Hisham's Palace
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Hisham's Palace (Arabic: Khirbat al-Mafjar) is the archaeological remains of an Umayyad winter palace located five km north of Jericho in the West Bank.
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The palace was built on the northern outskirts of Jericho, then an imperial domain, in 743-744 CE by Al-Walid ibn Yazid during the caliphate of his predecessor Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik,[1] who ruled the Umayyad empire from 723 until his death in 743. It was modelleed on a Roman bath house and was covered with exquisite colored mosaics and stucco.[2]
The complex comprised a palace, a paved courtyard, a bath house, a mosque, a fountain courtyard, a 60-hectare enclosure containing plants, animals, mosaic and decoration of the highest standard.[3] The palace itself was a large square building with a monumental entrance and rooms on two floors around a long porticoed courtyard.[4][5]
A sophisticated system of underground pipes was constructed to provide hot water and portions of the system still exist. The bath house also served as an audience room and banqueting hall.[6] The architecture of the bath's main hall and fountain contain many examples of late antique and classical secular building techniques not known elsewhere.[4]
Recent excavations have uncovered workshops and storerooms, which may indicate that the palace was also an Umayyad town.[7]
The main mosaic depicts a large tree and underneath it a lion is attacking a deer. Thousands of fragments of the mosaics are stored in the Rockefeller Museum in East Jerusalem, but they remain unstudied.[4]
The stucco features depictions of semi-naked women and is unique in Islamic art.[2]
Many of the details of the palace are known to historians as a result of the excavation and reconstruction of its layout by Robert Hamilton.[8]
The luxurious decoration throughout the palace surpasses that known in late Roman equivalents, something that is often taken as evidence of the irreligious nature of the Umayyads.[9]
The palace was destroyed in 747 by an earthquake.[10]
- ^ Hansen & Wickham, 2000, p. 287.
- ^ a b Petersen, 1996, p. 230.
- ^ Turner, 2004, p. 101.
- ^ a b c Bowersock, Brown & Grabar, 1999, p. 551.
- ^ Floorplan, Nasser Rabbat / Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture, MIT at ArchNet.
- ^ Hollingsworth, 2003, p. 117.
- ^ Holt et al, 1977, p. 707.
- ^ Necipoğlu, 1997, pp. 11-14.
- ^ Barker, 1999, p. 1088.
- ^ Bussagli, 2005, p. 60.
- Barker, Graeme (1999). Companion Encyclopedia of Archaeology. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415064481
- Bowersock, Glen Warren, Brown, Peter and Grabar, Oleg (1999). Late Antiquity: A Guide to the Postclassical World. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674511735
- Bussagli, Marco (2005). Understanding Architecture. I. B. Tauris. ISBN 1845110897
- Hansen, Inge Lyse and Wickham, Chris (2000). The Long Eighth Century. Brill Academic Publishers. ISBN 9004117237
- Hollingsworth, Mary (2003). Art in World History. Giunti. ISBN 8809034740
- Holt, Peter Malcolm, Lambton, Ann Katherine Swynford and Lewis, Bernard (1999). The Cambridge History of Islam. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521291380
- Necipoğlu, Gülru (1997). Muqarnas: An Annual on the Visual Culture of the Islamic World. Brill Academic Publishers. ISBN 9004108726
- Petersen, Andrew (1996). Dictionary of Islamic Architecture. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415060842
- Turner, Tom (2004). Garden History: Philosophy and Design 2000 BC - 2000 AD. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0415317487
- Khirbat al-Mafjar at ArchNet.