User:Figapartmenttoast/Almohad Caliphate

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Manuscripts and Calligraphy

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The Almohad dynasty embraced a style of cursive Maghrebi script known today as "Maghrebi thuluth" as an official style used in manuscripts, coinage, documents, and architecture. However, the more angular Kufic script was still used, albeit in a reworked form in Qur'an epigraphy, and was seen detailed in silver in some colophons.[1][2] The Maghrebi thuluth script, frequently written in gold, was used to give emphasis when standard writing, written in rounded Maghrebi mabsūt script, was considered insufficient.[3] Maghrebi mabsūt of the al-Andalus region during the 12th to 14th centuries was characterized by elongated lines, stretched out curves, and the use of multiple colors for vocalizations, which was derived from the people of Medina.[2]

Scribes and calligraphers of the Almohad period also started to illuminate words and phrases in manuscripts for emphasis, using gold leaf and lapis lazuli. While much of the script was written in black or brown ink, the use of polychromy for diacritical text and vocalizations also marked a departure from previous caliphates' calligraphic styles.[3][4] Blue dots were used to indicate elif, orange dots denoted hamza, and yellow semicircles to marked shaddah.[2] Separate sets of verses were denoted by various medallions, with distinctive designs for each set. For example, sets of five verses were ended with bud-like medallions while sets of ten were marked by circular medallions, all of which were typically painted in gold.[4] In manuscript illumination, composite floral finials were frequently used in decorating the margins and corners of the page.[4] Manuscripts attributed to this caliphate were characterized by interlacing geometric or recti-curvilinear illuminations, and abstract vegetal artwork and large medallions were often present in the margins and as thumbails.[4] Color schemes focused on primarily using gold, white, and blue, with accentuating elements in red or pink.[4]

During the Almohad dynasty, the act of bookbinding itself took on great importance, with a notable instance of the Almohad caliph Abd al-Mu'min bringing in artisans for a celebration of the binding of a Qur'an imported from Cordoba.[5] Books were most frequently bound in goatskin leather and decorated with polygonal interlacing, goffering, and stamping. The primary materials used for the pages were goat or sheep vellum.[5] However, the Almohad dynasty also saw industrial advancements in the spread of paper mills in Seville and Marrakesh, leading to the introduction of paper for Qur'an manuscripts, illuminated doctrine books, and official documents.[3][6] Most Qur'anic manuscripts were close to square-shaped, though other religious texts were typically vertically oriented.[6] With the exception of a few large-scale Qur'ans, most were modestly sized, ranging from 11 centimenters to 22 centimeters on each side, with 19 to 27 lines of script each page. In contrast, large-sized Qur'ans were typically approximately 60 centimeters by 53 centimeters and had an average of five to nine lines of script to a page, typically in Maghrebi thuluth.[6]

Hadith Bayāḍ wa Riyāḍ, the love story of Bayad and Riyad, is one of the few remaining illustrated manuscripts dated to 13th century Almohad caliphate.[5] Its use of miniatures displays a clear connection with previous illustrated tradition from the eastern Islamic world. However, it deviates in its depictions of the frontispiece, interior, and teaching scenes, which show similarities to scientific manuscripts from the central Islamic world, typically considered to have consisted of the Arabian peninsula, northeast modern Iran, and the Fertile Crescent.[7] Depictions of architecture specific to the Almohad caliphate are also evident in several places in the manuscript.[7]

 
Qur'an of Abu Hafs al-Murtada

The penultimate Almohad caliph, Abu Hafs al-Murtada, was a notable calligrapher in his own right and composed poems and copied Qur'ans. A known bibliophile, he frequently endowed books to madrasas and mosques and established the first public manuscript transcription center in Marrakesh.[2] One of the large Qur'ans that he copied has been preserved in Marrakesh and is the oldest surviving example in the western Islamic world of a Qur'an personally produced by a sovereign ruler. The 10-volume tome is written on parchment and bound with a leather cover decorated with a geometric motif, exhibiting the first dated use of gold tooling on a manuscript binding.[8] The verses are written in Maghrebi mabsūt script and the end of each verse is marked by a gold circle divided into eight uniform segments. Using large Maghrebi script, there are five to 10 lines to a page, with relatively few words to each line. There is lavish use of gold, and this Qur'an, as with other Qur'ans of this size, was likely intended for court use.[9]

References

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  1. ^ Streit, Jessica. "MONUMENTAL AUSTERITY: THE MEANINGS AND AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENT OF ALMOHAD FRIDAY MOSQUES" Cornell University. August 2013. p.52
  2. ^ a b c d Bongianino, Umberto (18 May 2021). Untold Stories of Maghrebi Qur'ans (12th-14th centuries) (Lecture).
  3. ^ a b c Bongianino, Umberto (14 October 2016). The Ideological Power of Some Almohad Illuminated Manuscripts (Lecture).
  4. ^ a b c d e Barrucand, Marianne (1995). Remarques sur le decor des manuscrit religeux hispano-maghrebin du moyen-age. Paris: Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques. p. 241. ISBN 2735502414.
  5. ^ a b c al-Andalus : the art of Islamic Spain. Jerrilynn Denise Dodds, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Patronato de la Alhambra y Generalife. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1992. ISBN 0-87099-636-3. OCLC 24846383.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. ^ a b c Barrucand, Marianne (2005). Les Enluminares de l'Epoque Almohade: Frontispices et Unwans. Estudios Arabes e Islamicos. p. 74.
  7. ^ a b Robinson, Cynthia (2007). Contadini, A. (ed.). Love Localized and Science from Afar: "Arab Painting", Iberian Courtly Culture, and the Hadith Bayad wa Riyad. Brill. pp. 104–114. ISBN 9789047422372.
  8. ^ Bloom, Jonathan M.; Blair, Sheila S. (2009), "Almohad", The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780195309911.001.0001/acref-9780195309911-e-70, ISBN 978-0-19-530991-1, retrieved 2021-05-04
  9. ^ Blair, Sheila (2008). Islamic Calligraphy. Edinburgh: Edinburgh. pp. 227–228. ISBN 978-1-4744-6447-5.