn Muslim, and he from Zayd ibn Wāqid.69

Figure 1). This would imply that the relics were found in front

Al-Walīd ibn Muslim thus emerges as the source of four

of the central gateway to the church but had to be displaced to

anecdotes about the relics in the Umayyad period. This

make way for pillar foundations. The most complete tradition

prominent figure of early Damascene religious scholarship,

(No. 7) states that al-Walīd ordered them to be returned to

reputed to have produced numerous written works, appears

their discovery spot and had it marked by the basket capital,

to have started life as a slave in the household of Maslama,

thereby suggesting that the relics were not moved. The story is

the famed half-brother of caliph al-Walīd who is lauded as a

related on the authority of Aḥmad ibn Ibrāhīm al-Ghassānī, his

military commander in al-Nābigha’s poem about the mosque

father Ibrāhīm ibn Hishām, and his grandfather Hishām ibn

(v. 6). He remained a client (mawlā) of the Umayyads after his

Yaḥyā, whose own father Yaḥyā ibn Yaḥyā served as governor

manumission.70 Al-Rabaʿī also cites him as the source of other

of Mosul and qadi of Damascus between the reigns of ʿUmar II

traditions exalting Damascus and its mosque. One of them

(99–101/717–20) and Hishām (105–25/724–43).

relates the discovery of an ancient inscription from the time

66

In the story about the destruction of the church, it was

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Ismāʿīl (ninth century) and Zayd (early eighth century) can be

of Solomon in the qibla wall, giving its full text. This wall,

al-Walīd who struck the first blow to the monument and

according to the same tradition, reflected the workmanship

overcame the hesitations of his workers—a narrative which,

of the Qurʾanic prophet Hūd, who was buried there.71 Another

as we have seen, seems to be echoed in his court poetry and

tradition asserts the identification of Damascus with a

may have a historical basis. In this account, the caliph is again

Qurʾanic term, al-tīn (the fig) in al-tīn wa’l-zaytūn (Q. 95:1).72

the main agent in the genesis of the mosque, for it is he, rather

Furthermore, he is the source of a Hadith according to which

than the workers, who goes down into the chamber, at night

the Prophet foresaw the impending greatness of Damascus;73

and with a candle for added atmosphere. There, he discovers a

and another in which he asserts that Jesus would descend on the

small decorated chapel (kanīsa laṭīfa), with the head in a coffer

‘white minaret in the east of Damascus’ on Judgement Day.74

(in Ibn ʿAsākir’s version, the latter is conveniently accompanied

Al-Walīd ibn Muslim was one amongst several Damascene scholars to circulate traditions of this type—the core material

by an identifying inscription). The tradition narrated by Tammām (No. 3), although concise,

from which Faḍāʾil traditions eventually took shape. They—and

includes key elements from most of the others: the testimony

the successive generations who relayed their stories—contributed

of Zayd, the discovery of the relics below ground and their

to establishing the sacred status of Damascus in the emerging

relocation under the column of the Sakāsik. Tammām’s source

landscape of Islam, just as its political power had waned with

is Muḥammad Abū Shabīb, a little-known son of Aḥmad ibn

the rise of the Abbasid Empire. The invention of the relics

al-Muʿallā (d. 286/900), the historian, qadi of Damascus and

should be viewed in this context, as part of a process of the

prominent Hadith transmitter. The transmission chain goes

sanctification of space through storytelling.75

67

108

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

p  figure 59 Bayt al-Māl, south side. Alain George, 2010.

The destruction of the church had a public resonance, having been carried out in broad daylight before numerous witnesses. Likewise, the configuration of the site, with the church on the right and first mosque on the left, had been visible to any Damascene until the reign of al-Walīd. The invention of the relics, by contrast, would have happened after dark and out of sight, with Zayd as its witness. In this, it echoes al-Walīd’s encounter with the legendary al-Khiḍr, which would have occurred at night, near the qibla, with the mosque expressly closed off to visitors.76 Both stories have in common their unverifiability, even by locals in Umayyad times. Similarly, the find spot of the relics under the dome was obliterated when massive foundation pillars were built for the Umayyad Mosque. These anecdotes were probably crafted in eighth-century Damascene circles with a narrative framework that facilitated their entry into circulation. By anchoring the mosque deeper in its Christian past, they bestowed on it a sacred aura that the church itself had lacked.

The Origins of the Bayt al-M l The Bayt al-Māl in Arabic Sources Of the three domed structures that now stand in the courtyard, only one existed in the first Islamic centuries: the raised octagonal chamber on columns near the northwest corner

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

(Figure 59). By the time of Ibn Jubayr’s visit in 581/1184, two other domes had been added in the centre and to the east, a

mosaic.’ 79 This was also the term used by sources in early Islam

configuration that continues to this day, even if the current

to describe similar structures at Fustat and elsewhere.80 This

central dome is a recent rebuilding.77 In modern Damascus,

suggests that it served as a treasury—the general meaning of

the older chamber to the northwest is known as the Dome of

bayt al-māl—whether for mosque endowments or some other

the Treasury (qubbat al-khazna, or simply al-khazne in Syro-

public fund, as assumed by some medieval writers.81 With the

Levantine dialect); some medieval sources call it the ‘Dome of

passing of time, it grew into a repository for discarded old

the Monies’ (qubbat al-māl) or ‘Dome of Aisha’ (qubbat ʿāʾisha).

manuscripts that began to attract the attention of European

But its earliest name is likely to have been Bayt al-Māl (lit.

scholars from the turn of the twentieth century.82

78

the ‘house of monies’). In the tenth century, al-Muqaddasī

No author appears to have discussed the origins of this

wrote: ‘On the right [if one faces the qibla], in the courtyard,

monument before the twelfth century. According to al-Badrī,

is a treasury (bayt māl) on eight columns, its walls inlaid with

the Bayt al-Māl dates to the days of al-Walīd and was built with

chapter 4  •  Silenced and Imagined Pasts

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

109

p  figure 60 The Bayt al-Māl, south side. K.A.C. Creswell, early twentieth century. Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, EA.CA.612. © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford.

Muḥammad ibn al-ʿAlāʾ also said: I stood on the dome as it was being built. Muḥammad ibn al-ʿAlāʾ is remembered as the maternal uncle of Ibn Ṣaʿṣaʿa. He reached the age of nearly a hundred.85

Al-Faḍl’s father Ṣāliḥ ibn ʿAlī ibn ʿAbd Allāh, the uncle of the second Abbasid caliph, al-Manṣūr (r. 136–58/754–75), had taken over Egypt from the Umayyads for the new dynasty. According to other sources cited by Ibn ʿAsākir, al-Faḍl (122–72/739–89) was governor of Damascus in 149–58/766–75.86 If this information is correct, he would have built the structure under al-Manṣūr (his first cousin) rather than al-Mahdī or Hārūn. The originator of the report, Muḥammad ibn al-ʿAlāʾ, was reportedly remembered by Abū Zurʿa as ‘an old man from among the people of the Mosque [of Damascus]’. He seems to have gained repute in the ninth century for having met the religious scholars al-Awzāʿī (d. 157/774), the slightly younger Saʿīd ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz (d. ca. 167/784), the storyteller (qāṣṣ) ʿUthmān ibn Abī al-ʿĀtika (d. ca. 149–55/766–72), and some of the last second-generation Muslims (tābiʿūn). He thus provided a living stones from the northeast and northwest temenos towers (which, as we have just seen, may or may not have existed).83

Both attributions for the Bayt al-Māl—to al-Walīd or to

This attribution is unusual in the Syrian historiographical

al-Faḍl, the latter under al-Manṣūr, al-Mahdī, or Hārūn—are

tradition. Al-Dhahabī (673–748/1274–1348) and Ibn Taghrī Birdī

credible in themselves, especially as these early Abbasid

(ca. 812–74/1409–70) assert that it was founded by the Abbasid

caliphs are known to have sponsored mosaic work at Mecca

governor of Damascus al-Faḍl ibn Ṣāliḥ ibn ʿAlī, under the

and Medina.88 Ibn ʿAsākir’s version carries more weight than

caliph al-Mahdī (r. 158–69/775–85), while Ibn Kathīr dates it to

the others because it alone has a cited source and fits within

around 160/777, under the same caliph. Ibn ʿAsākir provides

a detailed understanding of al-Faḍl’s career. Based on these

the most detailed account of its origins on the authority of Abū

sources, one would be led to accept the foundation of the Bayt

al-Ḥusayn Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd Allāh al-Rāzī (d. 347/959):

al-Māl by al-Faḍl. Yet while they set the question as a binary

84

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connection with these figures of authority.87

between an Abbasid or Umayyad origin, the monument itself Abū al-Ḥusayn al-Rāzī said, Abū al-Ḥasan Aḥmad ibn Ḥumayd ibn Saʿīd ibn Abī al-ʿAjāʾiz al-Kindī told me, Abū ʿAlī al-Ḥasan

110

suggests a more layered history. The walls of the Bayt al-Māl are currently concealed by

ibn Ḥalqum (?) told us, Muḥammad ibn al-ʿAlāʾ said:

its mosaics, most of which are twentieth-century creations

I knew al-Faḍl ibn Ṣāliḥ al-Hāshimī when he was governor

based on limited original fragments. These were revealed

of Damascus. It is he who made doors for the mosque

underneath plaster in 1928–29, together with the mosaics of

and the dome in the courtyard known as the Dome of the

the west courtyard arcade.89 The building remained in this

Treasury (qubbat al-māl).

state until at least 1962–63, as attested in a photograph of the

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

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p  figure 61 Bayt al-Māl, northeast side. Michel Ecochard, 1941. Michel Ecochard Archive, courtesy of Aga Khan Documentation Center, MIT Libraries (AKDC@MIT).

soundings undertaken at that time (Figure 26). The masonry

from a similar lintel or architrave. The capital on the northeast

and historical mosaics can thus be documented through

corner is smaller than the others, which is consistent with

photographs taken in that interval (Figures 60 and 61). The

their being spolia. The inner dome below the chamber has its

architraves, with their downward-facing ovoid globes, vegetal

apex at the same level as the top of the second stone course:

motifs, and three recessed steps, echo the outer frame of the

its structure is concealed by plaster, making it impossible to

cella gate at the Temple of Bel in Palmyra (Figure 62), as well

date. In photographs from the early twentieth century, the

as other Roman monuments. They were probably cut to size

original mosaic panels cover the upper decorative border of the

90

91

chapter 4  •  Silenced and Imagined Pasts

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

111

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p  figure 62 (above) Cella entrance gate and detail of carved mouldings of lintel (reconstruction), Temple of Bel, Palmyra, 32 CE. From Seyrig, Amy, and Will, Le temple de Bêl, vol. 2, pls. 44, 45. p  figure 63 (left) Bayt al-Māl, dome and architraves viewed from the interior. Ross Burns/Manar al-Athar, 2009.

architrave fragments. This border appears to have been cropped

of which involve carved Roman stonework except in column

vertically from a larger frieze, and it has no counterpart on the

capitals. This raises the possibility that the base of the building

inner sides of the architraves (Figure 63). It seems unlikely that

is older than its walls.

work was put into this feature only to conceal it in the same phase of building. The architraves are also recessed in relation

The Bayt al-Māl and the Typology of the Baptistery

to the capitals and have small gaps between them. The standard

Once envisaged without its upper storey, the Bayt al-Māl takes

of work is inferior to that in Umayyad parts of the mosque, none

on an intriguing resonance with another famous structure from

112

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

p figure 64 (right) Octagon of the Lateran Baptistery, Rome, 432–40 CE. Péter Tamás Nagy, 2019.

p figure 65 (below right) Sistine phase of the Lateran baptistery (reconstruction). Rome, 432–40 CE. From Giovenale, Il Battistero Lateranense, 105.

the late antique Mediterranean: the Lateran Baptistery in Rome. The core as rebuilt by Pope Sixtus III (432–40) consists of eight porphyry columns joined by Roman architraves (Figure 64).92 The structure was originally crowned by a drum and dome and surrounded by a barrel-vaulted ambulatory (Figure 65). It housed a large basin and fountain at its centre, a structure now lost but recorded in a sixteenth-century engraving by Antonio Lafreri.93 Sixtus III set the Lateran Baptistery in an octagonal roofed building, with floor mosaics in the ambulatory. At Damascus, between the Bayt al-Māl and north arcade, the 1962–63 soundings also revealed some 30 sq. m of white floor mosaics with tesserae measuring about 2.5 sq. cm each (Figure 66). They had been laid 48 to 57 cm below ground, which corresponds to floor levels in the Roman to Umayyad periods.94 No similar mosaics were found in the other sounding points across the mosque courtyard, which revealed instead a pavement of large marble slabs for both the Roman and Umayyad periods. There were roughly cut stones around the mosaics, arranged to form a flat surface, which either marked a threshold on the same floor or, as proposed by ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Rīḥāwī, a building base.95 In either case, the floor mosaics and pavement slabs most likely belonged to a Christian building. Given the difference in ground level just observed, the Bayt al-Māl columns with their capitals would have risen about 5.10 m above this mosaic floor, as opposed to 4.56 m today. The height of the Lateran columns is 6.10 m, counting the base, shaft, and capital. The Bayt al-Māl has a maximum span of 7.37 m whereas it is 10–11 m at the Lateran Baptistery.96 Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Even though the latter structure is larger, they are both of a comparable scale. The columns of the Bayt al-Māl have a larger diameter than those of the Umayyad arcades, yet are not as tall. A sounding carried out by Michel Ecochard in 1941 showed that they reach 2.30 m below the modern ground level, which corresponds to about a third of their height, and that most of them do not have bases.97 In the only photograph of this sounding that I could source (Figure 61), the area at the centre is underexposed, but the image does confirm that the columns continue uninterrupted below ground. At about 1.80 m below

chapter 4 • silenced and imagined pasts

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

113

p  figure 66 Floor mosaics near the Bayt al-Māl, excavated in 1962–63. From Anon., Maʿraḍ fusayfisāʾ al-jāmiʿ al-umawī, Dimashq 1964.

the white mosaic floor level, they were at the right depth to

used to make the structure more elegant and better matched

provide a piscine for full immersion, especially if steps led

with its surroundings. Furthermore the building, being at an

into the water.

uneven distance from the north and west arcades (Ground

98

The baptistery hypothesis fits the broader context of

of the mosque—and of other early Islamic architecture.100 In

of Phoenicia Libanensis, hence a city in which baptism was

the Christian era, this position was adjacent to the church:

performed. As already noted, Straight Street, a few dozen

depending on the orientation of this building towards east or

metres south of the temenos, was associated with the baptism

west, the Bayt al-Māl columns would have stood just north

of Paul. This may have provided the rationale for adding a

of either the main entrance or the apse. Both locations are

baptistery to this church, and perhaps for naming it after the

attested in early Christian architecture.101 Thus, the Bayt al-

Baptist, since his relics were not worshipped here before Islam.

Māl columns, architraves, and floor mosaics are likely to have

99

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plan, Figure 1), is at odds with the symmetrical organisation

Damascus. This was, first of all, the metropolitan bishopric

By contrast, the rationale for the size and placement of

originally formed the core of a baptistery—a hypothesis already

the columns becomes difficult to explain if the Bayt al-Māl

raised in passing by Richard Pococke in 1745, Charles William

was created in the eighth century. The Umayyad Mosque had

Wilson in 1880 and Geoffrey King in 1976.102

dozens of standard columns to carry its arcades and roofs. These must have been widely available and could have been

114

What was the date of the original structure? The type represented by the Lateran Baptistery—a font with a canopy

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:48:30.

set at the centre of an octagonal, square, round, or hexagonal

is itself a memorial’.105 The remark echoes the words of Abū

building—was shared by baptisteries across the Christian

ʿUbayd ibn Sallām (d. 224/839) about the Damascene church:

world. However the sub-type with eight freestanding columns

‘They showed me its location there, and the side it was on

surrounded by an ambulatory is primarily attested in France

before its destruction’.106 The memory of the vanished building

and Italy, notably at Aix-en-Provence and Aquileia in the

was still alive at that time, decades after its destruction, but

fifth century (in the latter case, with six columns) and

as a negative imprint, just as the Bristol plinth has come to

Nocera Superiore in the sixth century.

103

In the eastern

Mediterranean, a range of fifth- to sixth-century baptisteries

While this interest eventually faded, the Damascene church

from Constantinople through Syria to Egypt had a font

continues to cast a shadow over the fabric of the mosque to

surrounded by an octagonal structure, but the latter was

this day. The most impressive part of al-Walīd’s building, the

formed by niches alternating with arches. This other derivation

transept, probably mirrored and sought to outdo it. On its

of the type may have spread from the Byzantine capital to the

exterior wall, framing the entrance used by the rulers, a Greek

provinces in this period.

104

The structure at Damascus may

biblical inscription served as another reminder of its hollowed

thus have been a work of the late fourth or early fifth century,

presence. As one stepped inside, the mosaic inscription on

when the temple was converted into the church, and before

the qibla wall came into focus, affirming for posterity the

the spread of the newer Constantinopolitan model. But a later

obliteration of the church, in a voice echoed by those of

date, up until the early seventh century, remains possible.

Umayyad panegyrists. The metal sheathing of the church gates

In the early eighth century, al-Walīd must have decided to

was probably preserved, either to symbolise defeat or because

keep these eight columns standing when all the surrounding

they were seen as remains of a mythical past. As Umayyad-

buildings were destroyed. He or his Abbasid successors then

leaning circles ‘invented’ the relics of the Baptist in the

turned it into a domed chamber. But why keep the structure and

following decades, they were, again, harnessing the Roman

thereby disturb the symmetrical order of the whole precinct?

and Christian past of the site to augment its aura.

Reasons of economy are unconvincing in a building on which

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symbolise the fall of its statue.

The corner towers, on the other hand, must have been

such immense resources were lavished. The columns of the Bayt

retained for practical reasons, given their perfect fit with the

al-Māl could arguably have served as a memorial of the 705 crisis

qibla wall of the mosque. One of the most distinctive structures

and the defeat of Christians, thereby completing the message of

of the mosque, the eight columns of the Bayt al-Māl, are another

the mosaic inscription, transept, and gates. One cannot rule out

probable remainder of the Christian era. They may have been

that a micro-event involving al-Walīd happened there, or that

kept as a forlorn victory symbol or for another, long-forgotten

this spot had a small piece of sacred history attached to it; but if

reason. Long after its rubble was cleared, the church thus

so, any memory of these associations was eventually lost.

continued to stand in a relationship of conflict and erasure, but also appropriation and continuity, with al-Walīd’s mosque.

pppp

On 7 June 2020, the statue of Edward Colston, an English philanthropist who had made his fortune in the slave trade, was toppled and thrown into Bristol harbour by protesters. In the same week, The Economist magazine reported: ‘The plinth already attracts crowds; the absence of a memorial

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115

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5 A Vast Expanse of Splendour: Towards a Reconstruction of the Umayyad Mosque

B

etween 706 and 715, Damascus must have been teeming with craftsmen and workers from the four corners of the Umayyad Empire. Thirteen centuries

later, the monument that they built still stands at the heart of the modern city. This impression of permanence is illusory however, for the current mosque, like a living organism, never ceased to evolve from the moment of its foundation. In order to gain an understanding of the Umayyad state of the building, it is necessary to retrace our steps as far back

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across history as the evidence will allow in order to identify extant original sections, themselves more or less heavily repaired, in conjunction with the testimonies of texts and early photographs. While certainty about every aspect of the Umayyad building lies beyond our grasp, careful consideration makes it possible to reach hypotheses about most of its p  The transept and east side of the prayer hall. Max Van Berchem, after 1893. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem.

features. I will now analyse the structure of the mosque— its masonry, supports, and elevation—before turning to its ornament—a vast expanse of marble, mosaic, woodwork, and inlaid precious stones, with accents of gold throughout.

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

117

Structure

width as the large arch underneath, so that each column or

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pillar in the lower tier is aligned with a pillar above (Figure 69). Courtyard Arcades

These contrasting alternations of vertical elements animate

Standing at one end of the courtyard with the prayer hall to the

the scheme visually, while placing the load on the pillars in the

left, one faces the west arcade, the best-preserved part of the

upper tier. The construction is not strictly precise: for instance

Umayyad Mosque (Figure 67). Its masonry is original, as can be

in Figure 69, the pillar above the spandrel with a mosaic tree is

deduced from the Umayyad mosaic panels on the arches and

slightly staggered to the left. The span of each arch also varies

the Roman wall behind. In areas where the mosaic is missing,

between 4.09  m and 4.57  m across the arcade.1 Such variability

original ashlars are exposed: these are made of sandstone, and

makes it inherently difficult to reconstruct the proportional

their cut can be irregular, probably because some stones were

relationships that may have existed between the parts of the

reused from an older structure (Figure 44). Behind the arcade,

original building.

the masonry of the west wall is Roman (Figure 68). The arcade consists of nine large arches and eighteen small

The arcade elevation was described at an early date by Ibn al-Muʿallā (d. 286/900) by putting these words in the

ones. The rhythm of the lower tier is defined by the alternation

mouth of Umayyad stonemasons: ‘It should be built with

of two columns to one pier, whereas in the upper tier there

arches (qanāṭir), then above them pillars (asāṭīn), columns

is one colonnette for every pier, hence three colonnettes for

(ʿumud) and further arches that will carry the ceiling and

every pair of columns. Each pair of small arches is the same

reduce the load on the columns. Between every two columns,

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 67 (opposite) View of courtyard with prayer hall façade to the left, west arcade opposite, and north arcade to the right. Alain George, 2010. p  figure 68 (right) West arcade, section of temenos wall with exposed masonry. René Mouterde, after 1928. Beirut, Bibliothèque Orientale.

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p  figure 69 (below) Section of west arcade. Alain George, 2010.

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119

there should be a pillar (rukn).’2 The testimony of Ibn Jubayr in 581/1184 confirms that the same pattern was repeated for the other courtyard arcades: ‘As to the colonnades that enclose the court from three sides, they are supported by columns over

p  figure 70 (above) The east arcade (north side) and northeast corner, present day. Ross Burns/Manar al-Athar, 2009.

which are arched embrasures sustained by smaller columns

p  figure 72 (opposite below) The north arcade (left) and detail of northeast corner (right). Late nineteenth century. Courtesy of Special Collections, Fine Arts Library, Harvard University.

that go round the whole of the court.’3 The east arcade faces the west arcade across the courtyard and replicates its structure symmetrically. No original mosaics remain here and only four columns out of six—the pairs at the Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

p  figure 71 (opposite) The east arcade (south side) and southeast corner, present day. Ross Burns/Manar al-Athar, 2009.

centre and south of the arcade—are original (Figures 70 and 71). An early photograph shows that in the nineteenth century, a further Roman column remained in the northeast corner,

Looking left from the east arcade, with one’s back turned

while its twin had been replaced by a pier (Figure 72 and detail).

to the prayer hall, the north arcade comes into sight (Figure

All the spandrels in the upper tier of this arcade were restored

72). It consists, in its current state, of twenty-four arches

or rebuilt between the medieval and modern periods. The

supported by an imposing row of thick piers that probably

Roman wall behind was also extensively repaired in its lower

date to the reconstruction recorded by al-Budayrī al-Ḥallāq in

elevation and entirely rebuilt above; both parts of the structure

1173/1759–60, after the arcade was devastated by a succession

were probably affected by the same unidentified disaster.

of earthquakes in Rabiʿ II 1172/December 1758.4 The east end

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chapter 5  •  A Vast Expanse of Splendour

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121

of the arcade bears mosaics that are no earlier than the Saljuq period.5 In the nineteenth century, two old columns of a darker hue appeared here (Figures 72 and 73). By the early twentieth Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

century, they had been replaced with white columns like those

p  figure 73 (above) The north arcade from the northeast corner. Tancrède Dumas, ca. 1870. Badr El-Hage Collection.

made for the prayer hall in the 1890s (Figure 74). The west end of the north arcade also has a single original column, with later masonry to the right and above (Figure 75). In the nineteenth century, a second original column stood here, along with three colonnettes and two pilasters, as recorded in three photographs by Bedford (1862, Figure 76), a fourth by Phillips (1866, Figure 77) and a fifth by Bonfils (undated).6 Later photographs by Bonfils show the upper tier being rebuilt, which suggests that this part of the mosque collapsed towards

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p  figure 74 (opposite above, left) The northeast courtyard corner. K.A.C. Creswell, early twentieth century. Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, EA.CA.396. © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford. p  figure 75 (opposite above, right) The northwest courtyard corner. Michael Greenhalgh/Manar al-Athar, 2003.

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p  figure 76 The Bayt al-Māl and northwest courtyard corner. Francis Bedford, 1862. Royal Collection Trust, RCIN 2700961 © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021.

p  figure 77 The Bayt al-Māl and northwest courtyard corner. Henry Phillips, 1866.

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123

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p  figure 78 The northwest courtyard corner viewed from the west arcade. Said Nuseibeh, 2006.

