Until relatively recent times, wooden
furniture—in the sense of tables and chairs was little
known in traditional Islamic societies. Throughout the
warm and dry lands of North Africa, the Middle East,
India and Central Asia, most people found it practical, as
well as comfortable, to sit or kneel on the ground or on
the floor. They used soft carpets to protect themselves
from dirt; they leaned against cushions and firmly stuffed
bolsters. Even rulers usually went along with this common
practice and sat cross-legged on rugs and cushions that
were sometimes laid out on slightly raised platforms.
An important reason for the absence of
furniture in these parts of the world was the scarcity and
high cost of wood. Timber was usually reserved for
essential uses, such as building boats, supporting roofs,
or making doors and shutters, and many old building
timbers, for example, show signs of repeated reuse. After
Muslim forces reconquered Acre from the Crusaders in 1291,
Pope Nicholas IV barred Christians from selling
timber to Muslims in an attempt to prevent the Muslims
from building ships, and this "war of wood"
continued for many decades.
Throughout the Muslim lands, craftsmen
treated wood as a precious resource, and they learned to
use small pieces of it to great artistic advantage,
elaborating such techniques as mashrabiyya, in
which lathe-turned pieces of wood are joined into
grille-work, often used as a screen over a window; inlay,
in which little pieces of colored woods are inserted into
recesses carved in a larger piece of wood; and marquetry,
in which a surface is entirely covered with little pieces
of wood veneer laid side-by-side to form patterns. All
these techniques are commonly found in small wooden
objects, such as boxes, low tabouret tables and stands, in
the Islamic world.
Perhaps because it was so precious, Muslim
craftsmen used wood to make minbars, the one article of
furniture required in every congregational mosque. The
minbar, a stepped pulpit normally located to the right of
the mihrab (the niche in the wall facing Makkah),
is the place from which the imam preaches his sermon at
Friday noon worship. Although some minbars in later
centuries were built of stone or made of bricks covered
with glazed tiles, from earliest times most were made of
wood. And as the one ubiquitous type of wooden furniture
in the Muslim world, minbars were the focus of
woodworkers' greatest efforts, and were decorated with the
finest materials and techniques available. Many countries
and periods claim splendid examples, but perhaps the most
beautiful to survive from the medieval period is the
minbar formerly in the Kutubiyya Mosque of Marrakech,
Morocco, which is now preserved in the Badi' Palace there.
The minbar—the word has come into
English as mimbar—developed from the raised seat
used by judges in pre-Islamic times, and it is the only
common feature of the modern mosque that was used by the
Prophet Muhammad himself, who addressed his followers from
it. Other common features of mosques, such as the mihrab
and minaret (the tower from which the call to prayer is
issued) were introduced well after the Prophet's death in
632. His successors, the caliphs, made the Prophet's
minbar a symbol of their authority, and eventually placed
a minbar, modeled on the Prophet's, in the congregational
mosque of every city, so that the caliph or his deputies
could use it when addressing the community gathered for
Friday worship.
At first the minbar was a simple wooden
seat raised on three short steps, but in a few centuries,
minbars began to be built as larger and more elaborate
affairs. The steps became staircases, sometimes demarcated
with an archway at the bottom; the archway was sometimes
closed with doors. The seat at the top of the minbar was
also elaborated and, particularly in Egypt, the Levant and
Iran, was sometimes covered with a wooden canopy.
Rules for the use and placement of minbars
varied from place to place. Some Muslims believed that no
city could have more than one minbar, located in the
city's single congregational mosque, or that minbars could
only be brought out when they were needed for the Friday
sermon. Others felt that it was acceptable to have more
than one in a particular city or to leave them in place
all week. In the Maghrib (North Africa and al-Andalus, or
Muslim Spain), it became common practice to store the
minbar in a closet built into the wall to the right of the
mihrab. Because they were quite heavy, Maghribi minbars
were built on wheels so that they could be rolled out of
the closet, and wooden tracks were often laid on the
carpets or mats of the mosque floor to make the task
easier.
