Compare with The Ghur-i Amir in Samarqand (Tomb of Tamerlane, 1404).
The Khanqah of Sultan Faraj ibn Barquq (1400-11): One of the largest Mamluk monuments, this complex was the first true urban intervention into what had been until then a desert. It has a mosque with two minarets, a khanqah with numeorus cells for sufis, two sabil-kuttabs, two funerary domes, one for Barquq, the other for his ladies, and many dependencies such as baths, grain mills, and water wheels.
The Funerary Complex of Sultan Barsbay (1432): A long facade on the main street of the Qarafawhich consists of a mosque (with an ugly minaret added later), a mausoleum, two sabils, and a rab` for the sufis.
The Funerary Complex of Sultan Inal (1451-56): A notable example of the accretive nature of Mamluk architecture: Sultan Inal started it by building himself a funerary dome when he was an amir then went on to add a khanqah, a madrasa/mosque, a sabil and a zawiya after he became sultan.
The Funerary-Religious Complex of Sultan Qaytbay (1472-74): Perhaps the most beautiful monument of Mamluk Cairo, this complex has a qa`a-type mosque, a madrasa, a mausoleum, and a sabil-kuttab. It was part of a large complex enclosed by a wall of which a rab`, a drinking trough for animals, a saqiya (water-wheel), and a maq`adwhich formed part of a large residence, still stand. The 3-tiered minaret and the carved stone dome with two two superimposed designs are the most accomplished examples of the Burji period.