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p  figure 79 (above) The northwest courtyard corner pillar. Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 2004.

p  figure 80 (below) West half of the prayer hall, looking towards the transept. Alain George, 2010.

the end of the 1860s.7 In a further image also by Bonfils, the colonnettes have been replaced by the current stone masonry.8 The cause may have been an earthquake reported by the press on 14 April 1867.9 In each of the northeast and northwest corners, concealed from view in the courtyard, are two arches aligned with the adjacent arcade, for which they provide structural support. There is reason to think that these structures did not exist in the Umayyad period. The arch on the west side of the northwest corner runs over the river mosaic, which does not have a border at this juncture (Figure 78).10 The two columns in the same corner both date to the twentieth century, probably the 1950s (Figure 79). Their imposts appear to be medieval but in order to create them, the craftsmen had to cut into the cornice of the adjacent pier, which is Umayyad. Furthermore, the pier protrudes from the two arches above and bears holes for the marble dado. All these elements imply that the original corner was not connected to the Roman walls by arches. These must have been added later to provide structural support, perhaps after an earthquake, and thus contributed to preserve the original columns at both ends of the north arcade. Prayer Hall Arcades Moving inside the prayer hall, the four arcades that run from the transept to the side walls are entirely a work of the 1890s to early 1900s (Figure 80). Early photographs show that in the nineteenth century, this space still had Roman shafts with Corinthian capitals (Figure 81). Unlike in Umayyad sections Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

of the courtyard, a few capitals were markedly smaller than their shafts, which suggests a reshuffling of earlier elements during a rebuilding (Figure 82, third column from the right). The arch masonry above was concealed by plaster except in the photographs taken by Max Van Berchem after the fire of 1893, by which time much of this revetment had been either lost or removed (Figure 83). The arches are built with more cleanly cut stones than in the courtyard, notably in the outline of the intrados and extrados, and these also have a whiter hue. This type of masonry, which is similar to that of the arcade outside

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125

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p  figure 81 (opposite) West half of the prayer hall, looking towards the transept. Max Van Berchem, before 1893. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem.

p  figure 82 (above) Prayer hall, northeast arcade. Maison Bonfils, 1867–93. Courtesy of Special Collections, Fine Arts Library, Harvard University.

with pointed arches stood between the seventh and eight columns from the east wall on the northeast arcade (Figure 82). The Roman shafts in the prayer hall had a glossy appearance that suggests some form of coating. Ibn Ṭūlūn (880–953/1473– 1546) records that in 926/1520, ‘all the columns of the interior were painted, one green and the next deep red, whereas they

the west gate (Figure 84), continues into the arcade windows

had been stone white; their capitals were picked out in white

above and may reflect the use of a hard limestone from the

on black, whereas they had been in gold over dark blue since

region of Damascus. The combination of this material and

the time of the chief qadi Najm al-Dīn ibn Jiḥā’. One can infer

technique point to a date no earlier than the Saljuq period.

11

that the coating observed in the nineteenth century, with its

All the columns documented in the nineteenth-century

light hue, came later.12 At the Takiyya Sulaymaniyya (1554–60)

prayer hall have Corinthian capitals except for the pair that

and Darwish Pasha Mosque (1574) in Damascus, the columns

frames the Shrine of the Baptist, which must have been late

have dark, square bases with bevelled corners.13 The bases at

Ottoman (Figure 57). An Ottoman-era raised platform (dikka)

the Umayyad Mosque were broadly comparable to theirs,

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127

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p  figure 83 Section of the southwest prayer hall arcade after the fire of 1893. Max Van Berchem. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem.

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even though their style, with nearly vertical bevels and a horizontal lozenge in the middle of each panel, is more ‘classical’. Thus, this feature may have been introduced in the second half of the sixteenth century, although a later date remains conceivable. In photographs taken by Van Berchem after the fire, the ‘skin’ of the shafts has flaked off in places to reveal the stone below (Figures 83 and 85). The surface layer has a markedly darker hue than the stone it covers, probably because it was carbonised by the fire. It is difficult to infer the material of the shafts from the photographs, but one image shows, in the same frame, several column fragments from the prayer hall alongside one original column from the west arcade of the courtyard, all under the same direct sunlight (detail of Figure 85). Their hue and texture appear similar, which suggests that the prayer hall

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columns were made of the same marble.

p  figure 84 (above left) Arcade outside Bāb al-Barīd. Sean Weatherbury/Manar Al-Athar, 2010

p  figure 85 (above and detail below) The prayer hall, west side, after the fire of 1893. Max Van Berchem. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem.

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129

p  figure 87 (above) The prayer hall façade. K.A.C. Creswell, early twentieth century. Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, EA.CA.386. © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford.

p  figure 88 (opposite) Courtyard façade, centre and east sections. Francis Bedford, 1862. Royal Collection Trust, RCIN 2700959 © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021.

The Transept The masonry of the transept as it stands today is essentially Umayyad. This is indicated by its ashlars, which have the same texture as those of the west arcade and a comparable, relatively large size. The inner part of the four central pillars that support

p  figure 86 Buttress behind central mihrab. K.A.C. Creswell, early twentieth century. Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, EA.CA.713. © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford.

the transept was built later than the outer part, probably under the Saljuqs, who left commemorative inscriptions on them. Thus, the Umayyad transept was only supported by the parts of the pillars aligned with the wall, as long ago argued by Creswell (Ground plan, Figure 1).15 At the back of the qibla wall stands an exterior buttress exactly aligned with these pillars (they appear

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In medieval and early modern restorations, usable columns

to the left of the mihrab in Figure 1; see also Figure 86). This

and capitals are likely to have been re-erected, if only for

buttress must date to the same period since it is related to these

practical reasons: it would have been much more difficult to

pillars by its type and size of masonry, and by the shape of the

source large matching Roman columns with their capitals in

crowning cornice.16 It must have originally been mirrored by

the twelfth or sixteenth century than in the eighth, when the

a corresponding east buttress to match the pair of buttresses

whole of Syria was still dotted with temples abandoned less

on the courtyard façade, which are extant (Figure 87). These

than four centuries earlier. Indeed, this still proved an issue

supports, together with the arcades extending east and west in

during the restorations that followed the fire of 1893: once a

the prayer hall, relieved downward pressure from the transept

suitable quarry for new columns had been identified in Mezzeh

and dome.

near Damascus, and after much deliberation, a massive chariot

by two massive Roman columns that withstood the fire of 1893,

pulled by bulls and cows was constructed to transport the shafts, and the achievement became a matter of civic pride.

14

130

In the nineteenth century, the transept façade was supported but had become damaged and were removed in the subsequent

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restoration (Figure 4). Before the fire, the column on the right

reaches the shape of each window grille, the texture of the lead

had already had its base replaced with some type of concrete or

roofing on cornices and the decorative patterns of the wooden

mortar (Figure 88). It was crowned with a classical Corinthian

door. The two colonnettes in the upper tier, which remain in

capital, whereas the column on the left-hand side had a

place to this day, are accurately depicted as red; Bauernfeind’s

Composite capital datable between the late fifth century and

two paintings of Bāb al-Barīd also show its large columns

the Umayyad period.

realistically, with a reddish hue. James Silk Buckingham, who

17

Bauernfeind’s painting of the transept façade seen from

visited the mosque dressed as a Muslim in 1816, had also heard

Bāb al-Farādīs depicts the left-hand column as green (Figure 89).

of these columns and their colour as he stated: ‘We did not

The accuracy of his depiction can be measured by comparing

observe the columns of verd-antique which are said to be in

it with photographs (Figures 88 and 90): the level of detail

that front of the mosque which faces towards the court’.18

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131

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p  figure 89 (opposite and above) The transept façade viewed from Bāb al-Farādīs, with detail of the large column to the left. Oil on panel, 121 × 97  cm. Gustav Bauernfeind, 1888–89. Doha, Qatar Museums/ Orientalist Museum, OM.699. Photography © Qatar Museums/ Orientalist Museum, Doha.

p  figure 90 (above and right) The transept façade, with detail of the two large columns. Henry Phillips, 1875.

Ibn ʿAsākir notes about the origin of these two columns: I read under ʿAbd al-Karīm, from ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz, Tammām Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

told us, Abū Bakr al-Birāmī told us, Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad ibn Hārūn (by which he means al-ʿĀmilī) told us, Khālid ibn Tabūk told us, a learned man told me: ʿAbd al-Malik bought the two large green columns which are below the transept (nisr) from Ḥarb ibn Khālid ibn Yazīd ibn Muʿāwiya for 1,500 dinars.19

In later versions of the same anecdote, the purchase is made by al-Walīd rather than his father.20 In either case, by the twelfth century, the transept had two massive green columns

chapter 5  •  A Vast Expanse of Splendour

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133

that were thought to be Umayyad. Ibn ʿAsākir does not specify

said that it was removed one night and that this white one

their location, but since in his period Ibn Jubayr saw four pillars

was put in its place.24

(arjul) that supported the dome, even measuring their size,

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they are unlikely to have been inside the prayer hall.21 This is

This configuration, with an original green column and a later

confirmed by the inscriptions on the two southern pillars which

white one, matches the one observed in the nineteenth century.

record their building by Malik Shāh in 475/1082 and designate

Thus, it is likely that one original green column survived on

them with the Arabic word arkān, in the plural rather than the

the transept façade until then, possibly along with the capital

dual. Ibn ʿAsākir’s anecdote also echoes accounts in which

of its counterpart.

22

Ḥarb’s father Khālid ibn Yazīd sells the palace of his grandfather

Umayyad mosaics appear on every tier of the north transept

Muʿāwiya in Damascus, the famed Khaḍrāʾ, to ʿAbd al-Malik.

façade, which faces the courtyard (Figure 87). In the nineteenth

In the sixteenth century, al-ʿAlmāwī (b. 907/1501) was still able

century, a substantial panel remained on its east side. One

to see one of the two columns standing ‘under the nisr’:

image of the mosque captured by Frank Mason Good from

23

the southeast in 1866–67 shows two dark patches at the centre

134

There is only a green one; it is very large. The other one is

of the east transept wall, just below the drum (Figure 91).25

white and tall. It seems that it [the second green column]

They appear again in two photographs taken by Van Berchem

was slit, broken, destroyed, or someone took it—as it is

three decades later, by which time less than half of the surface

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 91 (opposite) The Great Mosque of Damascus from the southeast. Frank Mason Good, 1866–67. The Lenkin Family Collection of Photography, University of Pennsylvania Libraries.

Detail of Figure 9 (above). Mosaic fragment on east transept wall. p  figure 92 (right) View of the transept and prayer hall roofs from the east minaret. Michel Ecochard, 1934. Michel Ecochard Archive, courtesy of Aga Khan Documentation Center, MIT Libraries (AKDC@MIT).

captured in Good’s image remained. Whereas the latter was

all along the qibla wall. There is no matching evidence for the

shot from a distant rooftop, Van Berchem took his from the

south side facing towards the street, which probably remained

prayer hall after the roof had been destroyed by the fire of

undecorated, like other parts of the temenos exterior.

1893. From this relatively close viewpoint, his images yielded a superior level of detail that partially reveals this area of

The Dome

mosaic (detail of Figure 9 above).

The current dome is modern, having been built to new

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

The panel shows the crowning part of a tower, with a square

specifications after the fire of 1893. The nineteenth-century

shaft surrounded by a gallery, a small lantern dome, and a

dome rested on an octagonal base, with two windows on

golden finial consisting of two or three small stacked globes.

each of its eight sides and eight windows in the dome itself.

The image suggests a quality of craftsmanship consistent

Inscriptions and textual sources imply that by that date, it been

with an Umayyad date. Stylistically, the striation of the upper

rebuilt at least four times: in the aftermath of the fires of 1069,

shaft, the lozenge pattern of the balcony, and the approach to

1401, and 1479 and the earthquake of 1758, after which it must

foreshortening echo the river mosaic, but the type of building

have reached its nineteenth-century form.26 The earliest written

is unlike those seen in other parts of the mosque. By 1934, the

evocation of the dome occurred in al-Walīd’s lifetime, in these

mosaic had vanished, as shown in a photograph by Ecochard

verses from al-Nābigha’s panegyric:

(Figure 92). The existence of this fragment implies that the east side of the transept was initially covered with mosaics, hence also the west side. The detail also represents a decorative element set between two windows, a configuration scarcely found in the extant mosaic fragments, but which was once used

20. A dome that birds can scarcely reach, its upper portions ceiled in teak, 21. With lamps whose oil is gold—their light glows on from Lebanon and the Sīf

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135

p  figure 93 Finial from a mosque in Alcolea, near Cordoba, later refitted with a cross. Tenth century. Cordoba, Museo Arqueológico.

The inner dome of the mosque was thus lined with teak. Al-Nābigha emphasizes its height through the mention of lamps shedding light far outwards, which suggests a drum with windows.27 Ibn al-Jawzī (510–97/1126–1200) notes: In Rabiʿ II [233/ November–December 847] there was a strong tremor in Damascus at the height of the morning. Houses collapsed and great stones tumbled. A number of houses and arcades in the markets fell upon those inside. Many men, women and youths were killed. Some merlons (baʿḍ al-shurāfāt) from the mosque fell down, and the arcades of the dome (ṭāqāt al-qubba) at the centre of the mosque, next to the mihrab, collapsed. A quarter of the minaret of the mosque was cut down.28

This could imply that the drum was lost at this early stage, unless ‘the arcades of the dome’ refer to another part of the prayer hall. In his account of the same event, al-Dhahabī (673–748/1274–1348) only says that ‘the wall of the mihrab was cracked’, and al-Suyūṭī does not mention this wall or the dome at all.29 Taken together, these reports do not clearly imply that the dome was brought down by the earthquake of 847. In any case, only minimal information can be derived from the two descriptions that predate its certain destruction in the fire of 1069. Al-Muhallabī (d. 380/990) is the only writer

of the transept.33 His information on this detail should

to provide a measurement for its height in his description of

be disregarded.

the prayer hall: ‘In its centre is a dome about 50 cubits high, decorated (manqūsha) and gilded from within, and covered on

facing the mihrab, is a large dome’ and that ‘on the apex of the

the outside with lead tiles, like all roofs of the mosque.’ He

dome is a citron (turnuja) on top of which is a pomegranate

goes on to state that the mosque is 150 cubits deep from the

(rummāna), both of them in gold’.34 The outer dome must have

north wall to the qibla wall and 170 cubits wide, measurements

been clearly visible from the courtyard, suggesting that it rested

that correspond to a ratio of width to length of 1:13, which is

on a drum that raised it above the transept gable. The finial

far from the true ratio of 1:60, and inconsistent as it entails a

with its pomegranate and citron evokes two stacked spheres

30

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In the same period, al-Muqaddasī noted that ‘in the middle,

cubit of 93.02   cm for the length and 65.82   cm for the width.

of decreasing size. The description reflects the form an extant

The cubit measured 63   cm in Mamluk Damascus and around

tenth-century finial from the region of Cordoba, albeit with

55 to 56  cm in Umayyad buildings. Al-Muhallabī’s 50 cubits

four spheres; its cross was of course added later (Figure 93).

would therefore entail an elevation of 27.50 to 31.50  m for the

It is impossible to tell whether the one seen by al-Muqaddasī

dome—too small to be realistic since this is about the height

was original.

31

32

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 94 Southwest courtyard corner with first three arches of prayer hall façade. Alain George, 2010.

Textual sources, in sum, reveal only basic facts about the Umayyad dome: its height, wooden inner dome, drum with windows, and the possible existence of lead covering and a finial made of two stacked spheres. Prayer Hall Façade The prayer hall façade currently has twenty arches—ten on either side of the transept—supported by stone piers. The same masonry was already in place in the nineteenth century, as attested by photographs starting with those taken by Bedford in 1862 (Figure 88). In the earliest detailed account of the mosque,

The current intercolumnation in the prayer hall is the same

al-Muqaddasī describes the prayer hall as having ‘black (sūd)

as in Umayyad sections of the courtyard. Furthermore, the

polished columns as its supports in three very wide rows’.

engaged pillars that abut the arcades on the east and west wall

Since the prayer hall has two interior arcades, he saw a façade

are Umayyad, which implies that the total span of the arcades

supported by columns. Two centuries later, Ibn Jubayr gave a

has remained unchanged. The total of forty columns must

more detailed description of the same scheme:

therefore be valid for the Umayyad period. Ibn Jubayr’s mention of eight interspersed pillars between

It [the prayer hall] rests upon sixty-eight supports (sg.

the columns rules out the possibility that there were two

ʿamūd): fifty-four columns (sg. sāriya) between which are

columns to one pier in both the prayer hall and its façade,

interspersed eight plastered supports (arjul jiṣṣiyya); two

since this would imply at least twelve such pillars (two for

marble-clad supports engaged (mulṣaqa, lit. ‘joined’) with

each of the six half-arcades). His count of fifty-four columns

the wall that borders the courtyard; and four supports

is also incompatible with a row of columns on the façade and

clad with marble in a most wonderful way, being inlaid

two columns to a pier in the prayer hall, which would yield a

with coloured marble pieces arranged in annular form

maximum of forty-four columns.37 In addition, such a scheme

and in the likeness of mihrabs and other strange shapes.

would not fit easily with the Shrine of the Baptist, which had

The latter stand in the central area, carrying the lead

been flanked by two columns since the early Islamic period (see

dome along with the dome next to the mihrab.36

Chapter 4). The four arcades of the Umayyad prayer hall must

35

therefore have had ten columns each, in positions very close to Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Ibn Jubayr saw fifty-four columns that he distinguishes from

the present ones, and in Ibn Jubayr’s time there must have been

fourteen other supports: four richly decorated piers carrying

fourteen more on the façade, with a rhythm of two columns

the central dome, which still stand today, two engaged pilasters

to one pillar: six columns on either side, plus the two larger

on either side of the transept façade and eight ‘plastered

columns of the transept façade.38

supports’ interspersed between columns. Let us examine these observations alongside the actual

Echoes of this earlier pattern can be discerned at the two ends of the current façade. In the first two arches of the

structure. Today, each arcade in the prayer hall consists of

southwest courtyard corner, the springers are narrow (about

ten columns, which brings their number up to forty. This

the height of a voussoir), as opposed to about twice this

was already the case in the nineteenth century when original

width in subsequent arches (Figure 94); their size is suited to

columns survived, even though many had been remounted.

support by a column rather than a pillar.39 A vertical strip of

chapter 5  •  A Vast Expanse of Splendour

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137

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138

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p  figure 95 (opposite) Southwest courtyard corner. K.A.C. Creswell, after 1928. Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, EA.CA.391. © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford. Detail of Figure 87 (right). Masonry of west transept buttress and adjoining arch. p  figure 96 (far right) Original marble window below mosaic panel, west arcade. Alain George, 2010.

mosaic joins the two façades but it did not exist when Creswell photographed this corner in the early twentieth century (Figure .

95). His image does record a small mosaic fragment on the first spandrel of the prayer hall façade: since mosaics stopped being produced in the Ottoman period and the earliest modern restorations date to the 1940s, it cannot be later than the Mamluk period. The underlying masonry may thus be either original or medieval. In either case, the thinness of the first two piers suggests that this part of the courtyard façade bears the imprint of an Umayyad scheme in which two columns followed the southwest corner. The two arches flanking the transept are slightly lower and narrower than on the rest of the façade. Their masonry is different than in the middle of the arcade, with larger ashlars

collapsed at that point.41 It is thus plausible that this was also

that echo those on the southwest corner (Figure 95). On the

the Umayyad scheme, an idea which finds further support in

east side, the arches are coursed with the Umayyad masonry

the window grilles.

of the adjoining transept buttress at window level (Figure 45). The same pattern could be observed at the level of the first pier

Windows and Door Hangings

below until the adjoining part of the buttress was concealed by

Today, six Umayyad marble grilles remain above dado level in

new decoration (detail of Figure 87 above). This part of the

the west side of the courtyard: four on the arcade wall that were

façade is therefore likely to be earlier than the rest.

moved up slightly into the mosaics above to make way for the

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

40

The present reconstruction implies that, at a previous

medieval inscription at their foot (Figures 69 and 96), and two

stage in its history, the mosque had one pillar on either side

in the vestibule of Bāb al-Barīd.42 Several more could be seen

of the transept, followed by a rhythm of two columns to one

on the prayer hall façade in the nineteenth century. While they

pillar, hence two more pillars on each side, until each corner.

mostly seem to have been from medieval and later restorations,

Counting the two buttresses that frame the transept arches,

a few resonate closely with Umayyad specimens: three large

one reaches Ibn Jubayr’s total of eight pillars. Accounts of

composite windows at the centre of the transept, the single

the fire of 1069—the major disaster suffered by the mosque

window and two oculi above, and the second window to the

up until the time of his visit—do not suggest that the columns

right on the arcade, which has been patched with a square

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

139

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p  figure 97 (above) East courtyard dome and east half of prayer hall façade. Maison Bonfils, 1867–93. Courtesy of Special Collections, Fine Arts Library, Harvard University. Detail of Figure 88 (below) The transept façade and first six windows of the west prayer hall façade.

140

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

Detail of Figure 4 (left). Composite windows of the transept façade. Detail of Figure 88 (centre). The second, ‘patched’ window to the west of the transept before the fire of 1893. Detail of Figure 4 (right). The second, ‘patched’ window after the fire.

featuring a different grid pattern (see the details above). Like

of the wall towards the court, forty-seven windows

the extant windows in the west arcade and vestibule, they are

(sg. shamsiyya).43

constructed with relatively large voids in the patterns, suitable for the insertion of glass panes. At the centre of the transept (detail of Figure 4 above), one can detect an opaque fill that may

fourteen windows around the one near the mihrab: these must

have been glass, and there are carved colonnettes similar to

all have belonged to the south part of the transept, which has

those in extant Umayyad windows (Figure 96). The remaining

eight windows on the qibla side, facing the street behind, and

windows and lunettes of the prayer hall façade also have lattice

three on each lateral wall. The central dome had ten: since

work, but with tighter patterns (Figure 97). Unlike the set

there are six on the central part of the transept walls, three

described above, they appear to have burned down in the fire

on each side, one may infer that the drum had another four.

of 1893 (Figure 4): they are likely to have been made later, and

The six windows ‘in the cupola adjoining the wall on the court’

of a flammable material such as stucco. Indeed, in the ‘patched’

correspond, again, to the lateral windows in this section of the

window, the original grille, though calcinated, remained

transept—hence not those on the courtyard façade. The forty-

in place, while half of the newer insert was consumed. The

four are the rest of those on the qibla wall, to the east and west

openwork of these Umayyad grilles expands the range of

of the transept. Taken together, these add up to the seventy-four

ornamental forms already known from the west courtyard:

windows that he describes as gilded and fitted with stained glass.

complex centralised designs generated through multiple

One might infer that the forty-seven windows that he saw

intersections between circles of different sizes and parallel

‘on the outside of the wall towards the court’ were somewhat

lines set in a small number of orientations.

different, yet he uses the same term for both types: shamsiyya,

The upper tier of the prayer hall arcades is not described

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

By then, the transept had three domes. Ibn Jubayr saw

which in his native Maghrib usually denotes windows grilles

directly in any of the available sources. Did it consist of

(the equivalent term in Egypt and further east being qamariyya).44

windows set in stone arches as in the nineteenth century,

The windows on the prayer hall façade must therefore have been

or of open arches with colonnettes and piers as in the rest of

arches framed by stone pillars. Today there are forty-six windows

the Umayyad courtyard? In his description Ibn Jubayr notes:

on the arcades of this façade: twenty on each of the southeast and southwest arcades, and six on the transept façade (the three

The number of its gilt and stained-glass windows

composite windows at the centre, and the smaller window and

(shamsiyyāt) is seventy-four. In the cupola beneath the

two oculi above). This minor discrepancy notwithstanding, by

Lead Dome are ten; in the cupola adjoining the mihrab

including them in his tally Ibn Jubayr implies that he saw closed

and in the adjacent wall, fourteen; along the length of the

windows on that façade. The survival of an original window

wall right and left of the mihrab, forty-four; in the cupola

in the nineteenth century arcade (details of Figures 4 and 88

adjoining the wall on the court, six; and on the outside

above) reinforces the idea that this was the Umayyad scheme.

chapter 5  •  A Vast Expanse of Splendour

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141

p  figure 98 (left) Umayyad Palace at Anjar, elevation partly reconstructed, early eighth century. Alain George, 2011.

p  figure 99 (opposite) The Bayt al-Māl, original mosaics on north side (Panel A). Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 2009.

