Safavid Dynastic Shrine Architecture, Religion and Power in Early Modern Iran

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British Institute of Persian Studies

Safavid Dynastic Shrine

Architecture, Religion and Power in Early Modern Iran

Kishwar Rizvi

Architecture / Regional

The Safavid period represents an immensely rich chapter in the history of Iranian architecture. In this discussion of Safavid architecture in the context of its political, social and religious milieu, Kishwar Rizvi gives special consideration to the shrine of Shaykh Safi, built in AD 1334, as an important template for an emergent Safavid taste. Of both regal and religious significance, the shrine's direct relationship to imperial power is unique in Islamic architecture and provides valuable information about the methods of architectural benefaction prevalent in early modern Iran. Rizvi examines the ways in which the transition from a devotional aesthetic to an imperial one represented the young dynasty's imperial aspirations, and affected a wide range of public buildings from mosques to palaces during the early Safavid period and beyond.
Kishwar Rizvi is Assistant Professor of Islamic Art and Architecture, Department of the History of Art, Yale University.

Publication Date: 28 February 2011
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Imprint: I.B. Tauris
ISBN-13: 9781848853546
Format: Hardback
Page Count: 288
Weight (oz): 21.76

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