The oldest surviving minbar in North
Africa is the one still in the Great Mosque of Kairouan in
Tunisia, which was assembled more than a thousand years
ago, in the middle of the ninth century. The panels of
Javanese teakwood were probably carved in Iraq and then
shipped to North Africa, where they were assembled in a
carved teakwood frame. Unusually, this minbar seems never
to have had wheels.
The most famous minbar was that of the
Great Mosque of Córdoba, commissioned by the 10th-century
Umayyad caliph al-Hakam II on the occasion of his
expansion of the mosque. According to the 12th-century
geographer al-Idrisi, six craftsmen and their apprentices
worked for seven years to finish it. The Moroccan
historian Ibn 'Idhari, a native of Marrakech who lived in
the late 13th and early 14th centuries, wrote that the Córdoba
minbar was inlaid with red and yellow sandalwood, ebony,
ivory and Indian wood, and that it cost the enormous sum
of 35,705 gold dinars—at a time when a family of modest
means required 20 to 30 dinars a year to live on! Although
it was destroyed by Christian zealots in the 16th century,
archeologists working in the mosque, which is now the
Cathedral of Córdoba, discovered the remains of a closet
to the right of the former mihrab where the minbar had
presumably been stored.
The Kutubiyya minbar was probably built in
the same workshop that made the famous Córdoba one, for a
newly deciphered inscription on its left side states that
it was ordered in Córdoba on the first day of Muharram
532 AH (September 19, 1137) for the congregational
mosque in Marrakech. Thus it was most probably ordered by
the ruling Almoravid sultan, 'Ali ibn Yusuf, son and
successor of the Berber amir Yusuf ibn Tashufin, whose
long, 36-year reign is generally regarded as one of the
most brilliant in the history of the Muslim West. Although
Marrakech remained the capital of the Almoravid kingdom,
which included most of present-day Morocco and southern
Spain, Córdoba returned in those years to the central
intellectual, artistic and social position it had held
more than a century earlier under the Umayyads, when the
city had been a center of literature and the arts.
The Kutubiyya minbar, which stands nearly
4 meters high, 3½ meters deep and nearly 1 meter wide (13
by 11 by 3 ft), was prefabricated in pieces, so that it
could be transported from Spain to Morocco. It must have
been assembled and installed in the mosque of Marrakech by
1147, since it was in that year that the Almoravids lost
the city to their Almohad rivals. The Almohads, also a
Berber reformist group, had taken advantage of the
Almoravids' preoccupation with Iberian affairs to extend
their power from the High Atlas mountains south of
Marrakech.
After taking the city, the Almohad ruler
destroyed the Almoravid mosque on the pretext of
correcting its faulty orientation, which was said not to
point exactly towards Makkah; however, he transferred its
beautiful minbar as a trophy to the new mosque he built on
the ruins of the Almoravid palace he had also destroyed.
Apart from the minbar, all that remained of the earlier
mosque was the charming ablution pavilion that once stood
in its court.
An anonymous medieval author reports that
a skilled engineer from Malaga designed a magnificent
screened wooden enclosure, or m aqsura, for this
new Almohad mosque. The maqsura, he wrote, was housed in
slots in the floor of the mosque; when the sultan entered
the mosque, a counterbalance mechanism, presumably
activated by his weight, raised the screen from where it
rested to define a private enclosure for the ruler and his
courtiers. When the sultan left, the maqsura sank
back into the floor, where it remained for the rest of the
week. In fact, archeologists working at the site of this
mosque in the late 1940's confirmed the basic elements of
this story by finding the trenches that would have held
the maqsura. They also found the remains of another
wondrous mechanism, described in the same text, that
automatically opened the door of the closet that housed
the minbar when the preacher stood up to give the Friday
sermon, and silently rolled the minbar out. The Muslims of
Spain delighted in elaborate mechanical devices and
automata such as those.