‘On its doorways [of the mosque] were varicoloured curtains of silk’, rather than felt.47 The description of the mosque shared by Ibn Kathīr and Ibn Shākir states more vaguely that ‘the doors from the courtyard [to the prayer hall] were not closed but had loose curtains (al-sutūr murkhāt)’.48 These sources differ on the nature of the textiles, which may indeed have changed over the course of two centuries; but they plausibly agree on their use. Pavement and Floor Levels The lower tier of the prayer hall façade is likely to have

The prayer hall must have retained the same floor level since

remained open onto the courtyard since doors cannot be

Umayyad times as it corresponds to the foot of the Roman

practically fitted between columns, especially if these are flared

triple gate.49 A sounding carried out by Creswell and Grunther

towards the centre as in standard Roman practice. A passage

right outside the blocked south temenos entrance revealed

recorded by Ibn ʿAsākir shows that the prayer hall façade had

Roman pavement 14.3   cm below the door sill—which must

felt hangings at the time of Ibn al-Muʿallā, and that they were

have been the street level two millennia ago.50 By contrast,

thought to have existed in the Umayyad period:

the Umayyad courtyard floor was at least 48  cm lower than the present one, as this corresponds to the shallowest floor level

Abū Muḥammad ibn al-Akfānī and ʿAbd al-Karīm both

unearthed by soundings undertaken in different parts of the

narrated to us, ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz informed us, Tammām informed

courtyard in 1962–63.51 Al-Muqaddasī described the courtyard

us (and ʿAbd al-Wahhāb said, Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad ibn

as ‘paved with white marble’, an assertion echoed by other early

al-Muʿallā informed us, from Tammām), Yaḥyā ibn ʿAbd

writers which probably reflects its Umayyad state.52 Today, the

Allāh narrated to me, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān [= Raḥīm, ed.]

courtyard is level with the prayer hall but it must originally

ibn ʿUmar informed us, Ibn al-Muʿallā told us:

have been accessed from the courtyard up at least two steps

We used to hang in the Mosque of Damascus, in winter,

about 24  cm high or three steps of about 16  cm. Two steps can

felt (lubūd) of fine quality.

be seen on the prayer hall arcades and transept façades in some

He said:

nineteenth-century photographs (Figure 88). The lower step is

The wind blew inside and made it tremble in the reign

partly concealed by the courtyard floor: this makes it clear that

of al-Walīd, so people panicked, tearing the felt as they

it was not a modern threshold for rainwater but an earlier step

rushed out.

gradually engulfed by rising courtyard pavements.53 Stairs and

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45

a raised prayer hall would have been necessary to avoid flooding Since the façade faces north and receives little direct sunlight, hangings would have been essential in winter rather

from rain or snow in winter, especially if the original mosque did not have doors on this façade.

than summer, as asserted here. Whether or not these fixtures had already been introduced under al-Walīd, as asserted by

The Bayt al-Māl Chamber

Ibn al-Muʿallā, is more difficult to ascertain. Other early sources

As discussed in Chapter 4, the columns and architraves

mention that under ʿAbd al-Malik the entrances to the Dome

of the Bayt al-Māl must have originally formed part of a

of the Rock were screened by red felt hangings in winter and

Christian monument, though the date of its transformation

a different type in summer. Ibn Ṣaṣrā notes about Damascus:

into a chamber is yet to be determined. It was perhaps this

46

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the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

conversion that Arabic sources recall as its construction,

of Anjar, near Damascus (Figure 98). Stone and brick masonry

whether in the 770s under the Abbasid governor al-Faḍl ibn

is also attested in the palace and church at Qasr ibn Wardan,

Ṣāliḥ or, according to one source, half a century earlier under

built around 564 in northern Syria, and the early ninth-century

al-Walīd. The masonry of the octagonal chamber consists of a

church of Dere Ağzı in southwestern Anatolia.56 The technique

first level with two courses of large ashlars, then a stack of four

is virtually identical at Anjar and the Bayt al-Māl, with three or

brick slabs followed by a course of smaller ashlars, repeated

four stacked brick slabs alternating with a single stone course,

five times (Figures 60 and 61). While one could infer a later

whereas at Constantinople and elsewhere there are typically

stage of construction for the upper walls, the small door above

at least three stone courses between the brick layers. This

is framed by the same large ashlars as in the first two courses.

convergence opens the possibility that, despite the assertions of

It seems, therefore, that all eight walls were built in one phase.

most sources, the chamber may in fact be Umayyad.

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54

Stone and brick masonry was typical of Constantinople and

Four original mosaic fragments can be identified on the

neighbouring areas, and it differs from anything observed in

Bayt al-Māl. Three of these (Figures 99, 100 and 101) were

the Umayyad remains of the mosque.55 This could confirm an

uncovered in 1928: a scene with a date palm flanked by

early Abbasid date for the chamber, but the issue is complicated

houses and a border with pearly vegetal scrolls sprouting out

by the existence of masonry with layers of brick slabs at an

of an acanthus (panel A, lower half of north–northwest side,

Umayyad foundation from the same decade: the palatial city

with lacuna in lower-left corner); vegetal scrolls growing

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143

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p  figure 100 Bayt al-Māl, panel B (above) and panel A just visible on the right. Alain George, 2010.

p  figure 101 Bayt al-Māl, panels C.a (right border) and C.b (upper border). Ross Burns/Manar al-Athar, 2009.

upwards with bejewelled motifs (panel B, central third of

of a semi-circle with pearl decoration and an eight-pointed star

north–northeast side, excluding the vegetal base); a horizontal

set in a circle at the apex; this main motif is framed, on either

border of six-pointed pearly stars set in circles alternating

side, by two similar stars, but with six points. The same star

with lozenges, and a vertical border of symmetrical sprouting

design appears in the plant formations of panel B (Figure 100)

vegetal motifs (panels C.a and C.b respectively, right border and

and the repeat patterns of panel C.b (Figure 101).

upper border of the south–southeast side). They can be seen in photographs from the late 1920s to the 1950s (Figures 60 and 61). The fourth panel (D), on the north–southwest side, appears

The design of panel A, with a large central tree flanked by small houses, and a river below, echoes the river mosaic on the west arcade (Figure 103): the relationships of scale are

to have disappeared by the 1920s but can be recovered from a

comparable, as are the small houses with pitched roofs, the

photograph by Bonfils, which shows the plaster coating with

pearl finials at the apex of the triangular pediments and the

fishbone incisions applied under the mosaics (Figure 102).

graded hues to convey shade and depth. Minor details differ,

The decoration, which can only be faintly discerned, consists

such as the edges of the frontons which are more curved

57

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 102 Bayt al-Māl, southwest side (above) and detail of lost mosaic, panel D (right). Maison Bonfils, 1867–93. Courtesy of Special Collections, Fine Arts Library, Harvard University.

in the river mosaic. The Bayt al-Māl panel has deep greens

but much more so than in Saljuq and Mamluk restorations—

for the house fronts whereas these are only used for door

still holds.58 However, her judgement that they are ‘distinctly

frames in the river mosaic, and the colours of the riverbanks

inferior’ to nearby Umayyad mosaics requires nuancing.

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are more strongly contrasted in the former than the latter.

The acanthus in the lower border of panel A and in panel B

Most strikingly, the execution of the date fruits on panel A

are refined and closely echo similar themes on the soffits,

is coarse in contrast with the finely shaded fruit of the west

pilasters and spandrels of the west arcade, and also at the

arcade. The vertical vegetal border motifs in panels A and

Dome of the Rock: shared details include jagged leaf edges,

C are likewise relatively unrefined, and while they echo an

red tips and the insertion of pearls in the plants. Panel A is only

Umayyad vocabulary of ornament, some of their forms do not

distinguished from the other mosaics by a more pronounced

find an exact parallel in the rest of the mosque or at the Dome

use of grey. The six- and eight-pointed stars with pearly rays

of the Rock: the striated cups in the vertical border of panel A,

that occur in panels B, C.b, and D also find close parallels in

for instance, appear to be unique. The conclusion reached by

other parts of the mosque and at the Dome of the Rock (see the

Marguerite Van Berchem—that the Bayt al-Māl panels are less

borders in the background of Figure 69, and around the edges

accomplished than those in Umayyad sections of the mosque,

of Figure 104). On the basis of the stars and of plant scrolls,

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p  figure 103 River mosaic, west courtyard wall, detail. Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 2007.

it would be difficult to tell apart the mosaics of the Bayt

Two early mosques built at Hama and Homs on sites that

al-Māl from the original Umayyad decoration in the rest of

had also housed churches have a comparable octagonal

the courtyard.

chamber on columns in the courtyard, and by the tenth century

Taken as a whole, these mosaic panels seem somewhat

al-Iṣṭakhrī and al-Muqaddasī identified this type of structure as

contradictory: while some elements are relatively coarse,

characteristically Syrian.62 But the chronology of the Bayt al-Māl

others are highly accomplished, even though different work

at both mosques is even less clear than at Damascus, so they

phases are not apparent. In part, we are faced with the limits of

cannot be used to elucidate the matter. The material evidence

our documentation. The vast majority of the original mosaics

is inconclusive, which brings us back to where we started—

are lost and multiple teams of mosaicists with different styles

the textual sources. An early tradition recorded by al-Wāsiṭī (eleventh century)

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must have contributed to this immense project. Stylistic study has already identified the work of two to three teams at the

asserts that when ʿAbd al-Malik decided to build the Dome of the

Dome of the Rock, originally a much smaller programme,

Rock, ‘he then ordered the building of the treasury (bayt al-māl) to

although it is better preserved today.59

the east of the Rock, which is on the edge of the Rock, and filled

The two putative dates for the mosaics of the Bayt al-Māl

it with money’.63 There has been some debate as to whether this

are only separated by the six decades between the 710s and

was the Dome of the Chain, which stands just east of the Dome

770s. Some of the same craftsmen could have been alive across

of the Rock, close enough for the distance between them to be

the entire period, and more practically, there is likely to have

easily bridged.64 In either case, al-Wāsiṭī’s account asserts the

been continuity in the practice of this craft. Indeed, Umayyad

existence of a treasury on the Ḥaram al-Sharīf. Egyptian sources

mosaics from the intervening decades have been found at sites

also state that the Mosque of ʿAmr in Fustat had a Bayt al-Māl

such as Khirbat al-Mafjar (740s), Khirbat al-Minya (710s to 740s),

on columns in the early Islamic period. The dates given for its

and Baysan (probably late 730s).60 A Greek text suggests that a

foundation range between 97/715–16 and 99/717–18, hence shortly

mosaic workshop was active at Damascus in the ninth century.

after the great mosque to which it belonged had been rebuilt by

Thus, the mosaic evidence does not yield any clearer insights

al-Walīd.65 Al-Maqrīzī notes that it stood above a fountain, while

into the issue of date than the masonry.

Ibn Rusta gives an account that is worth citing in full:

61

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 104 Dome of the Rock, detail of the mosaics in the octagonal arcade. Jerusalem 72/ 691–92. Said Nuseibeh, 1992.

The treasury of Egypt (bayt māl miṣr) is in the

The sources do not attribute another Bayt al-Māl to the

congregational mosque, facing the minbar. It is set

Abbasids, although the transfer of the capital from Syria to

apart from the mosque roofs and does not touch them.

Iraq could also provide a plausible reason for building such a

It is raised on stone pillars and looks like an elevated

structure in the former capital. In 161/778, al-Mahdī ordered an

dome. People sit and walk underneath it. There is a

enlargement of the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina and the lowering

wooden arched bridge (qanṭara): when they want to

of the maqsura floor, which had hitherto been higher than the

enter the chamber, they pull these bridges with ropes

rest of the mosque.67 Although the screen, hence the exclusive

until their side rests on the mosque roof; after coming

precinct of the maqsura, was maintained (with a new teak frame),

out, they remove the bridge. It has a metal gate and

the caliphs were no longer raised above the rest of the community.

locks. After the last evening prayer, people have to

Similarly, at Damascus, the building of the Bayt al-Māl chamber

leave the mosque; no one is left inside and the gates

may have allowed some treasury funds to be moved to a public

are closed, because of the Bayt al-Māl.

space. Al-Faḍl, if it was he who undertook the transformation of

66

the building, may have done so to mark the change of regime,

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Whereas the Bayt al-Māl at Fustat was entered from the

and possibly to obliterate the symbolism of Umayyad victory over

arcades across a removable bridge, the one at Damascus

Christians embodied by its columns.68 But this evidence, again,

must have been accessed up a ladder since its entrance faces

is inconclusive. The question, in the final analysis, is surprisingly

away from the arcades and is, in any case, too distant from

resistant to elucidation, and either an Umayyad or an early Abbasid

them. This is probably because its location was set before the

date remains plausible in the current state of our knowledge.

Islamic era. The textual evidence for Jerusalem in 692 and Fustat around 715‒18 suggests that the tradition of building a

Merlons

domed treasury in the courtyard of a major religious building

The mosque roofline was originally lined with stepped

dates to at least the early Marwānid period. It is therefore

merlons. Merlons first appear in the historical record with

conceivable that the Damascene structure was created for

the earthquake of 847, when some of them are said to have

the same purpose.

collapsed.69 Preserved accounts of this event are late and

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147

p  figure 105 Stepped merlons, Temple of Bel, Palmyra, 32 CE. Seyrig, Amy, and Will, Le temple de Bêl, vol. 1, 17.

although the assertion is credible, it cannot be verified. The earliest direct observation of the merlons was recorded by al-Muqaddasī, who noted that ‘the merlons (al-shurāfiyyāt) have mosaics on both sides’.70 He must have been referring to the courtyard, where unclad merlons would have created an awkward break with the mosaics on the walls below. The anonymous description cited by Ibn Shākir and Ibn Kathīr four centuries later also asserts: ‘They made merlons (shurufāt) all around it [the mosque].’71 What was the shape of these ornaments? In the Roman era, the Temple of Bel at Palmyra had stepped triangular merlons (Figure 105), and a similar type notionally may have been found at the Damascene temple.72 The archaeology of the Umayyad palaces at Anjar (built during al-Walīd’s reign), Qasr al-Hallabat (many building phases), Qasr al-Hayr al-Gharbi (720s), Khirbat al-Minya (710s to 740s), and Khirbat al-Mafjar (740s, Figure 106) has also yielded several variations of the Palmyrene type, but with flaring sides.73 The Great Mosque of Cordoba displays the flared type on its façades, including some that survive from its first construction phase (170/786).74 Stepped triangular merlons that run across the outer edge of the temenos wall also appear in early modern depictions of the Mosque at Damascus by Paul Lucas (1714, Figure 107) and Vasily Barsky (1723–47, Figure 108). Both are approximative visual documents, yet their authors had no reason to invent this detail.75 The earliest photographs of the mosque were taken a century later by Girault de Prangey. The earthquakes of 1758 had struck Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

in the meantime and his photographs only show merlons on the southwest tower. They are of two types: the ones to the south (detail of Figure 6, page 150) are tall and have rounded edges, like those that appear on a Mamluk wall near the mosque in an Italian oil painting of 1511.76 The squatter merlons on the west and east sides appear more heavily weathered, p  figure 106 Stepped merlons with flaring sides at the Umayyad palace of Khirbat al-Mafjar, 740s. Reconstruction by Hamilton, Khirbat al-Mafjar, Pl. CVII.

148

which could suggest an earlier date (details of Figures 7 and 85, page 150). They are also closer in form to an equilateral triangle and thus echo Lucas and Barsky’s drawings as well as from the Temple of Bel. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus must

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 107 The Great Mosque of Damascus (right). Details of the merlons (above). Engraving from Lucas, Voyage, 246.

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p  figure 108 The Great Mosque of Damascus, schematic rendition. Vasily Barsky, 1723–47. From Dussaud, ‘Le temple de Jupiter damascénien’, 249.

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

149

Detail of Figure 6 (above). The southwest tower and its merlons, south side. Detail of Figure 7 (left). The southwest tower and its merlons, west side.

have had similar triangular stepped merlons across its entire roofline, clad with mosaics on the courtyard façades, and plain on the temenos exterior. Roofing The prayer hall has a roof consisting of three gables on either Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

side of the transept. Each gable spans the width of three lateral transept windows, of which there are eighteen in total (nine on each side). The gables reach above the apex of the central window, which they entirely cover along with a portion of the flanking windows (Figures 92 and 109). In the nineteenth century, the gables were slightly lower but still nearly reached the apex of the central window. In early Byzantine buildings, Detail of Figure 85. The southwest tower and its merlons, east side.

150

where a gable roof meets a transept or drum, the tip of the gable reaches just below the window.77 Since the transept windows at Damascus are Umayyad, the original gables

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 109 The mosque viewed from the southwest. Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 1991.

p  figure 110 (below) Southwest courtyard corner and west end of prayer hall. Max Van Berchem, after 1893. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem.

the ceiling collapsed.79 According to Ibn ʿAsākir, citing Ibn al-Birāmī, when al-Walīd had gathered the requisite amount of this material from the cities of the empire, a small quantity was still missing. A woman who had been offered payment for the lead she owned chose to donate it, and the tiles made from it were stamped with the mark li’llāh (‘for God’). In a variant on this story involving a Jewish woman, some tiles were stamped with al-isrāʾīliyya (‘the Israelite’).80 One should probably must likewise reached below their sills, with a much gentler

conclude that some of the original tiles had a one-word Kufic

roof slope than today. This has implications for the visual

inscription embossed on them.

appearance of the monument, as the merlons of the courtyard façade would have concealed the roofing from ground level. In the tenth century, al-Balkhī and al-Muqaddasī mentioned

The roofs extended across three courtyard arcades. In the nineteenth century, these were less inclined than at present and looked nearly flat from a distance (Figure 110).

that the roof was covered with lead, an assertion echoed by

The temenos chambers on the east and west sides each had

all later sources. Ibn Jubayr notably saw lead tiles during

a separate roof with a sharply raised gable (Figure 91).81

his climb onto the roof in 581/1184, even though most of the

There are no grounds to determine whether that state of the

originals must have been destroyed in the fire of 1069, when

arcade roofs kept any imprint of the Umayyad template.

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78

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151

Detail of Figure 83 (left). Eagle capital from the prayer hall.

p  figure 111 (below) Eagle capital at the Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem, 72/691–92. Lawrence Nees, 2012.

Columns and Colonnettes The foregoing study suggests that the original mosque had eighty-six ‘standard’ Roman columns like those still extant in the courtyard: forty in the prayer hall arcades and twelve on the prayer hall façade (all lost); twelve between the east and west courtyard arcades (ten of which remain); sixteen on the north arcade (of which only one survives); four inside Bāb al-Barīd (extant); and two inside Bāb Jayrūn (where the present shafts are composites from ancient materials, while the bases and capitals are modern).82 In the upper tier, there must have been at least forty-nine colonnettes: forty-two above the courtyard arcades (three for every two large columns); two (a double colonnette) inside Bāb al-Barīd; one to three inside Bāb Jayrūn;83 and four engaged colonnettes on the transept façade (two on either side). It is not clear whether the prayer hall arcades had colonnettes, pillars, or a combination of both in the upper tier: depending on the configuration, this may have added dozens more colonnettes to the total. Some extant columns and colonnettes have been remounted over the years, so that a modern shaft may carry an ancient capital and vice-versa. These objects deserve to be fully catalogued and studied in their own right.84 As noted above, the courtyard entrance to the transept was originally framed by two large green columns, one of which probably survived into the nineteenth century (Figure 90). The courtyard façades of Bāb al-Barīd and Bāb Jayrūn each have two original colonnettes with deep green shafts on either side and a white one in the middle (Figures 71, 94 and 95). These Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

are matched by two red and two green engaged colonnettes between the transept windows, respectively inside and outside (Figure 45). In the nineteenth century, one column in the western half of the prayer hall also had an eagle in its abacus. It appears in a photograph by Van Berchem, with its head turned towards the right and folded wings that curve down at the level of the beak (detail of Figure 83 above). Eagle capitals were integrated in the Umayyad building programme on Temple Mount in Jerusalem, where six of them were found at the Dome of the Rock, the Dome of the Chain and the

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

Detail of Figure 82 (left). Corinthian capital from the northeast arcade. Detail of the third column from the right. p  figure 112 (right) Bāb al-Barīd exterior. Ross Burns/Manar al-Athar, 2004.

Aqsa Mosque.85 The Damascus eagle was particularly close to two at the Dome of the Rock, now defaced (Figure 111). The position of the column in Van Berchem’s photograph would be difficult to determine, were it not for another shaft in the same image (Figure 83) distinguished by a metal ring at the base. Through a comparison with another photograph (Figure 81), one can infer that the eagle capital was the second

Gates and Vestibules

one after the transept. Lawrence Nees has shown that the eagle

The mosque today has four main gates.88 Three belonged to the

capitals in Jerusalem flanked the north and east gates at the

original Roman temenos and are situated along its axes: the

Dome of the Rock and the main entrance to the Aqsa Mosque.

triple gates of Bāb al-Barīd (the ‘Gate of the Post’) in the west

It is possible that a similar pattern of capitals with eagle reliefs

and Bāb Jayrūn (sometimes simply called ‘Jayrūn’ in Arabic

on columns adjacent to the transept existed at Damascus.

sources) in the east; and the single gate of Bāb al-Farādīs (the

The matter is complicated by the fact that many prayer hall

‘Gate of the Gardens’) in the north. A further Roman triple gate,

columns must have been remounted before the nineteenth

along the south wall, was sealed under al-Walīd to make way for

century and by the lack, so far, of clear early photographs of

the central mihrab of the Umayyad Mosque. The east door of

all the capitals in this area. If it were to be confirmed, it could

this triple gate may have been kept open for several centuries,

explain why Arabic sources called the transept ‘the dome of the

becoming known as Bāb al-Khaḍrāʾ, the gate offering Umayyad

eagle’ (qubbat al-nisr), as an alternative to the literal translation

rulers discrete access to the qibla from their adjacent palace.89

of the Greek aetos (‘eagle’, a term also used for ‘pediment’)

The most monumental gate inherited from the Roman

proposed by Creswell. At any rate, it seems that the cardinal

temple, Bāb Jayrūn in the east, had massive stairs leading to

axes of the Umayyad Mosque—the temenos gates, the transept,

an exterior portico with columns and an inner vestibule with

and the prayer hall columns immediately flanking it—were

columns. It has already been discussed in Chapter 2. Standing

marked by distinctive columns.

at the opposite end of the courtyard, Bāb al-Barīd (Figure 112)

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86

Finally, in a photograph by Bonfils, the capital of the third

was described by al-Muqaddasī as having a large central door,

column from the transept in the northeast arcade bears an

two side doors, arches, and columns. Its masonry remains

ornament on the abacus that could be either a face or a vegetal

largely intact to this day, even if most of the surface ornament

(or indeed abstract) motif, framed by two leaves with joined

is modern and some of the mosaics are from medieval and

stems (detail of Figure 82 above). This capital is also notable,

modern restorations.90 Al-Muqaddasī’s Bāb al-Farādīs, the north

among those recorded in the nineteenth-century prayer hall,

gate of the mosque, has been known at different times in its

for being markedly smaller than its shaft, which could imply

history as Bāb al-Kallāsa (after the eponymous madrasa and mosque that once stood outside it), Bāb al-Nāṭifiyyin (the

that it was introduced during a later restoration: if the detail was indeed figural, it may not have been noticed at that time.

87

‘Gate of the Confectionery Sellers’), and Bāb al-Sumaysāṭiyya

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153

p  figure 113 (left) Bāb al-Farādīs and base of north minaret. Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 2008.

p  figure 114 (above) West end of the qibla wall from the west. Flood’s Bāb al-Sāʿāt is immediately to the left of the current Bāb al-Ziyāda and its projecting portico. Adnan Nasser, 2019.

equally large ashlars in the first two to three stone courses above may have formed part of the Roman or Umayyad gate, whereas the rest of the elevation is later (Figure 113). Two inscriptions, respectively dated 482/1089 and 503/1110, record restorations around this part of the mosque.94 Today, a further gate near the west corner of the qibla wall, Bāb al-Ziyāda, gives direct access to the prayer hall. In the tenth century, al-Muqaddasī wrote about the same wall: ‘Bāb al-Sāʿāt, in the east corner of the prayer hall, has two unadorned leaves (after a nearby Sufi lodge). It currently consists of a single gate

and arches where experts in legal documents (al-shurūṭiyyūn)

with two leaves that leads directly into the north arcade. If one

and such people sit.’95 Like Bāb Jayrūn, Bāb al-Sāʿāt soon

restores the original rhythm of two columns to one pillar that

acquired supernatural associations. According to a tradition

prevailed on the courtyard arcades, it would have been framed

recorded by al-Rabaʿī (d. 444/1053), at the time of Cain and Abel,

by two columns. Al-Muqaddasī described it thus:

there used to be a rock outside it where offerings were left: if

91

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accepted, these would be instantly consumed by fire, but they The fourth gate is Bāb al-Farādīs, opposite the mihrab. It

would otherwise remain untouched.96 The aura of the mosque is

has two leaves. It is set in arches between two extensions

thereby made to reach back to the very beginning of mankind.

