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Krak
des Chevaliers:
The most important Crusaders' castles in Syria (12-13th c.). Its last
phase of building during the 13th century illustrates the incorporation
of new fortification techniques in response to technical advances
in siege machines. |
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The
Citadel of Aleppo:
An early Islamic citadel that might have influenced the choice of
location and forms of the Citadel of Cairo and the types of palaces
and audience halls to be built in it. |
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General
view the citadel of Aleppo. |
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The
Citadel of Cairo:
Built by Salah al-Din's lieutenant Qaraqush between 1176-1183 as a
royal residence and barracks for the troops and reorganized and enlarged
several times in the 13th-14th century. It became the seat of the
sultanate and remained the center of government well into the 19th
century. To this day , it still dominates the Cairo skyline. |
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The
general view of citadel of Cairo. |
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Detail
of the fortification of the northern enclosure of the citadel. |
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Iwan:
Usually a vaulted hall, open at one end. By the twelfth century, iwans
became important organizational elements in plans of residences and
religious structures alike to the point that the word acquired a new
meaning as the name of an entire structure, usually a royal one. |
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Dar
al-`Adl:
The palace of justice, an institutional building that appeared under
the Ayyubids and was used by the sultans and their deputies to publicly
judge petitions submitted by subjects. The Cairo Citadel had a Dar
al-`Adl that was rebuilt at least four times and was called The Great
Iwan. |
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Dar
al-`Adl as illustrated by Robert Hay in the 1820's. |
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The
Sunni Revival:
A term used to designate
the movement initiated by the Ghaznavids of Afghanistan (977-1186)
which culminated with the Seljuqs who actively sought the elimination
of Shi`ite principalities in the
Islamic world and the Shi`ite grip on the Abbasid
Caliphate in Baghdad and who sponsored
and fostered the renaissance in Sunni theology and jurisprudence. |
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The
Crusades:
A series of campaigns launched by Christian Europe against the Islamic
east, ostensibly to liberate the Holy Land. After the conquest of
Jerusalem in 1099, four Latin principalities were founded in the area,
the last of which was eliminated in 1293 by the Mamluks. |
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Salah
al-Din (Saladin):
A general in the Zangid army sent to Egypt, he managed to abolish
the Fatimid caliphate in 1176 and to restore Sunnism to the country.
He later established a new dynasty, engaged in a war of attrition
against the Crusaders, and encircled the two cities of Fustat
and al-Qahira in one wall and built
the Citadel of Cairo. |
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