The Mamluk Minarets of Ramla: Katia Cytryn-Silverman
The Mamluk Minarets of Ramla: Katia Cytryn-Silverman
Introduction
One of the most remarkable symbols of Ramla is the thirty meters high minaret, standing at the northern wall of the citys old Umayyad mosque best known as the White Mosque. This tower from which the faithful were called to prayers was erected in 1318, in the third rule of the Mamluk Sultan alNir Muammad b. Qalwun (1310-1341). Four years earlier, another minaret, which has not survived, was erected by the same ruler over Ramlas Great Mosque, a converted church dating to the Crusader period. From around the sixteenth century, the Mamluk minaret became known as The Tower of the Forty, as it is sometimes called today. According to Muslim sources, this name refers to the forty Companions of the Prophet, while Christians believed it was associated with the forty martyrs of Sebastia in Armenia, believed to be buried underneath this mosque. Despite being reminded of in almost every description of Ramla be it in Arabic geographical and historical texts, in Christian travelogues throughout the ages, in modern scholarly works, and even in banknotes of the Mandatory period this important architectural landmark has until now lacked an indepth research, which combines architectural aspects, its in-situ epigraphic evidence, together with its contemporary historical setting. Such an approach not only enriches our understanding of architectural trends and developments, but also allows us to assess the semiotics of this structure. Nevertheless, to enable a discussion on the architectural language of the minaret of the White Mosque and also of a number of local late thirteenth-early fourteenth century minarets it is imperative to introduce and survey the main building under discussion. Two brief reports dealing with Ramla by the surveyors of the British Palestine Exploration Fund (Conder and Kitchiner 1882: 269-275) and by the French explorer Charles Clermont-Ganneau (1896: 119-122), were published in the end of the nineteenth century. They dealt with the Crusader Church and with the White Mosque, also reserving a few lines for their respective minarets. The first detailed documentation of the White Mosques minaret was done in 1949 on behalf of the Committee for the Preservation of Muslim Religious Buildings (Mayer et al. 1950: 25-27). Ground plans, sections and elevations were produced, and are still in use today. The few archaeological works undertaken at the White Mosque in 1949 by Yaakov Kaplan (Kaplan 1959), in 1965 by Myriam Rosen-Ayalon and Avraham Eitan (Rosen-Ayalon and Eitan 1966 and 1969), and in 1979/80 by Meir Ben-Dov (Ben-Dov 1984) checked the foundations of the minaret in order to establish its chronology, allowing some general assessments as to the development of the mosque. Nevertheless, the study of this structure remained detached from the general study of Mamluk architecture, and of minarets in particular. It was neither included in K.A.C. Creswells study on the evolution of the minaret (Creswell 1968), nor in Jonathan Blooms monograph Minaret, Symbol of Islam (Bloom 1989).
This lecture is part of a continuing work on the minarets of the Mamlk period in southern Bild al-Shm. A popular article on the minaret of the White Mosque in Ramla has been published in Qadmonyot 138, 2008 (in Hebrew). For a full version of this present study, see K. Cytryn-Silverman, The Mamlk Minarets of Ramla, in Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 35, 2008, pp. 379-432.
The inscription, together with the archaeological evidence, points out to the fact that this minaret was erected from scratch with no remains of a previous tower underlying its foundations. But two pieces of evidence teach us that at least another minaret stood at the White Mosque when al-Nir Muammad ordered a new one to be built: first, the writings of the tenth century geographer al-Muqaddas, according to which a splendid minaret was built during the early 8th century by the Umayyads. The second evidence is an inscription commemorating Baybars historical victory over the Crusaders at Jaffa in 1268, today embedded over the westernmost entrance to the prayer hall at the Great Mosque of Ramla, but originally found at the White Mosque. Following Baybars many names and titles, the inscription reads (RCEA 12, no. 4588): He departed from the land of Egypt with his victorious army on the tenth of the month of Rajab the Separate, in order to go on a holy war and a raid on the men of idolatry and obstinacy; and he camped at the fort of Jaffa early in the morning, and he conquered it by the permission of God at 3 oclock of the same day. (4) Then he ordered the erection of this dome over the blessed minaret (manra) and this gate at the blessed mosque, by the needy servant [] [in the year 66] and 600 [March 26th, 1268] The beginning of its fourth line refers to the erection of a dome on top of the minaret, together with the entrance to the mosque. That implies that Baybars ordered a dome over an existing structure, probably also a square structure as usual in Syria, the location of which is unknown. That Baybars minaret was still standing when al-Nir Muammad ordered a new one, is learned by the passage written by the Jerusalemite historian Mujr al-Dn who wrote at the end of the 15th century (Mujr al-Dn, al-Uns: 68-69): And the Sultan al-Malik al-Nir Muammad ibn Qalwn erected in it a minaret, one of the wonders of the world in its shape and height. The travelers mention that it is unique of its kind After the conquest of Jaffa by al-Malik al-hir Baybars in the year 666, he built the dome over the mirb and the door facing the mirb, next to the minbar (pulpit) from which the sermon was preached on the festival. In the place of the still remaining old minaret, Baybars ordered the building of the one which exists today. A few locations within the perimeter of the White Mosque have been suggested as the probable site for the Umayyad minaret refurbished by Baybars, but that would shift this discussion from its main topic.