(ziyādatayn), to the right and left. Above it is a modern

More prosaically, al-ʿAlmāwī (b. 907/1501) asserts that Maslama

tower inlaid as already described.

ibn ʿAbd al-Malik’s house was close to this gate.97

92

Finbarr Barry Flood has shown that Bāb al-Sāʿāt must have He therefore saw a single gate below the north minaret,

stood towards the west end of the qibla wall rather than its east

flanked by arcades as it is today. The two ‘extensions’ find an

end.98 He localised it immediately to the west of the present Bāb

echo in later structures that were built along this wall, such as

al-Ziyāda (Figure 114), where an arcade reportedly extended

the Kallāsa and Sumaysāṭiyya. The sides of the current gate

into the city to the south in the mid-nineteenth century. The

are engulfed by later structures, but the massive lintel and

observation seems to be derived from the way ashlars break

93

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 115 (left) West end of the qibla wall from the east, with southwest tower on the left. From Degeorge, La grande mosquée des omeyyades, 118.

p  figure 117 (above) Sealed gate in west half of qibla wall. Adnan Nasser, 2019

p  figure 116 (below) Detail of southwest end of qibla wall, with bust in relief in the sixth stone course above ground level. Ross Burns/ Manar al-Athar, 2009.

along two vertical lines in this area (Figure 115). However, the ashlars of the third stone course cut across these lines, and this whole wall section is coursed with Roman masonry on either side up to the fifth row of ashlars, with consistent tooling traces and patterns of wear. It is only in the sixth and seventh stone courses, several metres above the ground, that ashlars of a lesser height appear, followed by a narrow horizontal gap. The first seven courses seem to be made of the same hard stone, which differs from the softer stone of the Umayyad upper Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

wall. An intervention was thus made over the sixth and seven courses; its nature is unclear but it involved the insertion of an ashlar with a bust in relief, now defaced—probably an image of Jupiter or Christ, types that were related in classical to late antiquity (Figure 116). This work may therefore have been undertaken in the Roman or Christian era. At any rate, given the continuity in the lower courses of masonry, it is far from obvious that a full gate was ever opened here. A walled arch currently stands further to the right, between the present Bāb al-Ziyāda and the central mihrab (Figure 117).99

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155

p  figure 118 (left) Clock of the Bū ʿInāniyya Madrasa. Fez, 758/1357. Postcard, mid-twentieth century. Brussels, Dahan-Hirsch Collection. (right) Section drawing of the clock. From Ricard, ‘L’horloge’, 251.

described by Abū Muhammad ibn al-Akfānī (d. 524/1130) on the authority of Abū Sulaymān ibn Zabr (fourth/tenth century) in this citation preserved by Ibn ʿAsākir: Abū Muḥammad ibn al-Akfānī told us orally, Tammām ibn Aḥmad told us, Abū Naṣr told us, Abū Sulaymān Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn Zabr, the ḥāfiẓ, told us, Abū ʿAbd Allāh ibn Aḥmad ibn Zabr, the qadi, narrated to us: Bāb al-Sāʿāt was named after a timepiece (birkār al-sāʿāt or binkām al-sāʿāt)102 that was made there through which

Its span of about 4  m is between those of Bāb al-Barīd (3.38  m,

each passing hour of the day was known. On it were birds

Figure 112) and Bāb Jayrūn (4.50  m, Figure 21), which could

of bronze, a serpent of bronze, and a crow of bronze.

suggest it was the lunette of a similar gate.

100

However the

Roman-Umayyad street level lies a mere 2.50  m below, a depth

At the end of each hour, the serpent came out, the birds chirped, the crow cawed, and a pebble dropped.103

too shallow for a gate of this width.101 The arch was probably

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designed instead to discharge weight from the wall above and

This piece of mechanical engineering, which must have

open within it the smaller rectangular gate, now walled up,

resembled a Byzantine clock, may arguably have been created

which can be distinguished through its lintel and incomplete

in the Umayyad period.104 One of the best-preserved medieval

side frames. Its size is compatible with al-Muqaddasī’s

clocks is the one inaugurated in 758/1357 at the Bū ʿInāniyya

description of Bāb al-Sāʿāt as having had two leaves. In Umayyad

Madrasa in Fez. It consisted of an upper tier with thirteen

times, it would have been the exact counterpart of Bāb al-Khaḍrāʾ,

hollowed projecting beams through which a string must have

the Roman side door to the right of the transept (Figure 36):

carried a weight; at each hour, a window opened and a weight

both gates share a width of about 2  m and their lintels are

dropped into one of the thirteen bronze bowls below, also

horizontally aligned. Al-Walīd’s reign presented an opportunity

supported by beams inserted into the wall (Figure 118).105 Ibn

for its addition as the wall above was being dismantled and

ʿAsākir’s description suggests that the mechanism at Damascus

rebuilt to provide the new prayer hall with windows.

was more compact, since there was a single bowl, but also

As shown by Flood, the name Bāb al-Sāʿāt (the ‘Gate of the Clocks’ or ‘of the Hours’) was probably derived from a clock

156

mechanically more complex since it involved three automata. Its construction would have required the insertion of timbers

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 119 Sealed gate in west half of qibla wall and surrounding masonry with beam holes. Adnan Nasser, 2019.

originally matched by a similar southeast tower. The Syrian historiographical tradition unanimously attributes the north minaret to al-Walīd.108 While its current elevation is from a later rebuilding, it features a base of massive ashlars up to five courses above the current ground level (Figure 113). These were probably reused from a Roman building, a pattern consistent with the blocking of the Roman gate on the south side carried out under al-Walīd (Figure 35), whereas evidence of such reuse into the wall, and there is indeed a concentration of beam

in later periods is lacking.109

sockets around the walled-up gate (Figure 119). Although their

The north minaret was first described in the late tenth

placement may seem random, several of the square holes are

century by al-Muqaddasī, who wrote about Bāb al-Farādīs,

aligned along three horizontal levels just above the arch.

the adjoining gate of the mosque: ‘Above it is a modern tower

Most of them are probably from shops and other structures

inlaid (muraṣṣaʿa) as already described.’ In the rest of his

that once abutted the mosque, but some may have served to

account, the adjective muraṣṣaʿa is followed each time by

secure to the famous clock. Their distribution would deserve

‘with mosaics’, and is used only to designate this type of work:

to be studied in this light.

al-Muqaddasī therefore saw this minaret clad with mosaics.110

The gate was eventually closed, maybe because the street

The observation is plausible in the context of the Umayyad

gradually came to encroach on it. By contrast, even today,

Mosque. Whatever the height of the original minaret, the

the ground has not risen much above its Roman level near the

surface of its walls (presumably the three walls visible from

southwest corner of the mosque, the site of the current Bāb

the courtyard) would have been but a small addition to the

al-Ziyāda. Its transfer would also have facilitated the inauguration

immense mosaic expanse in the courtyard and prayer hall.

of a new ‘mihrab of the Hanafites’ since this mihrab stands

The inclusion of this decoration would also have contributed

immediately to the west of the sealed gate, at the same distance

to the coherence of the design since three sides of the transept

from the central mihrab as the ‘mihrab of the Companions’ to

facing this minaret across the courtyard were covered with

the east (Ground plan, Figure 1). A ‘maqsura of the Hanafites’

mosaics. Conversely, a minaret clad with mosaics would have

was noted in this side of the mosque by Ibn Jubayr in 581/1184:

represented work on a scale far larger than anything attributed

this might imply the existence of a mihrab by that time.106

to the Abbasids in Damascus; had they established it, this

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would probably not have gone unnoticed in the Syrian sources. The North Minaret

The north minaret might therefore have been a work of

The mosque currently has three minarets: two corner towers

al-Walīd, and the first ashlar courses of the present square

in the southwest and southeast known respectively as the

base may be from this period.

‘west minaret’ (miʾdhanat al-gharbiyya) and the ‘minaret of

The sources state that ‘a quarter’ of the Damascus minaret

Jesus’ (miʾdhanat ʿīsā); and the northern tower known as the

(or, in some versions, the whole structure) was destroyed in

‘minaret of the bride’ (miʾdhanat al- ʿarūs) above the middle

the earthquake of 233/847; this may have been its upper tier,

of the north wall on the axis of the mihrab. The slender

but since damage seems to have mainly occurred along the

shafts in the elevation of both corner towers are medieval

qibla wall, these reports could equally be about one of the

additions.

107

As noted in Chapter 4, the cubical base of the

southwest tower probably belongs to the Christian era and was

corner towers and the north minaret may have remained intact at that date.111

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157

Detail of Figure 3 (left) Vase in front of a mosque, second illuminated page from the Umayyad Qurʾan discovered in Sanaa. p figure 120 (below) Marble fountain in the prayer hall. Christian Sahner, 2008.

Water Reservoirs and Ablution Facilities Water was an essential feature of the mosque, but the traces of its meanderings have been lost to later restorations. In the account of the mosque by al-Balkhī (d. 322/934), one reads: ‘When they want to wash it, the flood gates are opened and water spreads into the mosque, gushing forth to cover all corners.’112 A manuscript variant of al-Muqaddasī’s account echoes this statement: There is, too, in the mosque a spot where an opening is made once every year, so that the mosque is filled with water to the depth of about a cubit, and so the walls and the floor of the mosque are washed. Then another spot is

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opened so that all the water seeps away through it.113

Thus, by the tenth century a canalisation system with flood gates existed in the mosque. Al-Muqaddasī also notes about the four public gates: ‘Each of these gates has a marble ablution fountain in chambers (buyūt) from which water springs, and great exterior fountains in great marble basins.’ This description resonates with the first mosque depiction in the illuminated pages of the Sanaa Qurʾan, which shows two large vases flanking the entrance stairway, presumably to symbolise this function (detail of Figure 3 above).

158

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

Ibn Jubayr gives a detailed account of the canalisation system

Ornament

as he saw it in the twelfth century: In the earliest description of the ornamental programme of the Round this venerated mosque, one at each side, stand

mosque, Ibn al-Faqīh noted: ‘The mosque is built with marble and

four reservoirs, and each is like a large house. They are

mosaic, ceilings of teak, inscriptions of gold and dark blue, and

enclosed by lavatories to all of which runs water from

the mihrab is inlaid with precious gems and astonishing stones.’118

them [the reservoirs]. Lengthways through the court runs

Brief though it is, the statement summarises the main features

an oblong basin of stone (hawḍ min al-ḥajar mustaṭīl)

of the ornament, which will now be explored in greater detail.

with many spouts along its length pouring forth water.

114

Marble Dado The passage continues with a lengthy description of the

Textual sources underline the prominence of marble in the

reservoirs. It mentions that a stone basin with multiple spouts

ornament. In the days of al-Walīd, al-Nābigha already sang

ran across the courtyard—presumably from west to east,

that the mosque had ‘its each approach—adorned by God—

following the natural slope of the terrain. Al-ʿUmarī reports

with Syrian marble lined and robed’ (v. 22). At the turn of the

that maintenance works in the fourteenth century revealed

tenth century, al-Balkhī noted: ‘Its walls are faced with veined

underground vaults to channel water. In a photograph from

marble (rukhām mujazzaʿ)’.119 Al-Muqaddasī remarked a few

the soundings of 1962–63 (Figure 28), one can notice at least

decades later: ‘A most extraordinary thing is the composition of

one pipe, and possibly two or three, running along the axis

its veined marble, with every vein matched to its counterpart.’

between Bāb Jayrūn and Bāb al-Barīd: these seem to be a type

By the twelfth century, at a time when some of the original

of canalisation, although there is no way to ascertain their date.

ornament had been lost to the fire of 1069, Ibn ʿAsākir implied a

115

In the nineteenth century, the prayer hall contained a

distinction between two types of marble, rukhām and marmar:

fountain near the east wall and northeast arcade (Figure 82). This structure has since been stripped of its plaster, exposing

Abū al-Ḥasan al-Khaṭīb narrated to us, my grandfather Abū

white marble (Figure 120). Its date is unknown, although Ibn

ʿAbd Allāh told us, [Abū] ʿAlī al-Ahwāzī told us, ʿAbd al-Wahhāb

Baṭṭūṭa may have been referring to it—or to its predecessor on

ibn al-Ḥasan told us, from Abū al-Ṭayyib Aḥmad ibn Ibrāhīm

the same spot—when he wrote: ‘in the east of the mosque is a

ibn ʿAbādil (?), who said, I heard Aḥmad ibn Ibrāhīm ibn

large enclosure with a water tank for the use of the Africans

Hishām say, I heard my father say:

from Zaylāʿ’ (a port on the Somalian coast). Al-ʿUmarī also

There is no rukhām in the Mosque of Damascus, except for

mentions that there were water basins (sg. ṣaḥn) with running

the two marble panels of the shrine (maqām) which are said

water in different parts of the mosque, including one ‘at the

to be from the Throne of Sheba. All the rest is marmar.120

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116

pillar of the eagle, within the arcade’, which suggests the area of the transept.117 Water was thus omnipresent in the building,

In classical texts, marmar usually denotes ‘white marble’,

constantly flowing into basins of various shapes and sizes at its

as opposed to ‘coloured marble’ for rukhām, so the statement

gates, through the courtyard, and possibly in the prayer hall,

seems to imply that white marble dominated the decoration.121

serving for ablutions but also to refresh and quench thirst.

Even when al-ʿUmarī inverted the terms, asserting that rukhām was white, he was still pressing the same point.122 Thus, for Ibn ʿAsākir, there were only two panels of coloured marble in the whole mosque, and these belonged to the ‘Throne

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159

p  figure 121 (left) Bāb Jayrūn vestibule, southeast wall (left) and south wall (right). Max Van Berchem, late nineteenth to early twentieth century. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem. p  figure 122 (opposite left) Bāb Jayrūn vestibule, southeast wall (left) and south wall (right). K.A.C. Creswell, early twentieth century. Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, EA.CA.107. © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford.

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p  figure 123 (opposite right) Bāb Jayrūn vestibule, southeast wall (left) and south wall (right). Ross Burns/Manar al-Athar, 2008.

of Sheba’, in reference to the legendary Queen Bilqīs, wife of Solomon.

123

The location of these panels is uncertain.

reddish veining (mujazzaʿa bi-jamra), said to have belonged to the Throne of Bilqīs; God knows best’.125 He is referring to a part

A tradition cited by Ibn ʿAsākir places them in the ‘west shrine’

of the transept: perhaps again its mihrab, or the engaged red

(al-maqām al-gharbī), which could suggest one of the two Roman

colonnettes that still stand outside its façade today (Figure 45).

rooms on the west side of the temenos. Al-ʿUmarī, however,

The relationship, if any, between these colonnettes and Ibn

explains it as a reference to the central mihrab, where Ibn

ʿAsākir’s marble panels remains unclear.

Iyās (d. 930/1524) also identifies two small columns from the Throne of Bilqīs.

124

ʿAlī al-Harawī (d. 611/1215) states that ‘in the

mosque are small columns under the Dome of the Eagle with

160

At any rate, Syrian historians converge to portray the marble revetment of the mosque as overwhelmingly white. Ibn Ṣaṣrā (fl. ca. 1400) removes any residual doubts about this question:

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

The walls were covered up to the edge of the mosaic with

gate, is largely original (Figure 122), although a few tiles just

the same marble that is above the mihrab today, and there is

below the mosaic frieze have been lost since the 1930s (Figure

nothing like it at this time. It is called ‘foam of the sea’ (mawj

123). The historical revetment was composed from the base

al-baḥr) by architects, and when a man examines it, he sees

upwards as follows:

that it is one of the wonders and marvels of the world.

126

Lower border: a thin strip of quartered oblong panels of

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Ibn Ṣaṣrā’s ‘foam of the sea’ conjures up quartered, veined,

white veined marble.

white marble: he saw this original decoration above the mihrab,

Lower register: rectangular and lozenge-shaped panels

which implies that marble panelling of a different type had

of various colours.

become predominant by then. Different sections of the dado

Upper register: three rows of quartered marble tiles

were indeed restored in multiple campaigns between 630/1233

interspersed with pilasters, of which the pale yellow

and 730/1330, and a further one took place in 815/1413, not long

one on the east wall seems original (left side of Figure 123).

after he wrote this chronicle.

Upper border: a further row of quartered tiles like those

127

The marble panelling presently in the mosque is almost all

of the upper register

later than the fire of 1893. The only early dado segments are found inside Bāb Jayrūn, the east gate to the mosque (Figure 121). The revetment of its southeast wall, to the right of the central

Despite assertions in the sources about the absence of coloured marble, the greenish-grey lozenges set within the

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

161

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borders above the side door seem to be original, like the small

Creswell (Figure 129).128 The lower registers are largely patched

tilted squares that frame the central door. To the right of the

up with later tilework that can be immediately distinguished

east wall, the lower half of the south wall has chevron motifs

from the marble by its dense patterns. The upper border is

and red rectangles that must belong to a later restoration,

made up of oblong quartered marble panels alternating with

probably Mamluk. Moving to the other side of the central gate,

vertical russet tiles. The upper register has pilasters as at Bāb

the left half of the east wall has been heavily restored since the

Jayrūn. In the register below, above both Roman side gates,

late nineteenth century, although part of its lower tier, including

there is a circular panel of quartered white marble flanked

the green lozenges, may be original, together with the panels to

by two green half lozenges. The same composition with a

the right of the yellow pilaster in the middle tier (see Figure 124

green lozenge at its centre is repeated above the lateral doors

and the blurred record of its earlier state in Figure 125).

leading to the Roman chambers. All four door panels are set in

Extensive marble revetment from Bāb al-Barīd, now lost,

rectangular frames filled with quartered white marble. Judging

can be seen in two paintings by Bauernfeind (Figures 126 and

from the photographs, these different elements all appear to

127), as well as photographs by Van Berchem (Figure 128) and

have been original.

162

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p  figure 124 (opposite) Bāb Jayrūn vestibule, northeast wall. Batoul Diab, 2008. p  figure 125 (right) Bāb Jayrūn vestibule at the turn of the twentieth century. From Rivoira, Moslem Architecture, fig. 85.

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Inside the prayer hall, the central part of the qibla wall also

possibly white or pale yellow as at Bāb Jayrūn. Above this

retained marble panelling until the fire of 1893, as documented

register, instead of the upper border seen in the courtyard,

in photographs by Hakim and Gervais-Courtellemont (Figure

was a frieze identified by Flood as the famed vine (Ar. karma)

130), as well as an oil painting by Frederic Leighton (Figure

of the Umayyad Mosque or a later recreation of it.130 There

10).129 A photograph by Van Berchem shows that many panels

was more white marble panelling in the central tier below the

were lost in the fire of 1893, in the aftermath of which the

colonnettes, with a large square panel containing a lozenge of

lower part of the wall was buried in rubble (Figure 131). As in

coloured marble on either side of the mihrab—a pattern that

Bāb Jayrūn and Bāb al-Barīd, the upper register had quartered

again echoed both Bāb Jayrūn and Bāb al-Barīd. Likewise, the

marble; the pilasters in Leighton’s painting are dark green,

border below, with its russet tiles alternating with quartered

but the photographs suggest that they were of a lighter hue,

marble, resembled the upper border at Bāb al-Barīd.

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163

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164

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p figure 126 (opposite) Bāb al-Barīd, north wall. Oil on canvas, 120.8 × 92.2 cm. Gustav Bauernfeind, 1890. Private collection. Image courtesy of Christie’s images. p figure 127 (right) Bāb al-Barīd, south wall. Watercolour, 57.8 × 41.5 cm. Gustav Bauernfeind, 1889. Munich, Staatliche Graphische Sammlung, Inv.-Nr. 44344 Z.

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165

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p  figure 128 (above) Bāb al-Barīd, south wall. Max Van Berchem, late nineteenth to early twentieth century. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem.

166

p  figure 129 (opposite above) Bāb al-Barīd. K.A.C. Creswell, 1920. Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, EA.CA.612. © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford.

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 130 (opposite below) Central mihrab and minbar. Jules Gervais-Courtellemont, before 1893.

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167

The lower tier of wall panelling around the mihrab, as at Bāb Jayrūn and Bāb al-Barīd, resembles Mamluk ornament

the nineteenth century must have preserved some work from

of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Since there was

these restoration phases. Both the central mihrab area and Bāb

no clean break with early Ottoman work of the sixteenth

al-Barīd also bore traces of haphazard repairs that must date to

131

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with the southwestern side’.135 The marble revetment visible in

century, it could also date to that period.

132

The Mamluk

sultan al-Muʾayyad Shaykh extensively restored the dado of the mosque after the fire of 1410, and it was renovated again under Qaytbay two months before the fire of 1479.

133

later Ottoman times. The Umayyad programme of marble revetment can be summarised as follows, starting from the base:

According

to Ibn al-Ḥimṣī (Damascene, 841–932/1438–1527), ‘the marble

Lower border: Not securely identified.

panelling burned down and collapsed like melting salt’ during

Lower register: Not securely identified but probably

He also reports

dominated by large quartered tiles of veined marble.

that disaster, which he witnessed in person.

134

that in Rabiʿ I 885/May–June 1480, ‘they began the restoration of

Door and mihrab frames: Large rectangular panels centred

the marble dado sponsored by the sultan [Qaytbay], beginning

on a green lozenge or white circle flanked by two green

168

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 131 The central mihrab and wall. Max Van Berchem, after 1893. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem.

Detail of Figure 76. Now lost mosaic panels at the west end of the north courtyard arcade.

lozenges or half-lozenges and filled with white quartered marble; or a series of lozenge tiles in alternating colours, dark against a white ground, then white against a dark ground. Upper register: Veined white marble in small, quartered tiles, interspersed with pilasters with white or pale yellow shafts and white or dark red capitals, and a variety of capital shapes. Upper border: Not securely identified but probably dominated by small quartered tiles of veined marble. The quality and scale of the marble panelling makes it clear that it was a central element of the Umayyad decoration. Variety was key in the impact of the symmetrical waves of quartered veined marble, augmented with accents of colour in the colonnettes and around the gates and two mihrabs. Mosaics Today, Umayyad mosaics survive primarily in the west arcade,

spandrel border band and curly patterns at the centre may

in Bāb al-Barīd and on the transept façade. They were heavily

suggest a vegetal motif.

repaired and expanded in the 1950s and 1960s (see Chapter 1). According to ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Rīḥāwī, the original gold tesserae

of Bāb al-Barīd, one can observe a mosaic fragment with an

were inclined downward at an angle of 35 degrees, a technique

acanthus leaf from which springs a vegetal design (Figure

also used in other Umayyad and early Christian monuments

126). By the time of Van Berchem’s visit a decade later, it had

to make them glitter at ground level.

136

Preliminary results of

disappeared (Figure 128). The degree of verisimilitude in

the scientific analysis being carried out on fragments from the

Bauernfeind’s work makes it probable that this was not his

Louvre suggest that the tesserae were made of glass with gold

imaginary addition but an actual remnant. The date of the

or silver leaf, coloured stones, and seashell fragments cut into a

mosaic cannot be ascertained, although the painting suggests

tear shape.

a quality of execution compatible with the Umayyad period.

137

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In the oil painting by Bauernfeind showing the north side

In the process of studying early photographs and paintings,

A small panel on the east wall of Bāb Jayrūn shows a vine

several lost mosaic panels have come to light. Two of these,

scroll bordering parts of a house, a tree and a monumental

one on the east transept wall (detail of Figure 9, page 135)

building (Figure 132). The scroll is very close in form to one

and the other on the Bayt al-Māl (Figure 102), have already

of Umayyad date on a soffit at Bāb al-Barīd, but is cruder in

been discussed in this chapter. In two nineteenth-century

execution. It may be a later creation based on the original

photographs of the northwest corner, one can discern mosaics

design, although one cannot rule out the work of a less

on the left spandrel of an arch in the north arcade and the

competent eighth-century team.

pillar above (detail of Figure 76 above; see also Figure 77). It is impossible to see the details clearly, but the shape of the

Today, the only mosaics that survive inside the prayer hall are on the inner transept façade, and these are datable to the

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169

p  figure 132 Bāb Jayrūn, detail of southeast wall. From Degeorge, La grande mosquée des omeyyades, 140.

late eleventh or the twelfth century.138 Originally, most of the masonry in this immense space—the upper walls, pillars, spandrels and soffits—was covered with this ornament, of which a few glimpses emerge in the sources. Al-Muqaddasī famously asserted: ‘There is no tree or land that has not been represented on these walls.’ The early Damascene writer Abū Zurʿa (d. 281/895), as cited by Ibn ʿAsākir, stated that al-Walīd’s second successor, his cousin ʿUmar ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz (r. 99–101/717–20), was once preparing to have the qibla wall whitewashed or covered, so some Damascenes told him: ‘This is a likeness of (tuḍāhī) the Kaʿba.’139 The description shared by Ibn Shākir and Ibn Kathīr (both writing in the fourteenth century) echoes this assertion: They depicted with them [mosaics] all famous countries, with the Kaʿba above the mihrab, and the remaining regions to its right and left. They depicted all manner of trees that exist in different lands: beautiful, fruit-bearing, blossoming, and so on.140

In another part of his work, Ibn Kathīr notes again: Its walls were covered with gilt coloured cubes with

were referring to lost mosaics. In either case, the belief that

which were depicted all the countries of the earth: the

mosaics representing the Kaʿba were part of the Umayyad

Kaʿba and Mecca in the mihrab and all countries east and

Mosque was widespread from at least the ninth century

west, each in in its proper place. Every fruit-bearing and

onwards. Since there have been no mosaics around the mihrab

fruit-less tree was also depicted. These were shown in all

for centuries, it is impossible to assess whether the image in

their variety, each in its country and land.141

question was a random cubic structure or whether a depiction

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

of the holy site was indeed intended in the original mosque. The idea of a Kaʿba representation is echoed by later Syrian writers.

142

As recently as the early twentieth century, Henri

The descriptions of al-Muqaddasī, Ibn Shākir, and Ibn Kathīr imply that the mosaics depicted a wide variety of building

Saladin noted in his brief discussion of the transept façade

types and trees, and that these formed coherent landscapes.

mosaics: ‘the shaykhs of the mosque asserted that they

This idea finds a resonance, if inevitably partial, in extant and

represented Mecca and Medina’.

143

However neither holy city

known mosaic panels. The trees on the west arcade and wall

seems to be depicted there (Figure 45). It is possible that,

evoke a temperate climate that seems compatible with the

by that time, the interpretation of an earlier motif above the

Roman-type buildings depicted nearby. By contrast, the later

mihrab had become conflated with this extant panel. Saladin

panels on the east extremity of the north arcade show a boat

may have also simply misunderstood that his interlocutors

with a flat bottom and raised ends that is reminiscent of

170

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 133 Mosaic panel at the eastern end of the north arcade, eleventh century. Judith McKenzie, 2010.

