Meidan Emam, Esfahan
Built by Shah Abbas I the Great at the beginning...
Located in the historic centre of Isfahan, the Masjed-e Jāmé (‘Friday mosque’) can be seen as a stunning illustration of the evolution of mosque architecture over twelve centuries, starting in ad 841. It is the oldest preserved edifice of its type in Iran and a prototype for later mosque designs throughout Central Asia. The complex, covering more than 20,000 m2, is also the first Islamic building that adapted the four-courtyard layout of Sassanid palaces to Islamic religious architecture. Its double-shelled ribbed domes represent an architectural innovation that inspired builders throughout the region. The site also features remarkable decorative details representative of stylistic developments over more than a thousand years of Islamic art.
Slug: masjed-e-jame-of-isfahan
relatedTo:
isChildOf:
Location:
Created At: Tue Jan 21 2025 20:28:11 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Updated At: Tue Mar 04 2025 13:34:58 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Created By:
Version: 1
Status: test_v1