Explores the Kaʿba as it has been conceptualised, represented and used by Muslims from the earliest period of Islam onwards
The first book-length exploration of the Kaʿba in a Western language
Explains what the Kaʿba is by examining how it functions architecturally and is represented culturally
Each chapter pursues a different aspect of the Kaʿba, presenting new findings and arguments
Extensively illustrated, including a number of rarely reproduced images
What is the Kaʿba and why it is pivotal to the Islamic world? Why do pilgrims go about it, not in it? Is it empty? And why is a hollow building covered in black silk?
The most sacred site of Islam, the Kaʿba (the granite cuboid structure at the centre of the Great Mosque of Mecca) is here investigated by examining six of its predominantly spatial effects: as the qibla (the direction faced in prayer); as the axis and matrix mundi of the Islamic world; as an architectural principle in the bedrock of this world; as a circumambulated goal of pilgrimage and a site of spiritual union for mystics and Sufis; and as a dwelling that is imagined to shelter temporarily an animating force; but which otherwise, as a house, holds a void.
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Birol Başkan
List Price : £ 20.00The Kizilbash-Alevis in Ottoman Anatolia Sufism, ... -- ©2019
Ayfer Karakaya Stump
List Price : £ 85.00The Politics of Islam The Muslim Brothers and the ... -- ©2023
Birol Başkan
List Price : £ 20.00
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