Nilotic barges (Figure 133).144 The spandrel below depicts a

extensively by Flood.145 Its most detailed description is given by

palm tree laden with fruit, which tallies with Ibn Kathīr’s claim

Ibn Ṣaṣrā:

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

of a match between the buildings and plants of a given clime. These panels are datable to the late eleventh to twelfth century,

[It is related] concerning ʿUmar ibn Muhājir, who was

probably the reign of Nūr al-Dīn ibn Zankī (r. 541–65/1146–74),

secretary of the exchequer (kātib bayt al-māl) in the days of

but are likely to reproduce the Umayyad mosaics that they

al-Walīd ibn ʿAbd al-Malik, that he said:

replaced. The lost fragment from the transept side shows a

The expense of the vine which was put above the mihrab

tower different in style from architectural images on the transept

and that of the gold which went into it was computed and

façade and west courtyard (detail of Figure 9, page 135). Such

it was fifty thousand dinars.

elements provide but a small glimpse of what must originally

...

have been a striking vision.

It [the mosque] was inlaid with jewels, sapphires, pearls, coral, carnelian and all sorts of gems which were in the

The Vine Frieze with Precious Stones

vine above the mihrab. This, however, was taken out

A renowned feature of the Umayyad Mosque was a marble

when [the mosque] burned and fell into ruin. This was

frieze that ran around the prayer hall, above the level of

replaced with the glass mosaics and other things which

the dado: the vine (al-karma), which has been studied

are there today.146

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171

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p  figure 134 Interior of the transept facing north. Watercolour, 54.2 × 30   cm. Richard Phené Spiers, 1866. London, Victoria and Albert Museum, E.5-1917. Presented by the Executors of the Artist.

172

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

p  figure 135 The transept, looking towards the central and east courtyard facades. Max Van Berchem, after 1893. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

In Leighton’s painting (Figure 10) and nineteenth-century

If the vine extended to the courtyard façade of the prayer

photographs (Figures 130 and 131), one can see a frieze of vine

hall, it would have run at the level of the imposts.150 This is

scrolls running above the central mihrab and across the east and

unlikely since this façade was open, with no solid separation

west walls of the prayer hall: as first noted by Creswell, this must

between the interior and the exterior; nor was there space for

have been the vine, a later recreation, or a combination of both.

it to run along the inner transept façade because of the

The height of the frieze has been estimated by Flood at 45  cm,

windows. Flood noted a dark patch on the pier to the left of

and other textual accounts agree with Ibn Ṣaṣrā’s assertion that

the transept in the watercolour by Spiers (Figure 134) as its

the original was gilded and inlaid with precious stones.

147

Its

possible continuation, but a photograph by Van Berchem shows

height is about 7.83  m from ground level to the top of the frieze

a matching fragment on the right: it seems to be a carved

itself.148 This must have been its original position, given that

frieze, probably in stucco, like the one on the transept pillars

some of the marble panels below it were original, and that it

(Figure 135). The vine thus probably ran around only the three

corresponds to the height of the extant dado segments, both lost

walls of the prayer hall.

and extant, at Bāb Jayrūn (7.89  m) and Bāb al-Barīd (7.79  m).

149

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173

Detail of Figure 3. Mihrab (left) and minbar (right), second illuminated page from the Sanaa Qur’an.

The Central Mihrab and Minbar

16. You see there chrysolite, glittering sapphire;

From the time of its inception, the mosque had two mihrabs. The older ‘Mihrab of the Companions’, on the east side of

limestone, with purest gold inlaid; 17. Such figures on the qibla-line emerge,

the prayer hall, has been studied in Chapter 2, but it was the

of varied hue and shade!

central mihrab, one of the first to be given a concave form,

151

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that captured the attention of early writers. In the description of the mosque shared by al-Balkhī, al-Iṣṭakhrī and Ibn Ḥawqal,

One must await the visit of Ibn Jubayr in 581/1184, for a more detailed description to emerge:

one reads that al-Walīd had ‘its mihrab gilded and inlaid with precious stones’.152 According to al-Muqaddasī, ‘inside

Its mihrab is the most wonderful in Islam for its beauty

the mihrab and around it are carnelian and turquoise stones

and rare art, and the whole of it gleams with gold. Within

(fuṣūṣ ʿaqīqiyya wa fayrūziyya) of the largest kind’.

it are small mihrabs adjoining its wall and surrounded

153

Thus, the

mihrab echoed the vine frieze above it, in that both were

by small columns, voluted like a bracelet as if done by a

gilded and inlaid with precious stones in red and blue hues.

turner, than which nothing more beautiful could be seen,

The concentration of precious materials in this area was

some of them being red as coral. The glory of the qibla

emphasized by al-Walīd’s court poet, al-Nābigha:

of this blessed mosque and the three cupolas adjoining it,

174

the umayyad mosque of damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

irradiated by the gilded and coloured windows whose

Jaʿfar: Abū Yūsuf Yaʿqūb ibn Sufyān [al-Fasawī] said:

every colour is reflected on the qibla wall as the rays of

I read in wide panels (ṣafāʾiḥ) in the qibla of the mosque of

the sun pour through them, is such as to dazzle the eyes.154

Damascus, in gold on dark blue: ‘In the name of God, the Clement, the Merciful. God,

His description of rows of blind niches echoes the nineteenth-century mihrab, which may have dated to the late

Slumber seizes Him not, neither sleep; to Him belongs

Mamluk or early Ottoman period (Figure 130). It is possible

all that is in the heavens and the earth. Who is there that

that Ibn Jubayr was still looking at the Umayyad mihrab, since

shall intercede with Him save by His leave? He knows

the fire of 1069, according to Ibn Kathīr’s account, primarily

what lies before them and what is after them…’ to the end

ravaged the ceilings and mosaics.

155

Even if it had been

of the verse [Q. 2:255].

recreated, it is likely to have reflected the original, a tendency

‘There is no God but God alone, He has no associate,

observed throughout medieval restorations of the mosque.

we worship but God. Our Lord is God alone, our religion

The mihrab in the second illuminated frontispiece of the

is Islam, and our Prophet is Muḥammad (wa dīnunā

Sanaa Qurʾan has a radial motif in its hood (detail of Figure 3

al-islām wa nabiyyunā muḥammad)—peace be upon

opposite). Given that the mosque of Cordoba had a scallop hood

him. The servant of God al-Walīd, commander of the

in its tenth-century mihrab and that most representations of

faithful, ordered in Dhū al-Qaʿda of the year 86 [October-

niches in this period, from the mosaics of Ravenna through to

November 705] the construction of this mosque and the

those in the courtyard in this mosque, also bear this form, one

destruction of the church which was in it’.

could argue, as proposed by Flood, that it also occurred in the

This was in three wide panels, and in the fourth: ‘Praise

central mihrab at Damascus.

belongs to God, the Lord of all Being, the All-merciful,

156

The Sanaa Qurʾan illumination also shows part of a minbar

the All-compassionate, the Master of the Day of Doom’ to

with steps and a ramp. The sources, both early and late, do

the end of the sura [Q. 1:2-7], then Al-Nāziʿāt [Q. 79] to the

not mention the minbar of the Umayyad Mosque directly.

end, then ʿAbasa [Q. 80] to the end, then ‘When the sun

They only state that Muʿāwiya, ʿAbd al-Malik and al-Walīd

darkens…’ [Q. 81].

tried to have the Prophet’s minbar brought to Damascus from

Abū Yūsuf said:

Medina, and that on the occasion of the hajj, Muʿāwiya had

I returned afterwards and saw that it had been erased.

taken the minbar built for him at Damascus to Mecca, where it

This was before the days of al-Maʾmūn.158

remained for over a century.

157

Either the original mihrab was

unremarkable, or it was destroyed at an early date as a symbol Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

there is no god but He, the Living, the Everlasting.

of Umayyad authority.

Yaʿqūb ibn Sufyān al-Fasawī (d. ca. 277/891) is a plausible source for this information, as he mentions having visited Damascus at the end of 217/832–33, in 219/834–35, and again in

The Mosaic Inscription

241/855–56. His presence there is corroborated by Abū Zurʿa,

The original mosaic inscription was lost at an early date, but its

a Damascene scholar of the period. The account implies that

record by Ibn ʿAsākir, repeated by several later Syrian writers,

the inscription had been erased by the end of al-Maʾmūn’s reign

is worth citing in full:

(198–213/813–33), as explicitly stated in Ibn Shākir and Ibn Kathīr’s version: ‘Then it was erased after al-Maʾmūn came to

Abū al-Qāsim ibn al-Samarqandī told us, from Abū Bakr ibn

Damascus.’159 The assertion is again credible: this caliph erased

al-Ṭabarī, from Abū Ḥusayn ibn al-Faḍl, from ʿAbd Allāh ibn

ʿAbd al-Malik’s name from the mosaic and copper inscriptions

chapter 5 • a Vast expanse of splendour

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

175

at the Dome of the Rock to replace it with his own in Rabiʿ

would have targeted the historical part and erased the name

II 216/May–June 831. He was in Damascus at least twice, in

of al-Walīd in an act of damnatio memoriae. It is also possible

215/830–31 and 216/831–32, near the time of al-Fasawī’s visit.

to envisage an erasure in the ninth century followed by a

Al-Maʾmūn may thus have destroyed or otherwise altered the

restoration in the following decades, but there is no evidence to

inscription around those years. However, a full century later,

support this idea. The question, for now, remains unresolved.

al-Masʿūdī wrote:

Based on the citations given in al-Fasawī’s account, the Umayyad inscription was some 555 words long but unevenly

Al-Walīd ordered that it be written in gold on dark blue

distributed, with 98 words of Qurʾanic and historical text in the

(al-lāzaward) on the wall of the mosque: ‘Our lord is

first three lines and 457 words of Qurʾanic citations in a single

God; we worship but God. The servant of God al-Walīd,

line below.163 The fourth line, in other words, was over thirteen

commander of the faithful, ordered in Dhū al-Ḥijja of the

times as long as each of the first three. While the latter are said

year 87 [November‒December 706] the construction of

to have been on the qibla, which must mean the south transept

this mosque and the destruction of the church that was

wall, the fourth line would have extended along the rest of the

in it’. This text is still written in gold in the mosque of

qibla wall and possibly beyond, into the east and west walls of

Damascus in our time, in the year 332 [943–44].

the prayer hall. If the 98 words of the first three lines occupied

160

the full span of the transept wall on its qibla side (17.28  m),164 Al-Masʿūdī saw the historical part of the inscription intact and the last sentence reads like an implicit refutation of al-Fasawī’s

width of 52.3  cm. The real figure must have been slightly

statement. Both records of the inscription appear to have been

smaller since these panels were probably framed by a border.

made from direct observation but the month and year are

The qibla wall sides to the right and left of the transept

different. There are also differences in the wording: the first

respectively measure 56.45  m and 57.73  m (114.18  m in total),

two phrases (‘Our lord… but God’) are the same, but in reverse

while the transept width is 21.66  m including the engaged

order, and the following two phrases in al-Fasawī’s version

pillars. To these figures, one should add about 60  cm for the

(‘Our religion… in his guard’) are omitted by al-Masʿūdī. These

two lateral sides of each pillar (2.40  m in total).165 The total

last devotional utterings lend al-Fasawī’s account further

span available for the inscription on this wall was thus about

credence since they echo Umayyad phraseology at the Dome of

138.20  m. The lateral walls in the east and west of the prayer

the Rock.162 The historical part is identical in both cases except

hall measure 37.47  m each (74.94  m in total). In order to run

for a minor detail: where al-Fasawī’s text has the word bunyān

across these walls, the inscription had to circle around the

for ‘construction’, al-Masʿūdī gives bināʾ—both words have the

imposts of four engaged pillars, one at the extremity of each

same meaning.

arcade, which appear to be Umayyad and have an average

161

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every line of about 33 words would have had an average word

There are several possible explanations for the discrepancy

depth of about 1.46  m (5.84  m in total).166 If deployed across the

between al-Fasawī’s claim that the inscription had been erased

three walls of the prayer hall, the fourth line would thus have

under al-Maʾmūn and its reported presence in al-Masʿūdī’s

had a length of 218.98  m, hence words 47.9  cm wide on average.

lifetime. Most simply, this could have been a later scribal error,

This is close to the estimate for the first three lines, making it

or an extraneous addition at the end of al-Fasawī’s account.

likely that the average word width in the original inscription

Alternatively, only part of the inscription may have been

was around 50  cm.

destroyed in the ninth century but if this was the case, the evidence from the Dome of the Rock suggests that al-Maʾmūn

176

The long line is described by al-Fasawī as the fourth, in sequence with the first three, which implies that it lay below

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

Detail of Figure 131. Ceramic frieze and carved stone inscription on the qibla wall, to the left of the transept.

In the tenth century, al-Muhallabī wrote about the inscription: One singular thing [about the mosque] is that suras from the Qurʾan were written on its qibla wall in gold mosaic in multiple rows. The first sura was Wa’l-nāziʿāt gharqan [Q. 79:1]. It was made in such a way as to place at the

them, just above the vine and dado. The inscription and vine

level of the qibla, towards the face of the imam, ʿāmilatun

were probably paired, running across the same parts of the

nāṣibatun taṣlā nāran ḥāmiyatan [Q. 88:3–4].170

prayer hall: the qibla wall and two lateral walls. A photograph by Van Berchem taken after the fire of 1893

This brief account matches al-Fasawī’s description in its

shows a fragment of decoration to the left of the transept that

essential features: a mosaic inscription laid out in several

was lost shortly afterwards in the restoration works (detail

lines on the qibla wall and including sura 79; but sura 88 is

of Figure 131 above). It features a Qurʾanic inscription (from

mentioned here instead of suras 80 and 81. Al-Muhallabī

Q. 67:3) running above a ceramic frieze with a geometrical

implies that the imam—in Umayyad times the caliph himself—

design. A further fragment on the same wall appears in the

stood below these verses as he led prayer:

background of an image by Tancrède Dumas from around 1870.167 Its continuation to the right of the transept is visible

Faces on that day humbled, labouring, toilworn, roasting

in a photograph by Gervais-Courtellemont, skirting around

at a scorching fire, watered at a boiling fountain, no food

the gate that led into a small chamber behind this part of the

for them but cactus thorn unfattening, unappeasing

wall (Figure 130). The original position of the vine would have

hunger (Q. 88:2–7).

been markedly higher, above the original marble dado (both elements can be seen in Figures 130 and 131). The level of the later frieze matches the Mamluk to early Ottoman dado on

the inscription as to tell an amusing anecdote. Unlike al-Fasawī

both sides of the qibla. These were created at a time when the

and al-Masʿūdī, there is nothing to indicate that he visited the

mosaic landscapes above had been lost, so there was no need to

mosque, and indeed other details in his account such as the

reach their baseline, and funding was presumably scarcer than

allegedly erroneous qibla, a confused description of the arcades,

in the Umayyad period.

and the measurements, are inaccurate.171 But based on al-Fasawī’s

The tricolour imbricated pattern of the frieze is comparable Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Al-Muhallabī’s aim was not so much to record the contents of

more reliable record of the contents, it is possible that such a

to Mamluk examples; the exact same motif, with a rise of each

layout did occur, for the middle of the fourth line (around word

vertical line in five segments, was recorded in an unspecified

228 of 457) would have fallen at or near this passage:

Cairene monument from this period by Prisse d’Avennes. A similar pattern, but with a three-segment rise, also appears at

But the self-sufficient, to him thou attendest though it

the khānqāh of Sultan Baybars al-Jāshnakīr (709/1310).

is not thy concern, if he does not cleanse himself. And

168

Thus,

the Damascus frieze probably dated to the late thirteenth or

he who comes to thee eagerly and fearfully, to him thou

fourteenth century. Just as the Mamluk metalwork on the

payest no heed (Q. 80:5–9).

mosque gates seems to echo Christian patterns, so the ceramic frieze may have replicated, in the visual language of its time, the initial coupling of the vine with the inscription.

169

Al-Muhallabī’s anecdote may preserve the distorted memory of this (accidental) configuration.

chapter 5  •  A Vast Expanse of Splendour

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

177

p  figure 136 Coffered ceiling of west courtyard arcade, Great Mosque of Sanaa. James Allan, 1984.

At the Dome of the Rock, the inscription on the inner face of the octagonal arcade has a total of 212 words spread over 128.35  m, which corresponds to a width of about 60.5  cm per word. The inscription on the outer face has 180 words spread over 125.91  m, hence an average width of about 70  cm per word.172 Hence, the letters at Damascus were fifteen to thirty percent smaller, even though the whole inscription was slightly longer at about 270  m, as opposed to 254  m at the Dome of the Rock. The height of the latter inscriptions is about 30  cm, or some 35 mosaic cubes.173 If it had similar proportions, the one

like) of which a part has been eaten’, which in the present

at Damascus would have been 21 to 26  cm tall—about half the

context could imply corbelling.179 This detail remains unclear

height of the vine.

but suggests that a variation in the ornament occurred at the

In sum, it is likely that the mosaic inscription ran across the

junction of the wall and ceiling. According to Ibn Ṣaṣrā, ‘its

three walls of the prayer hall, coupled with the vine below and

ceiling was not in its present state, but all of it was painted

that it had slightly smaller letters than the extant inscriptions

(madhūna) with gold, silver, lapis lazuli, and other things’.180

at the Dome of the Rock. Its position 8.30  m above the ground

These brief texts converge to imply that the ceiling was

was about 1.50  m lower than at the Dome of the Rock and it

wooden and decorated, probably with gold and other colours.

was better lit, so it may well have been more legible.

They point to a flat ceiling rather than exposed rafters, without

174

being entirely clear about its appearance. The description of Ceilings

Ibn Shākir and Ibn Kathīr is more detailed: ‘Under al-Walīd,

Wooden ceilings and roof beams are eminently prone to loss

they made the ceiling in the form of ridges (jamalūnāt); its

through fire. Today, no fragments of the Umayyad ceilings

inner part (bāṭinuhā) was horizontal (musaṭṭaḥ) and corbelled

survive in any part of the mosque, and early written sources

(muqarnaṣ) with gold.’181 According to lexicographers of their

are elusive on the subject. Ibn al-Faqīh states that ‘its ceiling

era, a muqarnaṣ ceiling is one ‘built like a ladder’, hence

is of teak’, the same timber cited in al-Nābigha’s evocation of

its translation above as ‘corbelled’.182 Ibn Kathīr says more

the inner dome (v. 20). The ceiling is said to have partly split

explicitly in his discussion of the fire of 1069 that ‘all its

in the earthquake of 131/748, at the very end of the Umayyad

ceilings used to be gilded and coffered (mubaṭṭana), with ridges

175

period.

176

Nevertheless in the tenth century, al-Muqaddasī

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could still say about the arcades: ‘All ceilings are ornamented (muzawwaqa) in the finest manner.’

177

According to al-Balkhī

(jamalūnāt) above’.183 Taken together, these texts clearly point to a coffered ceiling. Remarkably, one such structure may survive from the reign of al-Walīd in the west courtyard arcade of the

and al-Iṣṭakhrī, ‘the pourtour of the ceiling is all muktab/

Great Mosque of Sanaa in the Yemen (Figure 136). But its date

mukattab in gold, and it surrounds the whole mosque wall ...

is disputed as it has also been attributed the Ṣulayḥid queen

Its ceiling is of gilded wood’.

178

In Arabic, the words muktab

Arwā bint Aḥmad in 525/1131.184 In either case, it can serve as

and mukattab are only distinguished by a small orthographic

an illustration of the type, given the rarity of Byzantine-era

sign (a shadda) and could thus easily have been confused

wooden ceilings.185 It was made by resting longitudinal beams

in the course of scribal transmission. Muktab means ‘sewn’,

on transversal ones to create three stepped vertical recesses

which could evoke an interlace or a repeat pattern, whereas

and carving part of their surface with vegetal and geometrical

Edward Lane defines mukattab as ‘(a bunch of grapes and the

motifs. The square coffers were painted in a variety of patterns

178

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

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p  figure 137 Inner transept façade, with detail (above) of upper masonry. Max Van Berchem, after 1893. Geneva, Fondation Max van Berchem.

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179

Detail of Figure 131 (left) Corbel on qibla wall, at centre of transept. The corbel is in the middle of the first stone course above the central window.

p  figure 138 (below) Mosque lamp in the Sanaa Qurʾan, early eighth century. Ursula Dreibholz.

also shows three holes in the wall that must have held tie-beams; a fourth hole can be seen to the right in another photograph from the same series. A matching corbel and hole are on the opposite side of the transept, above the mihrab (detail of Figure 131 above). The hole is bricked up, which shows that it belonged to an earlier phase of building and was no longer in use by the nineteenth century. The lack of similar masonry holes at other heights suggests that this was the level of the Umayyad ceiling. Al-Nābigha mentions in his poem that ‘precious silver curves up high, resplendent on the awed beholder’ (v. 19), thereby implying that this material was used in the elevation, probably the inner dome or its circular base. Ibn Ṣaṣrā also mentions silver among the pigments applied to the wooden ceilings.187 Lamps, Lighting, and Incense In the days of al-Walīd, al-Nābigha described the dome of the mosque as furnished ‘with lamps whose oil is gold’ (v. 21), seemingly to suggest transparent containers. The Sanaa Qurʾan illuminations show, hanging from the centre of the arch in both mosques, a round glass lamp with two green handles, a wick holder and a lit wick (Figure 138). The lamps, which are attached to the arch by a cord strung with small green and yellow disc hinges and a hook at the apex, are coloured in gold, either to imply that the glass was gilded or to convey the light shining from them. Ibn al-Faqīh states that the Mosque of Damascus had six hundred gold chains for its lamps, a figure repeated by

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several later authors.188 It is unclear whether he assumed that based on a circle inscribed inside a square. Carved Umayyad

these were Umayyad, but the order of magnitude is consistent

ceiling beams and panels also survive from the southern

with the two hundred and ninety lamps that Ibn Zabāla (d. after

part of the prayer hall at Sanaa and from the Aqsa Mosque in

199/814) reported for the smaller Umayyad Mosque of Medina.189

Jerusalem, and these show a range of motifs shared with other

Ibn Kathīr and Ibn Shākir also assert that the original mosque

media in this period.

at Damascus had chains of gold and silver for its lamps.190

186

In the nineteenth century, the transept appears to have had a

The mosque had about one hundred and thirty large arches

flat wooden ceiling on either side of the dome, as can be seen in

from which lamps could be suspended.191 This figure should be

a watercolour from 1866 by Richard Phené Spiers (Figure 134).

multiplied by three if the two smaller arches or windows above

A photograph of its inner façade taken by Van Berchem after

each large arch are included, adding up to a total of some four

the fire of 1893 shows a stone corbel below the upper window

hundred lamps. Of course, it is also possible that lamps were

(Figure 137), matching the level of Spiers’ ceiling. The photograph

hung in ways that are less obviously related to architecture,

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p  figure 139 Painted column from the Aqsa Mosque, Jerusalem. From Hamilton, Structural History, Pl. III.4.

for example across arcades, from the ceiling, or on freestanding posts. According to Shams al-Dīn al-Anṣārī al-Dimashqī (654–727/1256–1327), ‘at the night of the middle of Shaʿban, twelve thousand lamps are lit [in the mosque] with fifty Damascene qinṭārs of olive oil, without counting what is burnt in the madrasas’.192 His statement may be hyperbole, but it implies that in the Mamluk period, lamps were still lit in great numbers and tons of olive oil consumed on special occasions. The more sober figure of six hundred lamps given in the ninth century may or may not be an exaggeration, but it implies extensive lighting on a daily basis. The refilling of oil lamps involved significant human and material logistics, as suggested in an early source about the Dome of the Rock.193 Al-Badrī also wrote that in Umayyad times, ‘a row of censers was placed on columns in its courtyard [of the mosque]; its servants were tasked with this, not abating night or day until incense could be smelled two farsakhs [about 12  km] away’.194 The claim is again inflated and unreferenced, but it echoes a practice also attested at the Dome of the Rock.195 There and in two of al-Walīd’s other mosques, the rebuilt Prophet’s Mosque and the Great Mosque of Sanaa, the sources report that the walls were regularly anointed with fragrance (khalūq)— specifically the marble dado at Medina, and the mihrab with its decorative plasterwork at Sanaa. The same treatment was applied to the rock that gave its name to the Dome of the Rock and to the Kaʿba in Mecca.196 Thus, incense burning and the rubbing of fragrance are likely to have also occurred at the

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Umayyad Mosque of Damascus. Paint on Capitals and Columns

mosque is decorated with wavy lines in white, green, red, and

Al-Muqaddasī states that, in his day, the column capitals of the

dark blue. Rich polychrome decoration is consistent with late

mosque were gilded. An Umayyad painted capital does survive

antique aesthetic tastes, as attested by the painted columns at the

from the late Umayyad palace of Khirbat al-Mafjar, and in the

Red Monastery near Sohag in Egypt (fifth to eighth century).198

architectural frontispieces of the Sanaa Qurʾan, the capitals and

During al-Walīd’s rebuilding of the Prophet’s Mosque at Medina,

column bases of both mosques are coloured gold (Figure 3).197

the stone columns in the prayer hall were plastered white to

The column shafts in these illuminations are painted with

imitate marble, even though actual marble was used in the

chevrons in alternating red and green, or red and dark blue.

courtyard, and the capitals were gilded.199 Three stone columns

The pair of columns that frames the transept in the first

with painted plaster datable to between the mid-eighth and

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181

twelfth centuries have also been discovered at the Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem (Figure 139).