At some time before 1162, the Almohad
mosque was also found to be incorrectly oriented toward
Makkah, so yet another mosque was built at a slightly
different angle, adjacent to the first one. The
magnificent minbar was transferred yet again to the new
mosque, and it was this that came to be known as the
Kutubiyya ("Booksellers'") Mosque, because of
the dozens of bookshops that once surrounded it.
When the minbar first came to scholarly
attention in the 1920's, French scholars thought it had
been made for the Kutubiyya Mosque itself. Over the years,
the minbar was repeatedly cited as one of the great
examples of medieval Islamic art, but it was rarely seen
by non-Muslims. It remained in the mosque until the
1960's, when it was transferred to a local museum. Then,
in preparation for an international exhibition of the arts
of Islamic Spain held in 1992 at the Alhambra in Granada
and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York (See Aramco
World, September/October 1992), the minbar was
photographed extensively, but was ultimately deemed too
fragile to travel.
In 1996 a US-Moroccan team agreed to
undertake scientific conservation—though not
restoration—of the minbar's structure and decoration so
that its beauties could be made accessible to a wider
audience. Under the aegis of Abdelaziz Touri, director of
cultural patrimony for Morocco, a series of drawings was
produced that recorded and analyzed the minbar's every
detail. At the same time, the team prepared designs for
restoring a suitable space in the largely ruined Badi'
Palace, where the minbar would become the centerpiece of a
new museum of Islamic art.
Conservators from the United States spent
seven months in Marrakech studying the minbar,
strengthening its structure, regluing fallen panels and
removing several centuries of grime from its decoration.
Stefano Carboni, assistant curator of Islamic art at the
Metropolitan Museum, researched the minbar's history along
with the author of this article. The minbar is now on
public display in a new gallery at the refurbished Badi'
Palace, which opened last May.
Originally, every visible surface of the
Kutubiyya minbar was covered in a web of decoration
comprised of either carved panels or marquetry. Some of
the carved panels measure several centimeters across, but
many of the pieces of which the marquetry is composed are
smaller than a grain of rice. El Mostafa Hbibi, inspector
of historic monuments for Marrakech, estimates that the
minbar was originally composed of more than 1.3 million
pieces of wood. If the Córdoba minbar took seven years to
complete, as the texts tell us, a team of craftsmen and
apprentices must have worked for no less time to build and
decorate the Kutubiyya one.
The conservators determined that, in
addition to the standard range of saws, drills, chisels
and gouges that medieval craftsmen used, the builders of
the Kutubiyya minbar must also have used a fretsaw—a
thin, flexible toothed blade held under tension in a
deeply bow-shaped or U-shaped frame. Until then, scholars
had believed that this tool had been invented in
16th-century Italy, but it was clear that the fine,
undulating decoration on the risers of the minbar's steps
could only have been cut with such a tool, four centuries
earlier than it was previously thought to exist.
On the other hand, the conservators were
unable to explain exactly how medieval artisans had
created other aspects of the decoration, such as the tiny,
one-centimeter square tiles, inlaid with still smaller
cubes of wood, that make up the background of many panels.
Each of the triangular sides of the
Kutubiyya minbar is decorated with a geometric pattern of
intersecting bands, called strap work, which outline a
design of irregular polygons of four different shapes: two
sizes of eight-pointed star, both known as khatam,
or "seal [of Solomon]"; an elongated hexagon
with triangular projections on the long sides, known as mitraqa,
or "hammer"; and an irregular Y-shaped,
six-pointed star, known as difda'a—and
colloquially in Morocco as jarana, or
"frog." While the bands are worked in marquetry
of colored wood and bone, each of these four types of
polygon is made of a particular precious wood: The stars
are carved of African blackwood (Dalbergia spp.,
an exceptionally hard and fine-grained wood), the hexagons
of boxwood (Buxus sempervirens) and the
"frogs" of jujube (Zizyphus spp.). The
recent cleaning has revealed the distinct colors of these
different woods, which the centuries had darkened into an
undifferentiated brown. The vibrant colors of the patterns
reveal the close relationship between them and the
traditional art of tile mosaic, known in Morocco as zillij,
which in Maghribi architecture is used to decorate walls.
