Courtly architecture as an image of power, built between the 10th and 12th centuries on both shores of the Mediterranean, was erected by Fatimid, Zyrid and Norman rulers to flaunt authority and absolute dominion over the land. The buildings of the Fatimid caliphs have almost completely disappeared and the archaeological remains do not allow the main features to be defined in detail. However, some Zyrid and Hammadite palatial architecture is relatively well known and shows typological similarities with some Norman palaces in Sicily. It is likely that the design matrices of the residences in central Maghreb and Sicily are comparable to the Fatimid palaces that generated the later models. Our study analyses the characteristics of the Fatimid and Ziri architectural traditions in Sicily in order to thoroughly investigate the contribution of Muslim civilisation to the foundation of the island's artistic and architectural history. The research sheds light on the morphological aspects of Sicilian royal residences, allowing a series of hypotheses to be advanced that orient the Norman architectural tradition towards both North European military architecture and North African palatial architecture. In this way, it was possible to clearly define the dynamics linked to the contribution of Arab-Islamic culture to civil construction in Sicily.
Eredità islamica nell’architettura palaziale della Sicilia normanna tra l’XI e il XII secolo / Lamia Hadda. - In: QUADERNI DELL’ISTITUTO DI STORIA DELL’ARCHITETTURA. - ISSN 0485-4152. - STAMPA. - 79-80:(2024), pp. 515-527. [10.48255/2532-4470.QUISA.79-80.2024.40]
Eredità islamica nell’architettura palaziale della Sicilia normanna tra l’XI e il XII secolo
Lamia Hadda
2024
Abstract
Courtly architecture as an image of power, built between the 10th and 12th centuries on both shores of the Mediterranean, was erected by Fatimid, Zyrid and Norman rulers to flaunt authority and absolute dominion over the land. The buildings of the Fatimid caliphs have almost completely disappeared and the archaeological remains do not allow the main features to be defined in detail. However, some Zyrid and Hammadite palatial architecture is relatively well known and shows typological similarities with some Norman palaces in Sicily. It is likely that the design matrices of the residences in central Maghreb and Sicily are comparable to the Fatimid palaces that generated the later models. Our study analyses the characteristics of the Fatimid and Ziri architectural traditions in Sicily in order to thoroughly investigate the contribution of Muslim civilisation to the foundation of the island's artistic and architectural history. The research sheds light on the morphological aspects of Sicilian royal residences, allowing a series of hypotheses to be advanced that orient the Norman architectural tradition towards both North European military architecture and North African palatial architecture. In this way, it was possible to clearly define the dynamics linked to the contribution of Arab-Islamic culture to civil construction in Sicily.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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40 - QUADERNI 79-80 - HADDA - PP. 515-528.pdf
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