Author
Appointment, Hani Saleh
Type
Book
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
No
Library
Royal Danish Library
Library Asset ID
ISSN: 2789-7478, EISSN: 2789-7478
Record ID
cdi_almandumah_primary_1318794
Library Location
DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals
Notes
Since the sixth century AH/twelfth century AD, the city of Damascus has witnessed a wide urban renaissance inside and outside the city walls. One of the manifestations of this renaissance was the emergence of residential suburbs to the north and west of the city. The Sharaf al-Qibli area - which is located to the west of the city - was one of the areas on which many residential neighborhoods, schools, mosques, and a number of social and economic institutions were established. The oldest establishments in Sharaf al-Qibli date back to the era of the rule of the Buraid dynasty 498-549 AH/1104. - 1154 AD, and the rule of Sultan Al-Adil Nur al-Din Mahmoud bin Zengi, then the urban movement flourished in the era of the Ayyubids and Mamluks, and among the most important buildings in this region are: the Sufi cemetery, the Khatuniya al-Baraniyya madrasa, the Ablaq Palace, the Tankaz Mosque, and others, but all the buildings and urban structures were gradually extinct since the Ottoman control of the Levant until the middle of the fourteenth century AH / mid-twentieth century AD.
Görüntüle
Majallat Jāmiʻat Dimashq lil-dirāsāt al-tarīkhīyah, 2021, Vol.37 (142), p.345-396