reinforced buttresses rising above the mosques roof. It is even possible to see some of its arched niches, and the narrow top-floor surrounded by a veranda and topped by a cylindrical shaft (a lantern?). This squared tower also appears on a late sixteenth century etching of Ramla, which appeared in various itineraria to the Holy Land.
In Majdal near Ashqelon, the still standing minaret of 700/1300 is of a different type due to the polygonal shape of the shaft, but in terms of decorative style, it is in line with the previous examples note the use of multiple types of niches, framed by gadroon, molded trefoil arches, while polylobed fenestrations replace the slits seen in Ramla (at the Ghawnima the original system of windows is not clear). This style is in clear contrast to contemporary works in Cairo, the Mamluk capital, for example. There, the local architectural traditions which developed from the 11th century onwards were continued into the early Mamluk period, gradually adding northern Syrian and eastern elements. Nonetheless, this was a conscious choice, as the Romanesque style was well known in Cairo: the complex of Qalwun, as well as the gate of al-Nir Muammads madrasa, are examples of its use, which perhaps for traditionalist reasons, or mainly for being in the wrong cultural context, was not much repeated in the Mamluk capital. The Romanesque style seems to have passed in Palestine by the end of the 1320s, as evident at minaret Bb al-Silsila (730/ 1329-30) over the western portico of the aram in Jerusalem, erected twelve years after the minaret at the White Mosque. Despite sharing the square shaft typical of Syrian minarets, the decorative scheme varies deeply from the White Mosque. It is much plainer, with little use of arched windows and secondary building material.
Conclusion
In view of the above, the minarets of Ramla, the Ghawnima in Jerusalem, as well as the octagonal minaret at Majdal (700/1300), should be understood against the background of a period in which the Crusader chapter in Palestine was still an open wound. The shadow of more than a hundred years of Christian dominance over Jerusalem (1099-1187; 1229-1244) and more than a hundred and fifty years over Ramla (1099-1187; 1192-1197; 1204-1266), as well as major cities of greater Syria, still guided the political and ideological behavior of the time. Ramla, capital of Jund Filasn from the early eighth century up to the Crusader period, was returned to Islamic hands following the crushing victory by ala al-Dn at the Battle of iin, but only for a short time. Twice the city came into Latin hands and remained mostly Christian up to Baybars victory in 1266. The choice of connecting a military victory with the erection of a dome over a revived minaret, as well as the adoption of a Crusader-styled tower to display spolia, fits the atmosphere by which Islam should clearly display its supremacy over Christianity.
Dr. Katia Cytryn-Silverman is a lecturer at the Institute of Archaeology and the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is a specialist in the Islamic periods and has recently taken over directorship of the Tiberias excavations where her team is uncovering the remains of an early Islamic mosque (http://archaeology.huji.ac.il/Tiberias/). She is also a co-director of the Khirbat al-Minya excavations, an eighth century caliphal palace ca. 14 km. north of Tiberias. In addition, she continues her research on roadarchaeology, which was the topic of her doctoral thesis: The Mamluk Inns (Khans) in Southern Bilad al-Sham. The Institute of Archaeology and the Dept. of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies The Hebrew University of Jerusalem http://archaeology.huji.ac.il/depart/classical/katiac/katiac.asp [email protected]
Bibliography
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