Archives Islamic History
This is the third episode of The Great Mosque Builders, a series on seven monuments and seven builders across roughly a thousand years, each one an answer to the one before. This episode takes the two that sit at the heart of the story, and they make a strange matched pair: two men, two centuries and a continent apart, each trying to outbuild death. The first is Sultan Hasan of Cairo, a Mamluk ruler crowned as a boy, deposed, restored, and forever controlled by the hard men around him. In the years after the Black Death emptied Egypt, he poured the fortunes of the plague dead into the largest mosque the medieval Islamic world had ever seen, a complex so vast it folded four colleges for the four schools of Sunni law around a single courtyard. The chronicler al-Maqrizi recorded what it cost, what fell, and what the people of Cairo believed it meant. Hasan never lived to see it finished, and the golden-domed tomb he built for himself at its heart has stood empty for seven centuries. The second is Mimar Sinan, the chief architect of the Ottoman Empire, who began as a military engineer building bridges on campaign and ended as the greatest builder of his age. For a thousand years, the dome of Hagia Sophia had been the one no Muslim architect could surpass. Past the age of eighty, Sinan set out to answer it at Edirne, raising a vast dome on eight slender pillars over a single hall flooded with light, and then he wrote down, in the autobiography he dictated to Sa'i Mustafa Çelebi, exactly what he believed he had done. The episode draws on the Mamluk chroniclers al-Maqrizi and Ibn Taghribirdi, on Sinan's dictated memoirs, and on modern scholarship including Doris Behrens-Abouseif on Mamluk Cairo, Gulru Necipoglu on the age of Sinan, and Firas Alkhateeb's Lost Islamic History. It carries forward the threads of the earlier episodes: the Damascus of al-Walid, with the shrine of the Prophet Yahya, John the Baptist (peace be upon him), still standing inside it; the Cordoba of the exiled Abd al-Rahman; the brick mosque of Ibn Tulun; and the rival domes of Isfahan. Content Warning: this episode describes mass death during the Black Death and a building collapse that killed hundreds, many of them children. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.
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