9- The Great Seljuqs, The Sunni Revival, and the
Four-Iwan Plan
The Great Seljuqs (1038-1194): A Turkish, Sunni dynasty which ruled the whole Iranian
world (including Khurasan and Transoxania), Iraq, Syria, and parts of Byzantine
Anatolia.
The Sunni Revival: The term used to designate
the movement that culminated with the Seljuqs who actively sought the elimination
of Shi‘ite principalities in the eastern Islamic world and the Shi‘ite
grip on the Abbasid Caliphate of Baghdad, and who sponsored and fostered the
renaissance in Sunni theology and jurisprudence.
Nizam al-Mulk (1020-92): The able vizier of the
Seljuq sultans who organized the structure of their state, promoted Sunni
learning, and sponsored madrasas in Afghanistan, Iran, and Iraq, all called
Nizamiyya.
Four-Iwan Type: A structure with cross-axes ending in four iwans surrounding
a courtyard. In four-iwan mosques
and madrasas, the prayer hall is the largest iwan. The type first appeared in Khurasan, probably
developed from ancient Iranian models. It was the most popular type in the medieval period, and remained
dominant in Iran.
Muqarnas: Also called the stalactite or honeycomb, one of the
most distinctive Islamic architectural elements used in domes, in domes' transitional
zones, in cornices and friezes, in conches above entrances, and on friezes
supporting balconies of minarets.. Its origin, symbolic meaning, and date of first appearance
are frequently debated.
Monuments:
The Imam al-Dur Dome, Samarra: (ca. 1085), a
brick tapering cube, similar to the Samanid tomb, and a pointed muqarnas
dome whose exterior reciprocates the interior arrangement.
The Masjid-i Jomi at Isfahan (9th century, 11th and
12th century): An early hypostyle Abbasid mosque with cylindrical, brick
piers to which the Seljuqs added two monumental and extraordinary domes, one
on the qibla side (built by Nizam al-Mulk between 1072
and 1075) and one on the northern side (1088-89), and four iwans with pishtaks in the centers of its four porticoes overlooking the
courtyard built in the early 12th century. It is the most cited example of the transformation from hypostyle
plan to four-iwan plan.
The Great Mosque of Diyarbakir (founded 1091, and
renovated in the 12th century): A Seljuq foundation on the model of the
Great Umayyad mosque in Damascus, the mosque is remarkable for its use of
diverse Classical and medieval Islamic motifs.