Indeed, a band of mid-12th-century zillij girdles
the top of the minaret of the Kutubiyya Mosque itself, one
of the earliest surviving examples of the technique. Like
the minbar's, its pattern too is based on overlapping
octagons.
Zillij, intricately patterned and
subtly colored, relies for its effect on the repetition of
designs and motifs. In contrast, the decoration of the
Kutubiyya minbar is never quite repetitive. Among the
carved panels, no two are exactly alike, and each waits
for the viewer's eye to explore it as a miniature but
complete work of art in itself. Some panels are decorated
with shallow symmetrical designs of leaves and stems known
as vegetal arabesques, while others show more deeply
carved naturalistic foliage, frozen in time as if a breath
of wind had just rippled across it. A few panels display
manmade objects, such as two columns supporting a
scalloped arch and a hanging lamp, which presumably
represents a mihrab. The carving on the blackwood panels
is so fine, and the wood so finegrained, that they were
once thought to have been carved from colored ivory; all
are clearly the work of immensely experienced and talented
craftsmen.
The two sizes of stars defined by the
strapwork design on the flanks of the minbar generate a
subtle modulation of the overall pattern that prevents it
from becoming monotonous. While all the vertical and
horizontal bands are exactly in line, the diagonals
slightly expand and contract, thereby energizing the
whole. The overall design is precisely coordinated to
match the minbar's stepped profile: Each repetition of the
pattern corresponds to one of the steps. Each side panel
is bordered by stepped bands containing a long Arabic
inscription. The individual letters, also carved from
blackwood and outlined with thin strips of white bone, are
set against a background of tiny wooden tiles, each one
inlaid with minuscule blocks of wood that form yet another
pattern.
This inscription was long recognized to
contain quotations from the Qur'an, and the recent
cleaning revealed them to be passages from Surah 2
("The Cow") and Surah 7 ("The
Heights") that refer to the throne of God, an
appropriate metaphor for a minbar. The passage from Surah
2 even includes the sentence, "He brings them forth
from the shadows into the light," a selection that
could be a reference to the minbar's removal from its
closet each week. It was a great surprise, however, when
the cleaning also revealed that the inscription on the
left side ended with a historical text and date, which
turned out to be 15 years later than scholars had
previously believed.
Each riser of the staircase is decorated
with an arcade of linked horseshoe arches enclosing
vegetal motifs worked in marquetry, and arched frames on
either side of the stairway display beautiful geometric
and arabesque decoration on the exterior and exquisite
carved inscriptions, also texts from the Qur'an, on the
interior.
Perhaps the finest decoration was reserved
for the minbar's backrest, which originally had a complex
design worked in delicate marquetry and pierced carving.
It represented intersecting cusped arches reminiscent of
those in the maqsura around the mihrab in Córdoba's
congregational mosque. Although preachers traditionally
leave the seat at the top of the minbar vacant, in
deference to the Prophet Muhammad, this area of the
Kutubiyya minbar has paradoxically suffered the most loss
of its decoration, and its glories can only be imagined on
the basis of the scant remains and by comparison with
similar works.
Conservators discovered traces of gold
leaf on certain areas of the backrest and hypothesized
that these areas would have been covered with panels whose
backgrounds had been pierced, or carved entirely away,
very much like those on the slightly later Almohad minbar
in the Kasba Mosque of Marrakech. The effect would have
been extraordinary, as the reflected light glittered in
the dark depths of the carving. An elegantly simple
inscription encircles the top of the backrest; although
the date has been lost, the text commemorates the
completion of the work, probably sometime in the early
1140's. A text carved on the impost blocks supporting the
arches invokes God's blessing on the ruler, much as the
imam would have invoked them in the sermons he gave from
the minbar.
