12- Religious Architecture of the Ilkhanids
The Ilkhanids: Il-khan (Subordinate of the Khan) was the title assumed by Hülegü (1256-65), after he became the Mongol ruler of Iran and Khurasan. The Ilkhanids eventually converted to Islam and adopted the Iranian culture. It was from that period that the material culture of Iran flourished after the severe blow caused by the Mongol invasion.
Dargah: A Persian
term for entrance vestibule, it became an important element in Timurid architecture
and developed into monumental proportions along very symmetrical lines.
The Monuments:
The Mihrab of Sultan Oljeïtu at the Isfahan Masjid-i-Jomeh: (1310) a most unusual, carved stucco mihrab added onto a structural wall along with the whole vaulted oratory, called the winter hall.
The Mosque of ‘Ali Shah in Tabriz: (1315) Considered the largest iwan mosque of its time, this huge vaulted structure overlooking a large court with a big central pool (possibly meant as a reflective pool) was seen as the Islamic challenge to the legendary Iwan-i Kisra.
The Mausoleum of Sultan Oljeïtu at Sultaniyya: (1307-13) intended as a major component of a larger complex, this octagonal structure with eight slender minarets and a huge, blue-glazed dome is not well understood. Oljeïtu had the idea of transforming it into a mashhad for ‘Ali and his son al-Husayn when he converted to Shi‘ism but then changed his mind again and made it his own, and plastered the interior. The buidling shows the striving for verticality and the perfection of pre-existing traditions.
The Masjid-i-Jomeh at Varamin: (1322-26), built under Abu Sa‘id, the son of Oljeïtu, this mosque is a very symmetrical composition which displays the ideal four-iwan plan. Its dargah announces later developments.
The Mosque of Sultan al-Nasir Muhammad in Cairo: (1318 and 1335) This hypostyle structure is distinguished by the arrangement of alternate courses of red and black stone in its arches and niches, and by its two unusual minarets which may have been a direct import from Ilkhanid Iran.