نلاحظ جبل أبي قبيس خلف الكعبة
Content
Genre/Subject Matter:
This west-southwest view inside the Masjid al-Haram of the Caaba and, behind it, the sacred mountain Jebel Abu Qubays (1220 ft / 460 m), which overlooks the Masjid al-Haram to the east. At the summit stands a squat, apparently unfinished structure which later became the Bilal mosque, according to later photographs, for example Photo 174/5 ( c. 1907).
The buildings that line the foothills of Abu Qubays, feature distinctive Ottoman-era architectural features, such as a roshan (known elsewhere as mashrabiyya, or enclosed balcony), which are almost unchanged almost twenty years later in the same view by the Delhi-based photographers H. A. Mirza & Sons (Photo 174/5).
Inscriptions:
Printed above image, in ink:
III
Printed beneath image, in ink:
‘Die Ka’bah.’
A circular 'British Museum' blind stamp is located in the lower right corner.
Temporal Context:
This photograph was likely taken by the Egyptian photographer, army engineer and surveyor Muhammad S̱ādiq Bey (1832-1902). The attribution is claimed by Durkje van der Wal in his publication Christiaan Snouck Hurgronje: The First Western Photographer in Mecca, 1884-1885 , Amsterdam : Manfred & Hanna Heiting Fund, Rijksmuseum, 2011, p. 40. As such the picture is likely to date to his 1881 visit to the city. How Christiaan Snouck Hurgronje acquired the image is unknown.
Extent and format
1 photographic print
Physical characteristics
Dimensions:
169 x 210 mm
Format:
1 photographic print pasted into volume
Condition:
The print is in good condition with one minor surface loss in the lower portion of the image.
Foliation:
‘III’
Written in
German in Latin script
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