Initially, the sheer openness of the structure would have struck the beholder and induced the sense of a unified space

200

In view of this existing tradition, it is conceivable that the

that drew the gaze towards the qibla. The impression of size

columns in the prayer hall at Damascus were originally painted.

was magnified by the transept, gable, and dome that towered

The extensive use of costly marble columns might suggest

over the whole temenos enclosure. Inside this central part

otherwise, but paint on a smooth marble surface would have

of the prayer hall, natural light flooded in through multiple

been amongst the first elements of the decoration to fade away.

windows. The glittering surface ornament was concentrated

Al-Muqaddasī, the earliest author to describe the columns, states

around the bejewelled mihrab, the vine, four lines of mosaic

that the prayer hall had ‘black (sūd) polished columns as its

inscription, and coloured marble columns. These accents in the

supports in three very wide rows’. In ancient Greek and Roman

decoration and structure did not interrupt the open vistas, but

statues, white marble commonly served as a base for richly

they did put a marked emphasis on the transept as an honorific

painted decorations, and in at least some cases, a wax-based

canopy for the caliph.

coating was applied for both protection and added lustre.

201

Such

Seeing the mosque was a dynamic experience. The light

a treatment might explain why al-Muqaddasī saw the columns

reflected off the glass mosaics, jewels, and marble varied

as ‘polished’ and ‘black’—for the painted surface would have

throughout each day and, with the changing trajectory of

required regular makeovers to remove the accumulated dust

the sun, throughout each season too. Water burst forth in

and lamp soot on its coating. Thus, an arrangement of painted

multiple basins. As one walked around the building, its various

columns should be envisaged, though it cannot be proven.

architectural forms overlapped and shone in ever-changing ways.202 At night, the flickering light of hundreds of oil lamps

pppp

gave new life to its imagined landscapes and myriad details. This must indeed have been a sight to take the breath away.

In 715, standing in one corner of the Umayyad Mosque, one

One can better understand the trope reported in the ninth

would have encountered a monument substantially different

century by Ibn al-Faqīh: ‘One of the wonders of the Mosque

from the one that stands today. This was, first of all, an open

of Damascus is that even if a man stayed there for a hundred

space, the covered prayer hall separated from the courtyard

years, he would ceaselessly discover new marvels.’203

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only by arcades with curtains, rather than doors. From any

Later Syrian writers, when they expressed their admiration

vantage point, the gaze could roam unimpeded through the

for the building, could still see fragments of the original

vast expanse of the temenos, embracing arches, columns,

scheme, in a vision that became increasingly dense with

the mosaic panels, and the richly ornate qibla wall. The

historical and mythical memories. As the years went by,

courtyard arcades featured Roman columns of varied hues,

damage and disasters prompted restorations in different parts

with a prevalence of grey. Above the gilded, mostly Corinthian

of the fabric. Collapsed materials were routinely stockpiled for

capitals sprang masonry entirely covered with mosaics. The

reuse. Ibn Kathīr noted that in the aftermath of the fire of 1069

same scheme continued inside the prayer hall: moving into

‘all the fallen marble and wood was stored in the four shrines in

this covered space and looking up, one discovered coffered

the east and west’.204 This practice, which endured for centuries,

teak ceilings, a wooden inner dome, and the famed vine,

seems to have been motivated not only by expediency, but also

a magnificent carved marble frieze inlaid with precious

by a reverence for the materiality of the building. The same

stones, coupled with a mosaic inscription in gold script

attitude was apparent when sections of the ornament had to be

over a dark blue (or dark green) ground.

created anew, with original compositions typically replicated

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-13 14:49:12.

in the visual language of the day, as with the sheathing of the temenos gates (Figure 53). Thus, most historical interventions on the mosque were made with an awareness of its palimpsestic nature as viewed through the lens of the age. Endowments also tied the daily upkeep of the mosque to the economic life of Damascus and its environs.205 Its place at the heart of the urban fabric was thus spun like a thread across thousands of ordinary days. Uneventful by definition, these were seldom recorded but occasional glimpses emerge, as in Ibn Baṭṭūṭa’s fourteenth-century evocation of the courtyard: Here, the people of the city gather in the evenings: Qurʾan reciters, hadith experts, passers-by, strolling about after the last evening prayer. When an important person—a theologian or some such—meets a friend, they hurry towards each other and incline their heads.206

Or when al-Badrī noted in the fifteenth century: This courtyard is a most beautiful sight. Here local people gather for leisure. Every evening, you see them coming and going from Bāb al-Barīd to Bāb Jayrūn until the end of the last prayer. Some chat with their friends; some read. This is their habit, night and day, especially the former. Futile people call them ‘the tillers’.207

The mosque thus became, in the course of its long history, a living organism that not only evolved, but was also Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

symbiotically linked to the life of the city and its inhabitants.

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183

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6 ‘Jewelled Embellishments Dazzle’: The Mosque and Umayyad Aesthetics

I

n 715, the last scaffolding was removed from al-Walīd’s new monument just as the caliph, a man of about forty years, was in his death throes. Stepping over

the threshold of the temenos, the inhabitants of Damascus discovered a mosque of dazzling scale and opulence—columns and arches as far as the eye could see, clad with varied marbles and glittering mosaics, the whole scheme crowned by a majestic dome. The Muslim call to prayer and the Qurʾan were once again heard within the Roman walls, this time without the echo of Christian chants. Soon, the rhythms of ordinary life returned to this transformed space. Muslims came to

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pray, sermons were delivered, and heated political exchanges sometimes erupted during the weekly congregation.1 Religious scholars taught their followers at different locations in the courtyard, as they had done in previous decades. For much of the day and night, passers-by strolled about, chatted, and marvelled at what they saw. To eighth-century eyes, the monument, with its multiple p  Detail of the river mosaic on the west courtyard wall. Bernard O’Kane/Alamy, 2007.

departures from the norms of both mosque and church architecture, must have exuded novelty. These innovations also make it possible for us to envisage more precisely the

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

185

agency of Umayyad patrons, and to revisit the long-debated

represented in the workforce. The residents of Damascus

meaning of the mosaics. Having considered these issues, I will

would have encountered these workers during their daily life,

widen my focus to encompass the whole ornamental scheme,

conversing with them, selling them their daily bread and oil,

taking as a guide al-Walīd’s panegyrist al-Nābigha al-Shaybānī,

worshipping alongside them in their churches before they

whose verses have given this chapter its title. From these

eventually left again after six months, a year, or longer, only

various threads, there will emerge a convergence of aesthetic

to be replaced by others. Having been enrolled—willingly or

sensibilities between the visual perception of the mosque and

not—in al-Walīd’s project, this labour force reflected the long

aural reception of the Qurʾan.

arm of the Muslim administration. Every town and village, in Egypt and several other provinces, could now be made to submit goods, money, and labour towards the construction

The Novelty of al-Wal d’s Building

of Umayyad monumental buildings. Those returning home after these assignments spread news of the projects far and

Embodying Power

wide across the empire, thereby inadvertently contributing

By founding the Umayyad Mosque, al-Walīd enacted two

to their notoriety.

fundamental assertions of power. First, he carried out the demolition of the church within the temenos against the will

a chain of command headed by a group of supervisors, some

of local Christians, thereby upsetting the balance of power

of whose names are recorded in the Aphrodito Papyri and

between Umayyad ruling élites and this essential constituency.

later sources. Several anecdotes cited in Arabic historical texts

The Byzantine Emperor, Justinian II (r. 685–95, 705–11), was

attribute interventions in the details of the project to al-Walīd

part of this horizon, as asserted by al-Walīd’s own court poets.

himself, for instance the construction of the dome and the

Since the 690s, he had become embroiled in the life of both

lead roofing.3 These entertaining stories cannot be taken at

Christian and Muslim buildings at Damascus, Jerusalem,

face value, yet the idea is plausible. Al-Walīd’s panegyrists

Medina, and probably Mecca, under financial and other

emphasize his direct involvement in the destruction of the

conditions that became increasingly exorbitant as the years

church, and their verses imply that the stakes were raised by

went by. The very existence of the mosque attested to these

this event, with the new mosque coming to reflect the standing

shifting power dynamics, as did the inability of the Christian

of the young caliph. Given that his Damascene palace, the

community in Damascus to make the caliph change course.

Khaḍrāʾ, abutted the site, his role might have gone beyond the

Victorious military campaigns brought about an influx of

formulation of general guidelines—the level of involvement

surplus income and prisoners, some of whom will have been

suggested by the sources for his other mosques.4 Damascus

skilled craftsmen, to be exploited at will.

stood out, both practically and symbolically, because of its

2

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During the months spent on site, craftsmen worked under

For contemporaries, the building also embodied the growing

proximity to the heart of caliphal power.

reach of Umayyad power networks within the empire. The mosque could only stand because al-Walīd was in a position

Work Procedures

to mobilise resources and skills from several of his provinces

In the light of these factors, it is tempting to see the mosque

during the decade it took to complete it. Direct evidence

as the projection in space of al-Walīd’s vision, but the reality

of this pattern has emerged, for Egypt, from the Aphrodito

was of course more complex than this. At least two phases of

Papyri, and for northern Iraq, from the palatial city of Anjar

interaction had to take place before work on the ground could

near Damascus, although other regions must also have been

begin: from caliph to supervisor and supervisor to craftsmen,

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

p  figure 140 Mosque of Wasit, ca. 84/703. From Safar, Wasit, fig. 11.

not to mention the likely (but undocumented) role of foremen and other intermediaries. The desires of the patron, whether general or detailed, had to be articulated by his entourage, then communicated to workers who spoke Aramaic, Greek, or Coptic rather than Arabic. Most of these exchanges would have been oral, although pattern books, sketches, and written notes are attested in late antique papyri from Egypt and may also have been used in Umayyad times.5 According to an early account later compiled by al-Wāsiṭī (writing before 410/1020), when al-Walīd’s father ʿAbd al-Malik decided to build the Dome of the Rock, he asked craftsmen ‘to provide him with [its] description (ṣifa) and form (samṭ)’.6 This implies that some type of model was produced, whether it was the building in miniature or simply drawings. In Damascus, documents may similarly have

Reshaping Building Types

served to preview architectural designs, mosaic motifs, and

The earliest mosque for which there is securely datable archaeology is the one built at Wasit, when this city was

repeat patterns for woodwork and carved marble. Forms could also be sketched onto walls or plaster to show them in real size.

founded around 84/703 as the new capital of Iraq. It predates

Direct evidence of these intermediary procedures, if they did

the Mosque of Damascus by a mere two or three years, but its

occur, is lacking.

social and architectural contexts were different: this was

7

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The actual building process must have been less linear than

a monument typical of Iraq, with its newly founded Arab

even this outline suggests. The patron could revisit his ideas

Muslim settlements and recent Sasanian past. Its patron,

or be urged to do so by his craftsmen in the face of practical

al-Hajjāj ibn Yūsuf, the governor of the eastern provinces,

constraints. If dissatisfied with an aspect of the work, he and

was arguably the second-most powerful figure of the Umayyad

his supervisors could request modifications. Craftsmen could

administration after the caliph. Soundings carried out in

likewise reframe their own understanding of a brief—be it

Wasit from 1936 to 1942 revealed remains of four successive

patterns for window grilles, the shape of arches, or mosaics.

mosques, the first of which was Umayyad. With its qibla

The mosque was thus the result of repeated formulations of

misaligned, it lies at a different angle from later buildings and

requests, chains of responses, and accommodations between

is easy to distinguish even in photographs. The mosque was

patrons, craftsmen, and their intermediaries. By identifying

a square building (103.5 x 104.3  m) with a central courtyard

ways in which the building departed from established norms,

surrounded by three arcades and an open prayer hall with

both from a Muslim and a Christian perspective, one can

columns (Figure 140). It was built of materials common in Iraq:

edge closer to an understanding of the vision that guided its

baked bricks and gypsum mortar for the walls, red brick tiles

construction. The Damascus mosque has often been compared

for the floors, and columns composed of sandstone cylinders

with churches, from which it borrowed its vocabulary of

joined by iron rods bedded in lead. Different types of vegetal

forms and ornament. Yet for an eighth-century Muslim, it also

and geometrical repeat patterns were carved in relief on some

represented the transformation of another building type:

of the shafts (Figure 141).8 The prayer hall was five aisles deep.

the early mosque.

A fragment of pipework in the courtyard could suggest the existence of an ablution basin.

chapter 6  •   ‘Jewelled Embellishments Dazzle’

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

187

p  figure 141 Column from the Umayyad Mosque of Wasit, ca. 84/703. Baghdad Museum. From Degeorge, La grande mosquée des omeyyades, 40.

Thus, the evidence suggests a simple open plan enlivened by the carved—and possibly painted—ornament of the columns. Beyond Wasit, our knowledge of mosques predating al-Walīd’s reign is almost entirely derived from texts. Ziyād ibn Abīhi, al-Hajjāj’s predecessor as governor of Iraq, rebuilt the mosques of Basra (45/666) and Kufa (50/671), which were described by later sources from direct observation. According to alBalādhurī, the mosque of Basra was made of baked bricks and gypsum mortar with a five-aisle deep prayer hall resting on composite stone columns, and it had a teak ceiling.11 Ziyād’s mosque at Kufa was noted for the height of its roof (30 cubits, or around 15  m, according to al-Ṭabarī), which was carried by massive columns made of stacked cylinders as at Wasit.12 The prayer hall was again five aisles deep with a teak ceiling. In the twelfth century, Ibn Jubayr observed that its columns had ‘no arches over them’, so it must have had a trabeated ceiling.13 A double colonnade surrounded the courtyard. Carsten Niebuhr, who saw its ruins in 1765, measured it at about 104  m to one side: the same size as at Wasit.14 This group of three mosques at Basra, Kufa, and Wasit was built between about 665 and 703. It appears to reflect a common typology, with some variations: a square plan with a five-aisle deep hypostyle prayer hall opening onto a courtyard surrounded by colonnades. It is not known whether similar features were applied to mosques outside Iraq. The most substantial piece of evidence for the Syrian region is a description datable to the 670s attributed to ‘Arculf’ by Adomnán (d. 704), abbot of Iona in Scotland. It states that on Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

The columns in the area of the mihrab must have supported

Temple Mount in Jerusalem,

a relatively heavy superstructure, given that they had wider foundations than in the rest of the prayer hall (2.60  m, as

the Saracens now have a quadrangular prayer house. They

opposed to 1.60  m). Since only part of the first three aisles

built it roughly by erecting upright boards and great beams

facing the mihrab was excavated, we do not know whether

(magnis trabibus) on some ruined remains. The building, it

architectural emphasis was placed on this area or extended

is said, can accommodate three thousand people at once.15

9

to the whole maqsura, the space between the mihrab and courtyard façade. The mihrab itself consisted of a diminutive

The description points to a building devoid of lavish

rectangular wall recess rather than a concave niche, a feature

ornament, and the Latin term trabibus, commonly translated

that was probably first introduced in al-Walīd’s mosques.

as ‘beams’, may imply wooden columns.16 Although the

10

188

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

p  figure 142 Bāb al-Barīd mosaics, with bushy trees. Alain George, 2010.

direct source of the account is subject to debate, there can

a person looking towards the qibla in Damascus, the spacing

be little doubt that it reflects actual observation and that a

between colonnades was more than twice as wide as at Wasit.20

relatively modest building stood in Jerusalem.17 Likewise, as

Together with the use of arches, this increased the airiness of

the discussion in Chapter 2 has shown, the first mosque at

the building, opening up sweeping views from one end of the

Damascus must have been unexceptionable.

temenos to the other.

Mosques from Iraq thus stand as the most reliable evidence for what Jeremy Johns has called the ‘concept of the mosque’

perpendicular to it, and were framed by the transept and

in the first decades of Islam. The patrons of the Umayyad

a Roman wall at either end, which allowed them to relieve

Mosque of Damascus were clearly seeking to reproduce the

the weight of the central dome; they were also turned into a

same general template, with a courtyard surrounded by three

dynamic feature by the mosaic decoration of their spandrels,

arcades and an open transition into the hypostyle prayer hall.

possibly complemented by waxed paint on the shafts. As

However, the Roman temenos imposed a design with a wide

one walked through the mosque, ever-changing alignments

breadth. The mosque itself reflected the building tradition

between rows of regularly spaced columns and arches emerged.

of Greater Syria, which had until recently belonged to the

Assuming that the mosaics on these arches echoed extant

Byzantine realm: stone was used instead of brick, round arches

Umayyad sections of the west courtyard arcade (Figure 142),

served to raise the roof and open up space, and these were

various trees and edifices would have appeared, giving the

supported by fine Roman marble columns available in plentiful

beholder the sense of walking through fertile landscapes

supply as spolia.

scattered with buildings.21 Few churches appear to have been

18

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The arcades ran parallel to the qibla, rather than

While these choices were natural in the context of

decorated with mosaics on the spandrels and had they been,

Damascus, others point more distinctly to the agency of the

the orientation of the basilica towards the apse would not have

patrons. The prayer hall has a depth of 38  m, which is a third

lent itself to such overlaps.

larger than at Wasit (about 28  m). Within this space, only three 19

To opt for an open arcade between the courtyard and the

colonnades stood between the qibla wall and the courtyard,

prayer hall was to place the unity of the space within the

as opposed to five at Wasit, Basra, and Kufa. As a result, for

temenos above more practical concerns, such as shelter from

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

189

the elements. These were made less pressing by the brevity of

Recasting Mosaic Forms

Damascene winters, and by the fact that the prayer hall façade

The mosque was built mostly by Christian hands and it shared

was north-facing, hence naturally sheltered from the sun.

a repertoire of forms with church architecture, but recast to

Several texts suggest that curtains served to screen this space.

create a new impact. Beyond the structural elements already

The open façade marked a departure from the architecture

mentioned, its most striking aspect was the surface ornament

of churches, which were entered through doors at a few key

with its sequence, from the ground up, of large marble floor

locations. It was probably derived from earlier mosques,

tiles, a dado of quartered marble, wall mosaics, and coffered

as at Wasit.

ceilings. The mosaics, in particular, would have looked familiar

Having opened up the prayer hall through these various features, the makers of the mosque placed at its heart a

The Great Mosque of Damascus is the second oldest Islamic

transept that soared to twice the height of the adjacent covered

monument, after the Dome of the Rock, to preserve wall

aisles and broke their rhythm, a contrast accentuated by the

mosaics. Some of the other mosques built or rebuilt by al-Walīd

merlons that lined the façade of the prayer hall and concealed

— the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina, the Masjid al-Haram in

its gable roofs. By contrast, the maqsura at the Umayyad

Mecca, the Aqsa in Jerusalem, the Mosque of ʿAmr in Fustat,

mosques of Wasit, Jerusalem, Medina, Fustat, and Sanaa was

and the Qubaʾ Mosque in Medina—featured this medium,26 but

emphasized through internal features rather than a sharp

it was deployed on a larger scale at Damascus than in any other

elevation of the roof. The massive Damascene transept stood

Muslim building: across the enormous span of the four temenos

out uniquely and served to underscore the centrality of the

walls above dado level, on the arcades, prayer hall façade,

maqsura. With its towering dome, it effectively served as an

courtyard arcades, enclosure walls, transept exterior, including

honorific canopy for the caliph, who would have entered it

its two side walls, and probably on the north minaret. Only a few

through a separate door to lead prayer and deliver sermons,

of the greatest churches, such as Hagia Sophia at Constantinople,

part spiritual and part political, from the minbar.

could claim to rival the sheer extent of this work.

22

The maqsura at Damascus thus articulated in spatial terms

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yet uncannily different to an eighth-century observer.

The origin of the mosaicists at Damascus has been

what court panegyrics expressed through such metaphors for

debated by modern scholars, who have variously ascribed it

Umayyad patrons as ‘pole’ or ‘tent peg’: the ideological claim

to Constantinople, Greater Syria, and Egypt. This complex

that the caliph was a celestial axis guiding the community of

question is unlikely to ever receive a straight answer. Indeed,

believers on the righteous path.23 Al-Walīd was lauded by

even though the foregoing study has suggested that Justinian II

al-Nābigha as ‘the caliph of God through whom clouds of rain

may have contributed, under duress, to Umayyad building

are sought’ and by al-Farazdaq as ‘the shepherd of God on earth’.

projects, one should not infer that the work of craftsmen

Crafting a similar image within a mosque setting, Ibn Qays

from Constantinople is reflected in extant panels. Given the

al-Ruqayyāt evoked al-Walīd’s father ʿAbd al-Malik as ‘the deputy

sheer scale of the mosque, multiple teams must have been

of God on his minbar’. The transept, by its sheer bulk and height,

active across the site, and Umayyad patrons probably sought

disrupted the egalitarian ethos implied by the vast, open space at

to gather skilled craftsmen from every potential source in

eye level. It carried subliminal echoes of the church it replaced,

their territories or beyond.27 This is not the place to revisit this

thereby acting as a victory monument, and placed the caliph

issue: my present aim is rather to identify ways in which the

not only at the heart of the community of believers, but also on

mosaics at Damascus diverged from the usual practice of the

a vertical axis leading to the dome. The structure thus embodied

craft.28 In order to do so, they need to be considered against the

in stone his station as a connecting node with the divine.25

background of Christian mosaics.

24

190

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

p  figure 143 South lunette mosaic, monastery of Mar Gabriel. Kartmin region (southeastern Turkey), sixth century. Liz James, 2013.

The passage of time has left more or less fragmentary wall mosaics in about two hundred churches built between the

coast and Egypt were home to some of the world’s major glass

fourth and eighth centuries, primarily in the regions between

production centres and, in addition, tesserae could be reused

Italy and Egypt.29 Most survive as relatively small panels; where

from older monuments.32 Floor mosaics were more widely

larger compositions remain, they are usually in the apse, as in

commissioned than wall mosaics, having been a sought-after

churches at Rome, Ravenna, Poreč, Sinai, and Cyprus, hence

feature in domestic buildings since antiquity, and later in

in a quarter-spherical form that is not replicated at Damascus.

churches. By virtue of their location, they were more prone to

Buildings that preserve larger expanses of decoration are

survive the decay of their original building than wall mosaics

concentrated at Ravenna, Thessaloniki, and to a lesser extent

and have thus left more extensive remains.

Constantinople, where the extant sixth-century fragments at

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was clearly not an issue for Damascus, as the Syro-Palestinian

The preserved mosaics at the Umayyad Mosque represent

Hagia Sophia, while substantial, only reflect secondary aspects

only a fraction of the original programme, hence of its

of the original programme. Monuments at Sinai, Cyprus, and a

repertoire of forms. Most motifs in the extant panels can

small church at the Monastery of Mar Gabriel near Kartmin in

be individually compared to late antique mosaics: acanthus

northern Mesopotamia (Figure 143), along with archaeological

scrolls (detail of Figure 69, page 192; Figures 144, 145 and 146),

finds of glass tesserae, show that the craft was also native to the

rocky outcrops (Figures 147 and 148), fruit trees (Figures 149,

Eastern Mediterranean.

