학술논문

A Friday Mosque founded in the late first century A.H. at al-Yamāmah: origins and evolution of Islamic religious architecture in Najd.
Document Type
Article
Source
Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies. 2019, Vol. 49, p247-264. 18p.
Subject
*RELIGIOUS architecture
*ISLAMIC architecture
*MOSQUES
*SEQUENCE stratigraphy
*METROPOLIS
*ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations
*ARAB Americans
Language
ISSN
0308-8421
Abstract
Archaeological excavations have only rarely documented the birth and development of Islamic religious architecture in the Ḥijāz and none had in Najd. In this respect, the fieldwork conducted by the Saudi-French archaeological mission in the oasis of al- Kharj (central Arabia, 2011-2017) filled this gap by discovering and excavating the Friday Mosque at al-Yamāmah, ancient Jaww al-Khaḑārim, a major city in the region of al-Yamāmah. The five-year-long project revealed a late Islamic mosque (sixteenth-eighteenth century AD). Soundings and a careful examination of its floor demonstrated that it had been laid over an early Islamic mosque (eighth-tenth century AD), itself built over pre-Islamic dwellings. The stratigraphic sequence, architectural analysis, material study, and AMS radiocarbon dating at al-Yamāmah clarify the development of early Islamic Najdī religious architecture. This architecture is at the origin of a central Arabian indigenous tradition, which received little influence from outside the Peninsula and remained unchanged until recent times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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