Unlike many great examples of medieval
Islamic art, which—as far as we know—passed unnoticed
by contemporary witnesses, the Kutubiyya minbar was
already considered to be a great work of art in medieval
times. Ibn Marzuq, the 14th-century North African
preacher, statesman and hadith scholar, or
traditionist, wrote that "...all craftsmen... agree
that the minbar of the Mosque of Córdoba and the minbar
of the Kutubiyya Mosque in Marrakech are the most
remarkable in craftsmanship, because it is not customary
for Easterners to have fine woodwork in their
buildings."
Ibn Marzuq must surely have known more
about the arts of the "East" than that statement
implies, for during his extensive travels he had preached
from minbars in many of the most important mosques in
Syria and Egypt. He must have known that their woodwork
was finely crafted, although different in style and
technique from what he knew at home in the Maghrib.
For example, Ibn Marzuq is known to have
preached at the mosque of Hebron, and the minbar there is
one of the finest examples of its type to survive, having
been ordered for the mausoleum of Husayn at Ashkelon in
1091 or 1092, only a few decades earlier than the
Kutubiyya minbar. In contrast to the design of the
Kutubiyya minbar, woodworkers in the central Islamic lands
from Egypt to Iran favored an approach in which the sides
and other flat surfaces were, decorated with large-scale
strapwork patterns that often radiated from central stars.
These radiating bands create polygons of varied shapes,
and the aesthetic purpose is to amaze the viewer, who will
wonder how the designer has made seemingly disparate and
irreconcilable elements combine into a rational and
logical pattern.
This "Eastern" kind of woodwork
also differed in technique from that of the Maghrib. In
contrast to the decoration glued on the wooden carcass of
the Kutubiyya minbar, the decoration on the Hebron minbar
was actually constructed from grooved pieces of wood
fitted together with mortise-and-tenon joints. Each of the
strapwork elements is carved with parallel grooves, while
each of the polygonal pieces is carved with interlaced
arabesque designs. The balustrade is made up of
mashrabiyya spoolwork, one of the earliest surviving
examples of this technique. Furthermore, in contrast to
the intricate and small-scale patterns common in the West,
those used on minbars from the central Islamic lands,
particularly in Hebron and Jerusalem, are much larger in
scale, so that only a fraction of the design, or at most a
few repeats, is visible at any one time. These differences
of technique, design, and taste begin to explain why Ibn
Marzuq could write that "it was not customary for
Easterners to have fine woodwork in their buildings."
The extraordinary state of preservation of
the Kutubiyya minbar and its recent conservation provide
us with one of the finest and most complete examples of
medieval Islamic art from the Muslim West. While the
Almoravids were considered rough and austere reformists
when they first arrived in al-Andalus, they developed a
high culture and refinement, and there can be no question
that 'Ali ibn Yusuf was an enlightened patron of the arts.
The subtle contrasts between the techniques of carving and
marquetry, the textures of smooth and patterned surfaces,
the subjects of geometric and vegetal ornament, and the
colors of monochrome wood and vibrantly colored marquetry
are the basic organizing principles of the minbar's
design. Viewed from a distance, the colorful tile-like
patterns seem to take precedence, but from close up the
viewer is beckoned to explore the intricacies of
individual elements.
At the same time, as in much Islamic art,
there is considerable ambiguity as to what part of the
design is meant to be "the subject" and what is
meant to be "the background." For example, are
the carved panels meant to be seen as the background
between the strapwork bands, or are the panels the
subjects, and the bands merely separators? Within a fairly
narrow repertory of forms and techniques, which in the
hands of lesser masters might have approached monotony,
all of these elements are played off against one another
in a series of subtle variations, much as classical
Andalusian and North African art music consisted of
similar variations within canons of rhythm and melody.