150 and 151), pointed cypress-type trees (Figures 151 and 152),

30

Ornamental floor mosaics were made of stone rather

trees with three clumps of leaves (Figures 152 and 153) and

than glass, yet they should not be disregarded since they reflect

bushy trees (Figures 142 and 148). The motifs in the Damascus

the same technique: the setting of small tesserae in fresh

mosaics most strongly resemble examples from a few sites

plaster to realise a design, often following underdrawing on a

datable around the sixth century: the church of the Monastery

base layer of plaster. There was no significant obstacle to floor

of Saint Catherine at Sinai (Figure 148), the Villa of the Amazons

mosaicists working on the vertical surface of a wall, so long

at Edessa (Figure 151), the Great Palace in Constantinople

as the raw material—glass tesserae—could be obtained. This

(Figures 146 and 150), and the cathedral of Hagia Sophia in the

31

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191

Detail of Figure 69 (above). Upper pillar from the west courtyard arcade, Great Mosque of Damascus.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

p  figure 144 (right) West courtyard arcade, Great Mosque of Damascus. Alain George, 2010.

p  figure 145 Vegetal scrolls, vault of room over the southwest ramp mosaics, Hagia Sophia. Constantinople, sixth century. Washington DC, Dumbarton Oaks, DcWaDIC MS.BZ.004-03-01-02-010-041.

p  figure 146 Vegetal scroll, Great Palace mosaic. Constantinople, fifth to seventh century. From Cimok, Mosaics in Istanbul, fig. 28.

same city (Figure 145).33 At Damascus as at the Great Palace,

Figures 144, 145 and 146). Differences still remain, such as the

Hagia Sophia, and the Villa of the Amazons, for instance,

wider range of leaf and blossom forms and the occurrence of

the acanthus scrolls are thickly textured, with variations in

vases, pearls, and pearl-studded rings at Damascus.34 Likewise,

the width of the stems and an impression of volume created

the tree trunks at Damascus are composed with hues that

through parallel curved lines. Each pair of curling leaves

gradually fade from dark to light between the edges and the

opens widely to enclose the next (detail of Figure 69 above,

centre, with a predilection for a brown palette—an approach

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

p  figure 147 (right) Section of the river mosaic, Great Mosque of Damascus. Alain George, 2010. p  figure 148 (below) The Burning Bush, detail of wall mosaic above the apse, Church of the Monastery of Saint Catherine. Mount Sinai, sixth century. Araldo de Luca for CCA-Roma.

only otherwise seen at Edessa. While they remain short of identical, these mosaics form a coherent group. By contrast, the same motifs in extant wall mosaics at Rome, Ravenna, and Thessaloniki (fourth to eighth centuries) show a distinct formal articulation and colour palette, and less attempt to render volume.35 The tesserae, whether they were being prepared for a wall or floor, had to be cut to specific sizes and shapes to fit different parts of a design, such as the pointed tip of a leaf or the narrow heart of a fruit. Multiple colours were achieved through the careful selection of stones and the manufacture of custom-made glass cubes. These were laid to create the illusion of form and texture from a distance through such Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

techniques as interlocking inlay, in which pieces of two different hues were alternated in a chequerboard pattern, or parallel inlay, in which graduated tones, from light to dark, were applied in straight lines.36 Parallel inlay was used at all five sites mentioned above, as well as at Damascus, and the method is also attested elsewhere, for instance at Ravenna. Interlocking inlay is relatively rare in this small corpus, but it

in themselves, imply direct connections: they merely confirm—

occurs in some of the Great Palace mosaics. This group is also

expectedly—a shared background for this craft in the Eastern

brought together by a comparable approach to contouring,

Mediterranean. The relationships, if any, between sites over

tonality, and the detailing of motifs. Such affinities do not,

time still await to be mapped by future research.

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193

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194

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p  figure 149 (opposite far left) Spandrel with tree, west courtyard arcade, Great Mosque of Damascus, Alain George, 2010. p  figure 150 (opposite left) Tree with parallel inlay mosaic at the Great Palace. Constantinople, fifth to seventh century. From Cimok, Mosaics in Istanbul, fig. 42.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

p  figure 151 (opposite below) Floor mosaic, Villa of the Amazons, Edessa (Urfa/Şanlıurfa), fifth or sixth century. Sean Leatherbury/ Manar al-Athar, 2018.

p  figure 152 (above right) Detail of transept façade, Great Mosque of Damascus. Ross Burns/Manar al-Athar, 2003. p  figure 153 (right) Apse mosaic, Sant’Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna, sixth century (with area to the left of the saint dating from the restoration of 1906–11). Ludvig14, CC BY 4.0.

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195

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196

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p  figure 154 (opposite) Apse mosaic with details of fortress and four rivers, church of Saints Cosmas and Damian. Rome, sixth century. Alain George, 2010. p  figure 155 (above right) Apse mosaic, church of Hosios David. Thessaloniki, fifth century. Liz James, 2005. p  figure 156 (right) Ceiling painting, Villa of Dar Buc Amira, Zliten, Lybia, ca. 70 AD.

Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

While precedents can be traced for most vegetal motifs used

century), notably palatial structures crowned by a conch

by the Umayyads, this is less clearly the case with architectural

hood and framed by pyramidal roofs, as well as square kiosks

images. Many depictions of buildings in known church mosaics

with arches. Their pictorial type can again be traced back to

are fortress-like or palatial and shaped as solid rectangular

the imperial Roman period, in wall paintings at Pompeii and

blocks (Figure 154). Examples resembling the buildings found

Boscoreale (first century CE).39

37

at Damascus are rare. One relative exception is a cluster of

While these mosaics and images are far removed from

small buildings shown on a hill at the small church of Hosios

Damascus in space and time, the Church of the Holy Virgin

David in Thessaloniki (Figure 155). These have simple a simple

at Dayr al-Suryan in Egypt provides a hint at the missing link.

rectangular structure with a black door and gable roof, a type

It contains a wall painting which, on the basis of style, paint

that ultimately harks back to Roman village scenes such as a

stratigraphy, and the history of the site, can be dated to the

ceiling painting from Zliten near Leptis Magna (Figure 156).

eighth century (Figure 157).40 Despite the different medium,

Parallels to the Damascene images of monumental architecture

its composition and articulation warrant comparison with

can be found at the Rotunda in Thessaloniki (fourth to eighth

the finest church mosaics. Both frescoes and mosaics were

38

chapter 6  •   ‘Jewelled Embellishments Dazzle’

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

197

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p  figure 157 (above and left) The Annunciation, wall painting on the western semi-dome, with detail of architectural depictions, Church of the Holy Virgin, Dayr al-Suryan, Egypt, eighth century. Mat Immerzeel (Paul van Moorsel Centre/Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), 1992.

begun by outlining the composition on the plaster, typically

flowers and grassy foregrounds, curtains, vases and jars, the

in red and green, to prepare for their execution. The parallels

holy book (Figure 155), and clouds, usually reddish, white, and

with the Damascus mosaics are striking: the slightly curved

blue (Figure 154), spring to mind as examples.41 Comparisons with

triangular edge of the gable front in the basilican buildings,

the floor mosaics at Edessa and Constantinople, as well as earlier

the towers with pointed roofs, the clustering of the buildings

examples at Antioch and Apamaea,42 yield a close correspondence

in a pyramidal fashion, the articulation of doors as rectangles

not only in the range of forms, but also in their relative sizes: large

with thickened outlines and windows as small squares, and the

trees with ample foliage, small buildings, and relatively bulky

trees that stem out of the architecture. The Dayr al-Suryan apse

rocky outcrops. It seems probable, in view of these convergences,

suggests that similar motifs may have been executed in mosaic

that floor mosaicists played a significant role in the creation of the

in churches from the Syro-Egyptian region.

Damascus mosaics, alongside their peers used to working on walls.

Many elements from the Christian repertoire were omitted at Damascus despite their compatibility with an aniconic stance:

198

Indeed, these two groups of craftsmen need not have been distinct in the first instance. Overlaps may have existed between them.

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

p  figure 158 (right) Procession of saints, nave mosaic detail, Sant’Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna, sixth century. Alain George, 2010. p  figure 159 (below) House and river, Great Palace mosaic. Constantinople, fifth to seventh century. Dick Osseman, 2016.

Poetic Composition and the Mosque If the Damascus mosaicists drew selected motifs from an existing repertoire, they also made bold experiments with composition. This is most evident in the river mosaic (sometimes called the ‘Barada panel’) on the west courtyard wall (Figure 147). With dimensions just over 7 × 34   m, hence a surface of about 250 sq. m, it dwarfs all others in the mosque.43 In the original building, its area was equal to that on the east courtyard wall opposite and to only about a third of that on the north courtyard wall. The south (qibla) wall was of the same size as the north wall but interrupted by windows. The scale of these mosaics must have presented a particular challenge to both patrons and craftsmen. Only one extant early church, Sant’Apollinare Nuovo Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

at Ravenna (sixth century), preserves wall mosaics of a comparable format (Figure 158), although the two rectangular nave panels are much shorter than the river mosaic. Most other large panels in churches are from domes or apses: their spherical shape, with a clear axial focus rising towards the apex, is more compact and naturally invites symmetry.44 The lack of a direct equivalent is not merely accidental, for in the basilica and martyrium, walls are supported by arches in the nave or drum and pierced by windows on the exterior. The mosaic ornament has to be articulated around these

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

199

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architectonic forms: full rectangular wall panels are unlikely to

followed by a human, animal, or mythical figure, followed by

ever have reached such a scale in buildings with this typology.

another tree, and so on; the different elements are also of a

Floor mosaics, on the other hand, routinely occupied large

fixed height (Figures 151 and 158). The river mosaic, with its

surfaces. In them, tall trees were often given more visual

pairs of trees and building clusters, and variable motif sizes,

prominence than at Sant’Apollinare Nuovo, thereby setting

breaks these conventions. Its vast landscapes are unified

the basic rhythm of the composition, as at Heraclea Lyncestis

by the river that runs across their foot. Rivers are rare in

in Macedonia and Nikopolis in Greece (sixth century). When

early Christian wall mosaics, where they typically appear as

style, scale, and composition are combined, the closest parallel

diminutive streams stemming from a rock (Figure 154). The

with Damascus is once again the floor mosaic at the Villa of

difference is not just one of size: the waters in the Umayyad

the Amazons in Edessa (Figure 151). Churches from modern

Mosque are in movement, swirling furiously in some sections

Jordan commonly featured similar compositions well into

and flowing calmly in others, whereas in churches they are

the Umayyad period, but over smaller surfaces and with less

still. A river fragment from the Great Palace in Constantinople

refined detail in the execution.

offers, once again, a more salient comparison: the foamy water

45

46

In all of these Christian floor and wall mosaics, each visual unit alternates with the next in binary fashion: typically, a tree

200

rendered in white surges from the architectural foundations (Figure 159). The scale, however, is much smaller.

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

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Thus, in the river mosaic, large trees form the armature of the composition, as in floor mosaics, but with an altered rhythm. Clusters of buildings like those occasionally found in church apses have been inserted between those tall trees.

p  figure 160 (top) River mosaic, west courtyard mosaic panel. Drawing by Farah Dabbous for Alain George.

p  figure 161 (centre) River mosaic, west courtyard mosaic panel. Collage of photographs by Eustache de Lorey. Johanna and Loreline Simonis.

In the original design, four rivers would have formed a Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

continuous water course that encircled the mosque, uniting the composition. The extant panel was thereby conceived as a succession of vertical elements—trees, rocks, and building

by the addition of a corner arch, as discussed in Chapter 5.

clusters—rooted in horizontal rivers and composed in a non-

The missing section leading up to the north corner must have

binary rhythm. Its whole composition can be envisioned in a

been taken up mostly by the large tree of which a few branches

new drawing by Farah Dabbous (Figure 160). A photographic

now remain (Figure 78), followed by a wide geometrical

collage of Eustache de Lorey’s photographs by Johanna and

double border. Between these two elements, a small building

Loreline Simonis is reproduced alongside it to help distinguish

cluster may have been inserted, and perhaps a slender tree

sections that predate twentieth-century restorations (Figure 161).

paired with the large one, like at the opposite end of the panel

The right end of the panel was cut off in the medieval period

(see the left side of Figure 160). Even if these features did exist,

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201

b

T

T

B

T

b T T b T

B

T

b

T

B

T b T b T

Left half of panel

T

b

T

T

B

T

b

T

[b]

T

{B}

T

b

T

right half of panel

p  figure 162 Composition of the west courtyard mosaic panel.

Key

and notwithstanding the gaps filled by restorers, the current

(Figure 164): its two halves unfold with a matching rhythm from

composition is very close to the original one. Its articulation is

right to left, which is the direction of Arabic script, again with

schematised above with the letter ‘B’ denoting tall buildings or

the central tree acting as the caesura. Starting from the tree at

building clusters (full panel height), ‘b’ for small ones (half the

the right end of the composition (marked with a green ‘T’) and

panel height or less), and ‘T’ for a tree (full panel height).

the central tree (red ‘T’) respectively, the same elements—trees

The panel had roughly equal halves on either side of

B

Building or building cluster, full panel height b Building or building cluster, half panel height or less {B} Building from medieval and modern restorations, probably reproducing the original composition

[b] Building from modern restoration, probably reflecting the height of the original, given that the foliage of the large trees overhead survives T Tree, full panel height b Left end of composition T Centre of composition T Right end of composition

or buildings—occur in the same sequence across no fewer

the central tree flanked by two round pavilions (red ‘T’ in

than sixteen consecutive units. Only in the last unit does the

Figure 162). Each half now contains seventeen units; twelve

left half of the panel feature a tree and small building cluster

of these—nine large trees (‘T’) and three large buildings or

(marked with a brown ‘b’), as opposed to a small monumental

building clusters (‘B’) on either side—occupy the full height of

building at the end of the right half, just before the central tree

the panel. The rest—five monumental buildings or building

(red ‘T’). Since the two trees that precede the left end of the

clusters on either side (‘b’)—are half this height or less. Each

panel (before the brown ‘b’) are closely intertwined, arguably

half of the panel thus contains the same number of primary

they may form a single visual unit, which would make the

types, and there is some symmetrical correspondence between

convergence complete.

them (Figure 163). Each circular pavilion on either side of Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

B

The entire panel was thus carefully constructed to impose

the central tree (red ‘T’) is flanked by a monumental building

a rhythm repeated across both halves with an element of

with a conch niche, two side towers, a colonnaded elevation,

symmetry at the centre. The principle resonates with Arabic

and water flowing from the lower level. Next, a pair of trees

poetry, where each verse is divided into two hemistiches, each

frames a small building cluster. After these first six elements,

one governed by a set succession of long and short syllables.

the composition diverges between both sides, although more

The Basit tetrameter, for example, has fourteen syllables per

correspondences re-emerge at the end of each sequence.

hemistich (Figure 165). The alternation of a long syllable with

Symmetry is thus maintained primarily at the centre of the

a short one predominates, but two consecutive short syllables

panel, and becomes looser as one moves towards the edges.

occur once or twice per hemistich, just as two consecutive

The composition also follows a second, overlapping pattern

trees occur in each half of the mosaic panel (once on the

202

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

right half of panel

left half of panel

T → Right half of panel

b

T

B

T

b

T

T

B

T

b

T

[b]

T

{B}

T

b

T

←T left half of panel

b

T

B

T

b

T

B

T

b

T

T

b

T

B

T

T

b

p  figure 163 Development of the composition from either side of the central tree.

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Right half of panel

left half of panel

b

b

T

B

T

b

T

T

B

T

b

T

[b]

T

{B}

T

b

T

T

T

B

T

b

T

T

b

T

B

T

b

T

B

T

b

T

p  figure 164 Development of the composition in a right-to-left direction: comparison of right and left panel halves.

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203

L

S

S

L

S

L

S

L

S

S

L

S

L

S

L

S

S

L

S

L

S

L

S

S

L

S

L

S

p  figure 165 One articulation of the Basit tetrameter, from right to left (L = long syllable; S = short syllable)

right and twice on the left, if one counts the two intertwined

of Arabian culture and Arab-Muslim social life. Faced with

trees as a pair rather than a unit).47 More complex rhythms

the challenge of conceiving novel visual compositions, the

existed in other meters, with sequences of up to four short

supervisors at Damascus seem to have replicated habits forged

or long syllables combined in different ways. Within this

by this highly codified art form.

structure, sounds generate echoes and contrasts; in the mosaic panel, depth and texture are similarly enriched through the modulation between tall (‘B’) and short (‘b’) buildings or

Mosaics, Empire and Polysemy

building clusters, which steer the composition away from monotony, both as a linear progression and as two matching

Paradise and Earthly Dominion

halves, since a few large buildings in one half correspond to

What were Umayyad ruling circles seeking to convey through

small ones in the other half.

the vast landscapes that they created? This issue has been

In other words, the idea of composing through the regular

debated for decades by modern scholars. According to a line

alternation of two essential units (long and short syllables,

of interpretation initiated by Eva Börsch-Supan and Barbara

building clusters and trees), each occurring either individually

Finster, the programme reflects the Qurʾanic imagery of

or in short commensurate sequences and with textural variety,

paradise with its lofty chambers, palaces, jewels, gardens, and

was inherent to both the Damascus river panel and Arabic

rivers.50 For instance:

poetry, but not to earlier mosaic traditions. Small variations could occur between hemistiches in some meters, especially

But those who fear their lord, for them await lofty

at the end of a verse, just as the two halves of the mosaic

chambers above which are built lofty chambers

composition slightly diverge, if read from right to left, in

(ghuraf min fawqihā ghuraf mabniyyatun), underneath

their final components (Figure 164). The overall composition

which rivers flow—God’s promise, God fails not the tryst

is structured and rhythmical, rather than one-directional

(Q. 39:20).

and binary.

Blessed be He who, if He will, shall assign to thee better

48

In a seminal study on late antique culture, Michael Roberts observed a range of values shared by literature and the visual

than that—gardens underneath which rivers flow, and He shall assign to thee palaces (Q. 25:10).51

arts in the Latin world, including mosaics, which he termed

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the ‘jeweled style’. ‘The style’, he notes, ‘involves enumerative

The same elements occur in the landscapes, along with

sequences, emphasis on ornamental detail at the expense

golden skies and hints of gold (hence light) in trees, and

of plastic realism, and the elaboration of geometrically

pearls suspended from arches. If the mosaicists were asked

defined compositional units.’ This sensitivity shares with

to represent paradise without showing humans, animals, and

the Damascene mosaics the importance of sequence, the

angels—given the pictorial tools at their disposal—the mosaics

accumulation of details and lack of emphasis on naturalism

at Damascus stand as one possible answer to the brief. The

(particularly in the surreal scale of trees in relation to

buildings, which tend to be markedly smaller than the trees

buildings) and the geometrical structure—but the Damascus

and to be shown simultaneously from multiple perspectives,

mosaics, with their complex rhythms, also achieve a unique

can be interpreted as contributing to the same otherworldly

compositional expression. Poetry, its memorisation, and

effect.52 The paradisiacal interpretation finds indirect support

the ability to recognise its meter, were fundamental aspects

in the late eighth-century History of Medina by Ibn Zabāla,

49

204

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largely preserved through citations by al-Samhūdī (d. 911/1506).

The poet extols two great rivers under the caliph’s dominion

This work attributes the following words to the mosaicists who

as if embracing a wide landscape with his gaze: the Nile, with

worked on al-Walīd’s rebuilding of the Prophet’s Mosque in

its isles and submerged banks, and the Euphrates, likened to

Medina, which had similar mosaic decoration to Damascus:

an assailant biting at the walls of ʿĀnāt (also ʿĀna), a fortified

‘We made it according to the pictures of the trees of paradise

outpost along its northern course.55 These verses could

and its palaces.’53 Given its early date and local authorship

arguably evoke the mosaics with their rivers and buildings, but

(Ibn Zabāla was Medinan), the statement must reflect ideas

they are fundamentally a poetic trope for the praise of rulers.

prevalent in the city a generation or two after al-Walīd’s reign,

Al-Nābigha al-Dhubyānī, the prominent sixth-century poet,

which lends them relative weight.

famously compared his Lakhmid patron to the Euphrates, a

A different interpretation was posited by Richard

metaphor echoed by al-Akhṭal in his praise of ʿAbd al-Malik.56

Ettinghausen, who saw the landscapes as a representation of

Al-Farazdaq himself frequently used the Euphrates, and in a

lands under Umayyad rule. As one steps back to view the

few instances the Nile, as metaphors for his patron’s might

whole panel on the western arcade, and back again to imagine

and generosity.57 In an unrelated eulogy to Yazīd ibn ʿAbd

the entire courtyard adorned with similar decoration, this

al-Malik (r. 101–5/720‒24), al-Walīd’s younger half-brother,

vision emerges as an almost instinctive reaction to these vast

also proclaimed:

54

horizons. This was the impression conveyed by virtually every medieval visitor to the mosque, starting with the well-known

And if you are not with him [the Prophet], you will be

statement by al-Muqaddasī that ‘there is no tree or land that has

his Companion with the two martyrs and the truthful

not been represented on these walls’. But testimonies recorded

one (al-ṣiddīq) at the pinnacle of the wall (ʿalā al-sūr)

two centuries or more after the foundation of the mosque

In the soaring lofty chambers of paradise (ghuraf al-janna

cannot inform us about Umayyad intentions.

al-ʿulyā) built for them—rewarding their deeds.58

Echoes of an Umayyad discourse on the meaning of the mosaics may be sought in the three panegyrics about the

Yazīd is portrayed as destined to join the Prophet and

mosque, but without much success. Jarīr did not venture into a

his foremost Companions, the first three caliphs Abū Bakr,

description of the building, perhaps because he composed his

ʿUmar, and ʿUthmān, in paradise.59 There he will enter ‘lofty

poem before the construction work was sufficiently advanced.

chambers’ (ghuraf), the Qurʾanic term also used by modern

Al-Farazdaq, having poignantly evoked the seizure of the

scholars to back a paradisiacal reading of the mosaics,

church in the temenos, shifts his viewpoint to say:

amplified here through the adjective ‘soaring’ (al-ʿulyā). Had

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such connotations been meaningful to his patrons, al-Farazdaq 24. Perhaps the void in my pails will meet surplus from the fulsome rivers that flow from you;

could easily have crafted a similar image in his praise of the mosque; but he did not.60

25. Waters of Nile, when it swamps its isles,

Al-Nābigha, in his turn, proclaimed that the mosque was

and floods its boundaries to the hills,

surrounded by ‘rivers and fertile lands’ (al-anhār wa’l-rīf, v. 23).

26. Or of the Euphrates of Abū al-ʿĀṣ when its waves clap high in a broad-lipped deep. 27. Nobles of ʿĀna fight still from behind her wall; a cleft-hump stallion lusts to engage.

This hemistich is inserted in a sequence of verses about its wall ornaments, between evocations of marble panelling and the inscription, leaving little doubt that it is an allusion to the mosaic landscapes.61 Etymologically, the term al-rīf, which does not occur in the Qurʾan, refers to agricultural landscapes and

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205

the countryside.62 Al-Nābigha’s choice was partly dictated by the

Christians and Justinian II, which marked the foundation of

f-rhyme of his poem, but he could have used another turn of

the Umayyad Mosque—events vindicated in panegyrics and

phrase had the image seemed inapposite. Bold assertions about

commemorated in the historical part of the same inscription.

the divinely guided nature of Umayyad rule were commonly

The passage also exudes an unfathomable quality generated

uttered in court poetry, whereas they rarely found their way

by its polysemic vocabulary, the understated and near-spectral

into public inscriptions. The three poems, being responses

presence of its horses and riders, and its oath form (‘By …’)

to expectations in these circles about praise of al-Walīd and

—an oath of which the object remains untold.

63

his project, were the ideal forum in which to voice inflated

The next verses are marked by a change of rhyme. They

proclamations about its meaning. Yet none of them sought to

evoke Judgement, ‘the day when the first blast shivers and the

connect the mosque with paradise.

second blast follows it, hearts upon that day shall be athrob and their eyes shall be humbled’ (Q. 79:6‒9). This prompted later

The Horizon of Judgement

commentators to interpret the opening sequence as referring

The mosaic inscription was, along with the poems, another

to angels or heavenly bodies rather than soldiers.66 In the

major contemporary declaration about the mosque. Although

context of 715, however, both dimensions—the battle and its

lost at an early date, its contents were recorded in written

cosmic reverberations—were prone to magnify the resonance

sources. This was an artefact fixed in space, whereas a

of al-Walīd’s actions against local Christians and Byzantium.

poet’s verses could travel far and wide, but it derived public

After evoking men’s interrogations about their fate after

prominence from its form—words in gold mosaic spread out

Judgement (Q. 79:10–14), the sura turns to a story about

over several hundred metres—and its position in the prayer hall

Moses ‘when his Lord called him to the holy valley, Towa’, and

of the mosque, at the heart of Damascus. The inscription began

ordained that he should proclaim His signs. Pharaoh, who

with the famous Throne Verse (Q. 2:255) followed by suras

refused to recognise them, was chastised for it (Q. 79:15–26).

79, 80 and 81, then a brief historical section stating al-Walīd’s

God is then lauded as Creator of heaven and earth before

patronage and the date.

a sudden shift (in bold below) to an awe-inspiring vision of

64

The Throne Verse glorified God, ‘the Living, the Everlasting’,

Judgement as the gateway to paradise or hell:

‘His Throne comprises the heavens and the earth’, possibly the first instance of a long tradition whereby this verse was placed

What, are you stronger in constitution or the heaven He

at the heart of mosque architecture. The next sequence, from

built? He lifted up its vault, and levelled it, and darkened

Al-Nāziʿāt (Q. 79), began with these verses:

its night, and brought forth its forenoon; and the earth—

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after that He spread it out, therefrom brought forth its By those pulling [at the reins] to plunge [into the fray]!

waters and its pastures, and the mountains He set firm,

And those moving briskly and energetically! And those

an enjoyment for you and your flocks. Then, when the

swimming along, then forging ahead, then regulating the

Great Catastrophe comes upon the day when man shall

affair! (Q. 79:1‒5, trans. Robinson).

remember what he has striven, and Hell is advanced

65

for whoever sees, then as for him who was insolent and

This striking passage gave rise to exegetical debate in later

preferred the present life, surely Hell shall be the refuge.

times, but at a primary level, it conjures up the image of riders

But as for him who feared the station of his Lord and

in the heat of battle. The choice may not appear significant

forbade the soul its caprice, surely Paradise shall be the

until one remembers the armed confrontations with local

refuge (Q. 79:27–41)

206

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The sura finally returns to human questions about the timing of the Hour, which are to remain unanswered (Q. 79:42–46). The next sura, ʿAbasa (‘He Frowned’, Q. 80), opens with a scene of

what it has produced’. It ends with an assertion of the truth of Muhammad’s message. Judgement emerges as the primary theme of an inscription

almost palpable physicality: a blind man comes to an unnamed

in which earthly abundance also features prominently, with

person (the Prophet, for most exegetes) who turns away

more distant echoes of paradise and hell. The Last Day was also

from him, towards the ‘self-sufficient’ (Q. 80:1–10). A divine

given special pre-eminence in the mosaic inscriptions at the

injunction ensues: this is ‘a reminder (and whoso wills, shall

Dome of the Rock.68 At this fateful moment, according to other

remember it) upon pages high-honoured, uplifted, purified,

Qurʾanic passages, the world will be emptied of its inhabitants

by the hands of scribes noble, pious’ (Q. 80:11–16).

