11- Ayyubids and Mamluks
The Ayyubids: A family of Kurdish amirs who ruled Syria and Egypt (1176-1250). Their founder was Salah al-Din (Saladin),
the exemplary knight and hero of the Counter-Crusade.
The Mamluks: A curious phenomenon that
is not encountered outside the Islamic world, Mamluks were imported slaves,
mostly of Turkish or Caucasian stock, who were destined for a military career.
The Mamluks ruled Egypt and Syria from 1250 to 1517.
Waqf: Endowment
deed. In the medieval period,
amirs and dignitaries endowed charitable structures both for pious and social
reasons and as a means to preserve some of the wealth generated by their iqta‘, or revenues
form land holdings granted by the state only while they are actively in the
service.
Khanqah: Institution
for sufis which usually contains a mosque, quarters for a number of sufis,
and a meeting hall where the hudur is
performed. Its introduction into
the urban environmrnt in major cities marked the recognition of popular religious
practices by both the ruling and the clerical classes
Hudur: Sufi
acts of devotion which took the form of dancing, singing, and whirling among
other ways. Each Sufi order had
its distinctive hudur.
The Monuments:
The Mosque of Sultan al-Zahir Baybars in Cairo: (1267-9)
First royal Mamluk mosque in Cairo. Hypostyle in plan, and fortress-like in
elevation, the mosque with its three portals displays local and Seljuk influences.
Its minbar and mihrab are said to have been built with wood and marble
taken from a Crusader's church in Jaffa
The Complex of Sultan Qalawun in Cairo: (1284-85)
Contains a bimaristan (hospital), a madrasa, and a mausoleum for the founder.
The street façade is well articulated and shows the confluence
of Syrian (Crusader and Islamic) arrangements. The madrasa is a four-iwan
type with a basilical organization in the qibla iwan. The Dome of the mausoleum echoes the octagonal
plan of the Dome of the Rock.
The Khanqah of Sultan Baybars al-Jashankir: (1307-10) a structure with a biaxial plan, this khanqah had a mausoleum added on its qibla side. It contained rooms for the sufis aligned on its two longitudinal sides.