(‘We shall muster them all together’, Q. 6:22, 10:28; ‘the earth

The mysterious leaves and scribes in these lines seem to

shall shine with the light of its Lord, and the Book shall be set

belong to the divine realm. They were often interpreted as

in place’, Q. 39:69). The image resonates with the Damascus

referring to the Qurʾan itself, the prophetic revelations, or the

mosaics, their still landscapes and golden skies, as well as the

Preserved Tablet (lawḥ maḥfūẓ), the heavenly archetype of the

physical context of the prayer hall where, in all likelihood, a

Qurʾan (Q. 85:22). After reproving man for his arrogance (Q.

Qurʾan manuscript was displayed at set times of the week.69

80:17–23), the sura continues:

Judgement could, in other words, be read into the mosaics—

67

but was this their overarching meaning, rather than paradise, Let Man consider his nourishment. We poured out the

or indeed empire? The question itself, as it turns out, may be

rains abundantly, then We split the earth in fissures and

anachronistic.

therein made the grains to grow and vines, and reeds, and olives, and palms, and dense-tree’d gardens, and

The Art of Polysemy

fruits, and pastures, an enjoyment for you and your

Early Arabic culture, like the broader Mediterranean cultures

flocks. And when the Blast shall sound, upon the day

of late antiquity, placed a core emphasis on ambiguity and

when a man shall flee from his brother, his mother, his

polysemy. A brief look at a verse from al-Nābigha’s poem will

father, his consort, his sons, every man that day shall

serve to illustrate the point. In the opening sequence about

have business to suffice him. Some faces on that day

al-Walīd’s military campaigns, the poet declares that the caliph

shall shine laughing, joyous; some faces on that day shall

‘gathers captives, gifts them, shares them; gives of chiselled,

be dusty o’erspread with darkness—those—they are the

short-haired mares’ (v. 4). Upon first hearing the verse, the

unbelievers, the libertines (Q. 80:24–42).

mind’s eye might see war prisoners and fine horses, the booty

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that sustains Umayyad armies. The use of the feminine for As in the previous sura, an enumeration of the earth’s

‘captives’ implies that these are women, reflecting historical

bounties abruptly gives way, at the point highlighted above,

trends at a time when a growing proportion of the Umayyad

to the thundering blast of Judgement. The last sura that

élite were being born to concubines.70 Caliph Yazīd III (r. 126/744)

featured in the inscription (Al-Takwīr, Q. 81) contains a

epitomised this trend, as the son of al-Walīd and Shāh-i Āfrīd,

further admonition about the time ‘when the sun shall be

a Sasanian princess who was captured in Qutayba ibn Muslim’s

darkened, when the mountains shall be thrown down’, and in

Central Asian campaigns.71

subsequent verses, ‘when the scrolls shall be unrolled, when

Understood on this level, al-Nābigha’s verse already stands

heaven shall be stripped off, when Hell shall be set blazing,

as a powerful piece of rhetoric. But the phrase al-jurd al-sarāʿīf,

when Paradise shall be brought nigh—then shall a soul know

translated above as ‘short-haired mares’, generates a further

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

207

image since sarʿaf (the singular of sarāʿīf) also means ‘praying

from our Lord’; yet none remembers, but men possessed

mantis’, and jurd is the word for ‘locusts’. These two words

of minds (Q. 3:7).

from the same lexical field are unlikely to have been combined accidentally: they create the chilling image of an army of

The interpretation of this verse has itself been debated by

‘locust-praying mantises’ swarming over fields, eating the

commentators toiling to uncover its true meaning, not unlike

grain (a core resource in military campaigns) and biting off

modern scholars seeking to understand Umayyad mosaics.

the heads of their prey (ironically, in the natural world, it is

But such ambiguity was perceived by classical scholars as the

the female mantis that reserves this fate for the male after

source of inexhaustible depths of meaning, and similar values

copulation). Al-Walīd’s half-brother Maslama, the military

may have applied to the mosaics.75 To paraphrase Michael

commander lauded by al-Nābigha in the same poem (v. 6),

Sells’ remarks on the Qurʾan:

was himself called al-jarāda: ‘the locust’, the singular of al-jurd.72 Later sources explain this as a derogatory nickname coined

While the two possibilities can seem to offer an ‘either/

by his opponent Yazīd ibn al-Muhallab in 102/720, but it may

or’ to the [beholder] seeking a single meaning, they carry

instead have emerged earlier as a warrior image.

a ‘both/and’ force, a plurisignification or multivalence

The mind of the listener will not instinctively construe more than one meaning at once. The first cognitive response will

essential to the [visual] effect of the [mosaic panel] in which they occur.76

involve one image, but by dwelling further on the verse, new impressions will accrue. Polysemy, in this context, enriches

mosaics seems confirmed by the lack of captions. These

sensitivity is also central to the reception history of the

were used almost universally to identify figures, buildings,

Qurʾan. Just as classical poets scoured the depths of Arabic

and other features in Christian floor and wall mosaics, with

lexicography to give their work texture, so the Qurʾan features

the Great Palace at Constantinople a rare exception. They

terms that were puzzling to contemporaries, as asserted

must have therefore have been presented as an option to

by the text in its own voice. Habitual schemes of sentence

the patrons of the Umayyad Mosque. Arabic script, having

construction are also stretched to the point of disruption.

recently received a geometrical codification, would have

Clear admonitions rhythmically alternate, often in the same

lent itself particularly well to their inclusion.77 A deliberate

verse, with words or clauses that have a wide flexibility of

decision must have been taken to forgo them. This, together

meaning. Far from being accidental or from solely reflecting

with the lack of identifiable geographical markers in the

semantic complexity, this was a self-proclaimed value of

extant sections of the programme,78 served to open up the

the text:

range of possible reactions to these mosaics, rather than

73

74

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The intentionality of this approach in the Damascus

the meaning while taking away its immutability. This nuanced

pinning down a specific message. It is He who sent down upon thee the Book, wherein are

208

The Qurʾan does not assert a marked spatial or temporal

verses clear (muḥkamāt) that are the Essence of the Book,

divide between earth and the ‘otherworld’ (Ar. al-ākhira, a term

and others ambiguous (mutashābihāt). As for those in

commonly rendered by the less suitable ‘hereafter’).79 Likewise,

whose hearts is swerving, they follow the ambiguous part,

for later Muslims, paradise and hell could touch this world,

desiring dissension, and desiring its interpretation; and

particularly in sacred locales, such the Kaʿba in Mecca, the

none knows its interpretation, save only God. And those

Rock on Temple Mount in Jerusalem, and tombs of holy men.80

firmly rooted in knowledge say, ‘We believe in it; all is

With this perspective, the mosaics could represent earthly

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

dominion, Judgement and paradise, not only because of a

but rather a laudatory expression of grandeur addressed

cultural predilection for polysemy, but also because all three

to the caliph. The exercise was to some extent contrived,

realities were consubstantial and could thus be embodied by

which may paradoxically increase its historical value, for

the same landscapes.

the poet was crafting a response to prevalent norms and

81

expectations. His verse sequence also obeys a fundamental principle of ekphrasis as formulated by Ruth Webb: ‘any

The Craft of Perception

ekphrasis rivals the visual arts in that it seeks to imitate their visual impact’.83 Words are crafted to trigger the same emotions

In seeking to understand the Mosque of Damascus, the attention

as an encounter with the object, thereby bridging the gap

of modern scholars has been naturally drawn towards its most

between image and imagination.

distinctive feature, the mosaics—a path followed in this chapter

Al-Nābigha begins by evoking the mosque as a corrective

thus far. But their singularity is only evident with the hindsight

to the shared worship that had prevailed on this site until the

of later Islamic art. At the time of their creation, mosaics were

destruction of the church and declares: ‘Now prayer of Holy

simply the most lavish ornament that was available for religious

Truth holds sway; discerned is God’s authentic Word.’ (v. 15).

architecture, whereas earlier mosques had been more frugal. The

Ritual (Muslim prayer) and scripture (the Qurʾan) are placed at

first generation to encounter the building—al-Walīd and his circle,

the heart of this redefinition of the site. Drawing his audience

the Muslim ruling minority, Jews, and the Christian majority—

into the building, the poet emphasizes the wealth and diversity

perceived it through a cultural lens and with expectations

of its ornament: ‘You see there chrysolite (zabarjad), glittering

different from ours. It is necessary to step back from our inherent

sapphire (yāqūt); limestone (kils) with purest gold inlaid’ (v. 16).84

interest in figural and naturalistic themes in order to probe their,

The precious stones must have been those of the vine, the

rather than our own, intents and perceptions.

famous inlaid frieze in the prayer hall, and perhaps the mihrab. Gold was also used in the frieze and for the capitals, not to

Al-Nābigha and the Intensity of Sacred Space

mention its ubiquitous presence in the mosaics. As the poem

What might a contemporary have derived from the vast

shifts towards other themes, the list continues with passing

expanse of architectural forms and ornament presented by

mentions of silver (v. 19), teak (v. 20), marble (v. 22), and mosaic

the mosque? We are fortunate to possess one testimony that

(vv. 23–24).

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may shed light on this question: the descriptive sequence in

These verses generate for the listener a perception of

al-Nābigha’s poem (vv. 16–24), composed from the perspective

multiple colours—again, with echoes in ekphrasis.85 The

of a panegyrist passing superlative judgement on his patron’s

chromatic range is rich: light green, sometimes verging on

work. Byzantine writers commonly engaged in the comparable

brown for chrysolite; deep blue for sapphire; buff white for

exercise of ekphrasis, the detailed literary description of works

limestone; bright yellow and metallic grey for gold and silver;

of art, whether as dedicated compositions or as part of longer

shiny white with dark accents for marble; brown and painted

texts. Equivalent approaches are rare in Arabic, and even

colours for teak. The multiple hues of the mosaics are summed

more so during the first century after the hijra. Al-Nābigha’s

up through a reference to their (green) countryside and (blue)

verses are an exceptional document about the history of the

rivers. Textures also abound: while precious stones are smooth,

mosque, but also about aesthetic sensitivities in early Islam.

limestone is rough to the touch and wood is warm, while silver

Like ekphrasis, al-Nābigha’s utterances were not—or at

and gold have a metallic sheen and glass mosaics reflect light.

82

least not primarily—an intimate reaction to architecture,

The sapphire, likewise, is ‘glittering’ (v. 16).

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209

The poet’s perception intensifies over the next two verses,

naturally in the Umayyad Mosque, which had no doors between

starting with the impact of the juxtaposed colours: ‘Such figures

the prayer hall and courtyard, so that the four temenos walls

on the qibla-line emerge, of varied hue and shade!’ (v. 17). The

could be seen from any vantage point. He starts by extolling

movement of the beholder in space brings new elements into

the marble dado and its wavy lines visible at eye level as a work

focus and stimulates vision. The qibla is identified through

of the Creator: ‘And its each approach—adorned by God—with

the possessive pronoun ‘our’, as if to underline its recent

Syrian marble lined and robed’ (v. 22). ‘To Earth’s Navel are its

appropriation from the Christians. Its wall was made up of

parts secured’, continues al-Nābigha (v. 23), thereby placing

marble panels above which ran the vine with its inlaid jewels,

the building at the centre of the world. It is encompassed by

then four lines of mosaic inscription in gold over dark blue (or

‘rivers and fertile lands’: strikingly, the mosaics only emerge

possibly dark green), and mosaic landscapes with dominant

through this brief allusion in the poem, a mere hemistich out

gold and green hues up to ceiling level. Al-Nābigha continues in

of eighteen in the descriptive sequence. What al-Nābigha found

this vein, proclaiming:

extraordinary was not the individual ornament or its themes, but rather the overall impact of the building on the beholder.

18. Jewelled embellishments dazzle till the blacks of the eyes are set aquiver; 19. While precious silver curves up high, resplendent on the awed beholder;

Through these nine verses, al-Nābigha is sequentially drawing us into the mosque. He first builds up broad impressions dominated by colour and glittering light before leading us towards the transept. There, the poet sets our eyes on the qibla wall with a growing sense of luminosity. Having looked up

So intense is this vision that it dazzles the beholder,

towards the dome and ceiling from the same vantage point,

physically overwhelming the black of his eye. The first

he embraces the mosque at eye level, taking in the marble and

hemistich (v. 18) reads, on a literal level: ‘Its ornament nearly

mosaics of the four enclosure walls. He then returns to the

blinds the clearsighted of the nation (baṣīr al-qawm).’ By

prayer hall (v. 24): ‘With iterations [of the Word], inscribed—

contrast with the ‘beholder’ of the next verse (called al-rāʾīn,

clear Signs (āyāt)—of threat and promise from our Lord!’ The

in the plural), the baṣīr in this verse is a ‘seer’ or ‘clairvoyant’

inscription brings closure to the sequence by launching into

who can glimpse the unseen (the word is a divine attribute in the

the vastly expanded temporal, spatial and emotional horizon of

Qurʾan). His standing is underlined by the qualificative ‘of the

Judgement. The mosque as he conveys it creates, for the viewer,

nation’.86 Faced with the experience of the mosque, al-Nābigha

a fabric of light and colour, textures and forms that triggers a

seems to imply, one is struck with a flash of supernatural

sensorial experience verging on spiritual insight.

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insight, blurring the boundary between physical light and spiritual illumination, between sight and bodily contact.

The Mosque as a Foil for the Qurʾan

Al-Nābigha then praises the height of the building with its

The aesthetic values expressed by al-Nābigha are those of his

dome ‘that birds can scarcely reach’ and its teak ceiling (v. 20),

time. The Qurʾan, in addition to being dogmatic and rational,

as if he were now looking up from the qibla. Light returns to the

was received on aesthetic, spiritual, and sensory levels in

fore through an evocation of lamps: their oil ‘is gold’ and their

the classical era. It was through these entry points that the

light ‘glows on from Lebanon and the Sīf’ (v. 21), projecting its

ordinary worshipper primarily experienced the text, if with

rays outwards and turning the dome into a beacon. The poet

an awareness of its fundamental injunctions and admonitions.

goes on to cast a panoramic glance at the surface ornament.

The Qurʾan itself emphasizes its visceral, emotional impact on

Such an all-encompassing perspective would have come

the listener:

210

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

God has sent down the fairest discourse as a Book,

what lies before them and what is after them, and they

consimilar in its Oft-Repeated (al-mathānī), whereat

comprehend not anything of His knowledge save such as

shiver the skins of those who fear their Lord; then their

He wills. His Throne comprises the heavens and earth;

skins and their hearts soften to the remembrance of God

the preserving of them oppresses Him not; He is the All-

(Q. 39:23).

high, the All-glorious (Q. 2:255).

The text designates itself here through the enigmatic term

and earth, united by the all-encompassing presence of God.

may not be coincidental that al-Nābigha chose this unusual

This image would have resonated with the architectural setting

term (v. 24) to describe the mosaic inscription at the mosque,

of the transept with its sheer height that culminated, as one

since its contents largely invited the type of sentiment evoked

looked upwards, with the dome, a symbol of the heavenly

in Q. 39:23. After the Throne Verse, exalting God’s majesty and

spheres. The verse also states that the grace of intercession

glory, it consisted, at its core, of three early Meccan suras with

is granted only by God’s leave. The Prophet’s intercession

a rhythmic and sonic structure provoking aesthetic and sensory

on Judgement Day had been publicly proclaimed a few

responses that reinforced their semantic impact, but also the

years earlier under ʿAbd al-Malik, in the Dome of the Rock

openness of their meaning.

inscriptions. The Muslim community’s path to this promised

88

Thus, a two-pronged correspondence can be drawn

salvation now went through the leadership of the Umayyad

between the reception of the Qurʾan and of the mosque. Both

caliphs.89 The idea found a further echo along the qibla wall at

can be approached on the epistemological level, respectively

Damascus, this time looking down towards the jewel-studded

embodied in Qurʾanic commentaries and interpretations of the

mihrab and the minbar, symbols of the authority of both

mosaics. Both also invite more innate sensory reactions—to the

caliph and Prophet. The connection between the space of the

sound of the sacred text and the ornament of the building, as

transept, the person of the caliph, and the Prophet would thus

felt through the body, but eventually leading into the spiritual

have been reinforced for those who could read the inscription.

level. In this sense, the mosque with its mosaic trees and rivers,

Even with minimal literacy, one could take the cue from the

and the sheer splendour of its marble, gold, and precious

first few words of a verse to identify it from memory.

stones, stood as a visual counterpart to the auditory experience of the Qurʾan. The mosaic inscription invited a focus on the transept, where Copyright © 2021. Gingko Press, Incorporated. All rights reserved.

The verse evokes the boundless expanses between heaven

al-mathānī, which occurs only one other time, at Q. 15:87. It 87

In order to read the fourth and final line, one had to walk back towards the northwest corner of the prayer hall. From there, a long sequence of verses (Q. 79, 80, 81) ran across the

it was deployed over four lines. While the fourth line ran across

west, south, and east walls. As they evoked, in the rhythmic

the whole prayer hall, the first three were contained entirely

language of the Qurʾan, images of Judgement, earthly

in this space. They emphasized al-Walīd’s patronage and his

abundance, and to a lesser extent paradise and hell, mosaic

destruction of the church—but mostly, through the Throne

landscapes unfolded above as a canvas onto which each of these

Verse, the majesty of God’s realm:

major themes could be projected. Similar plays on the combined effect of inscription, space, and image were common in

God there is no god but He, the Living, the Everlasting.

Christian buildings of the period.90 Few visitors will have given

Slumber seizes Him not, neither sleep; to Him belongs

this aspect of the mosque their full attention, but even reading

all that is in the heavens and the earth. Who is there that

a small part of the inscription, or being told about its contents,

shall intercede with Him save by His leave? He knows

would have added to the overall impact of the ornament.

chapter 6  •   ‘Jewelled Embellishments Dazzle’

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

211

A codex is likely to have completed the scheme. The

hall, unified the vast space between the four temenos walls. An

Umayyads commissioned monumental Qurʾans in vertical

experience of sight, sound, and smell was set in motion, again

format, of which a small corpus survives, and sent them to

with echoes in the Byzantine world.97

major mosques of the empire, where they would be used for recitation, particularly on Friday.91 In the prayer hall at

pppp

Damascus, the pages of Kufic calligraphy would have resonated with the mosaic inscription, and not just on a formal level

Al-Walīd’s new monument at Damascus fused the openness

since its fourth line contained a reference to ‘pages (ṣuḥuf)

of the early mosque with the airiness of the church. Soaring

high-honoured, uplifted, purified by the hands of scribes

above the prayer hall, its transept reflected the caliph’s stature

noble, pious’ (Q. 80:13–16). These verses lend themselves

in Umayyad ideology, at the heart of the body of believers,

to otherworldly associations, a trend already reflected in

leading them in prayer, and linking them to the cosmos along

the earliest Qurʾanic commentaries. In the context of the

the vertical axis of the dome. Here, his presence was embodied

mosque, they may also have evoked the Qurʾan manuscript

in stone, ornament, and furnishings, and staged to proclaim

presented to the gaze at the foot of its wall. Both layers of

him as the victorious Deputy of God on earth—khalīfat Allāh.

meaning could, once again, reinforce each other. Like the

All around this central space, a vast vision of abundance was

mosaics at Damascus, the form and illumination of Qurʾans in

deployed in marble, glass tesserae, gold, paint, and precious

this period were experimental and, like them, some featured

stones of varied colours and forms. The mosaics in particular

finely executed trees, plants, buildings, and architectural

uprooted Christian conventions by doing away with figuration

motifs combined with calligraphy, making this resonance

and captions—and just as importantly, energising the whole

more complete (Figure 3).

composition through poetic rhythms.

92

93

The mosque, from this perspective, becomes a foil for the Qurʾan, which is embodied in its space simultaneously as a

were not intended to convey a single message: rather they

book, a mosaic inscription and, perhaps most importantly, as

drew the beholder into a polysemic field made only richer by

sound. The ‘Readers who do not sleep’ officiated there, says

the gaps and uncertainties between different ‘readings’. But

al-Farazdaq (v. 20), which implies continuous recitation, a

its intended impact was not confined to meaning; for it is a

practice also observed in the fourteenth century by Ibn Baṭṭūṭa,

sensorial response verging on the spiritual that emerges from

although we do not know whether it continued uninterrupted

al-Nābigha’s poem, in a convergence of sensibilities with the

throughout these centuries. The mosque, Ibn Baṭṭūṭa also

aural reception of the Qurʾan. Day and night, the ‘fragrant

states, had seventy muezzins in his day, and according to

words’ of reciters (al-Farazdaq, v. 23) reverberated through

al-Badrī (d. 894/1489), upon founding the mosque, al-Walīd

the space, making vision and sound work in concert. The

‘established three companies of forty muezzins, and these

stimulation of smell likely completed this artful construct.

94

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Like poetry and the Qurʾan, the mosque and its ornament

remain to the present day’. This late anecdote is unreferenced 95

Meanwhile in the Christian sphere, a change of attitude

and of uncertain authenticity, but whatever their number, a

was underway. Since time immemorial, the spiritual realm

company of muezzins would have been needed for a mosque

had been felt as a palpable presence in this world, glowing

of this scale. Their shared utterance reverberated across the

with particular intensity in sacred sites. Then gradually, from

city and was repeated as a faint whisper by the faithful in their

around the seventh century, paradise came to be conceived

houses and shops. Looking inwards, the sound of Qurʾanic

as a world ‘out there’, a ‘hereafter’ in heaven, infinitely distant

recitation, like the seamless transition from courtyard to prayer

from our earthly lives.98 The iconoclast crisis that broke out in

96

212

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George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

726 with the edict of Leo III resonated with this background. Its controversies revolved around the attribution to a man-made object—the icon—of otherworldly powers. John of Damascus, whose life was affected, one way or another, by the genesis of the Umayyad Mosque, reacted vigorously to these developments in Constantinople, seeking to shield icon worship from such attacks: ‘I do not venerate matter’, he said, ‘I venerate the fashioner of matter, who became matter for my sake and accepted to dwell in matter and through matter worked for my salvation.’99 John was thereby signalling a subtle shift towards the icon as a ‘window’ opening onto the unseen, rather than as the very embodiment of divine presence in matter. Instead of trying to change the gaze of the worshipper, as this implied, Muslims opted to remove the figural image from sacred space, and to fill this numinous void with the living sound of the Qurʾan. The Umayyad Mosque expanded the scope of this nascent aesthetics. Its breathtaking ornament resonated with the aural impact of the Qurʾan, making matter not only glitter, but also vibrate in unison with the beholder. As we stand at the threshold of these fleeting perceptions, the vertical layering of palimpsestic histories and horizontal complexities of sociocultural interactions give way to a dazzling experience: seeing through the eyes of others, and faintly reviving lost worlds. Such travel through time can only enrich

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our own fields of vision.

chapter 6  •   ‘Jewelled Embellishments Dazzle’

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:03:10.

213

Appendix 1 Jar r

Three Umayyad Poems about the Mosque of Damascus and the Destruction of the Church



Greet the dwellings at ʿĀqil and Anʿum—







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though inured to travel, once stout of girth. his banners flaunt victory and spoils. kingship is given; ascend to the pulpits, secure! a house of deeds that is high to scale.

I see buildings devoid of their folk, brought down;



214

unmarked barrens on starless nights,

He inherits the reins and lances of power;



Yours are the brimming valley-basins.

The Lord of the Throne ordained that the Caliph be you;



has built on the greatest edifice!

Truly, al-Walīd is the Chosen Imam;



fragment like shards of glazed clay.

The swift camels of Mahra exhausted, dragging,



10

What distances to you have I travelled —



brackish waters tinged brazil-wood red,

Your heritage now dwarfs the one you had raised;



on the wrist, and guard yourself from them!

Al-Walīd the Caliph, son of a Caliph,



unlike those of the loved one, honoured!

Quarters where shells, when ring-doves lay,



degraded is the beguiled hostage to passion.

Wayless deserts I’ve passed, and drinking holes,



nor speared in their dens by the hunter at noon.

Come the day when you lift the hem of your cloak



5

Truly the odious have, among us, abodes





The lovers they tried, they left in thrall,



Arabic Text with Translation by Nadia Jamil

when desire went with the parting litters, yoked?

Sweet does, not taken unawares by the archer,



have wreaked their havoc on these abodes.

Did you stifle the need to weep as you did



and pouring clouds blazoned by Arcturus.

A legion of black rain-bearers, sling-stone tempests,



pointed Revelation on a parchment of the Book;

Remains whereon winds drive twilight cumuli

but the site of your throne will not be razed.

the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus

George, Alain. The Umayyad Mosque of Damascus : Art, Faith and Empire in Early Islam, edited by Melanie Gibson, Gingko Press, Incorporated, 2021. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30611051. Created from nottingham on 2023-11-15 12:06:24.

15

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