anaza
{{short description|Architectural element of some mosques}}
{{For|the Arab tribe of the same name|Anazzah}}
File:Al-Karaouine University (Al-Qarawiyyin) in the city of Fes, Morocco (Image 8 of 9).jpg in Fez, dated to 1290 CE]]
Origins
The
Architectural feature
Possibly related to its symbolic use as an early qibla indicator, the term "anaza" later came to refer to an architectural feature found in many mosques in the western Maghreb and Morocco. This architectural element designated an "outdoor" or "summer" mihrab, often taking the form of an ornate wooden screen positioned at the boundary between the sahn (courtyard) and the interior prayer hall of a mosque. It was typically aligned with the central mihrab axis of the mosque. This anaza had the function of serving as a mihrab for prayers conducted in the courtyard.{{Cite journal|last=Almela|first=Iñigo|s2cid=167107436|date=2019|title=Religious Architecture as an Instrument for Urban Renewal: Two Religious Complexes from the Saadian Period in Marrakesh|journal=Al-Masāq|volume=31|issue=3|pages=272–302|doi=10.1080/09503110.2019.1589973|hdl=10261/212691|hdl-access=free}}{{Rp|296}} The wooden screen was frequently adorned with intricate carvings and paintings depicting a stylized mihrab motif and other inscriptions. Alternatively, the anaza could be a simple marking on the ground or floor of the courtyard just before the central entrance of the prayer hall, such as a semi-circular groove or recess in the middle of the step leading to the entrance.{{Cite book|last=El Khammar|first=Abdeltif|title=Mosquées et oratoires de Meknès (IXe-XVIIIe siècle): géographie religieuse, architecture et problème de la Qibla|publisher=Université Lumière-Lyon 2|year=2005}}
Wooden anazas were constructed in mosques across Morocco and the Maghreb. In Morocco they became a standard feature of "grand mosques" or Friday mosques in particular.{{Rp|54}} The oldest surviving example is the anaza of the al-Andalusiyyin Mosque in Fez, which dates from 1209 (from the Almohad period).{{Rp|133}} Historical sources also mention an even older anaza, dating from 1129 (during the Almoravid period), at the Qarawiyyin Mosque in Fez, but it no longer exists today and has been replaced by the current Marinid-era anaza which was fabricated between 1288 and 1290.{{Cite book|last=Terrasse|first=Henri|title=La Mosquée al-Qaraouiyin à Fès; avec une étude de Gaston Deverdun sur les inscriptions historiques de la mosquée|publisher=Librairie C. Klincksieck|year=1968|location=Paris}} The anaza in the Grand Mosque of Fes el-Jdid, which likely dates from the mosque's construction in 1276, is very similar and might be the oldest Marinid anaza.{{Cite book|last=Maslow|first=Boris|title=Les mosquées de Fès et du nord du Maroc|publisher=Éditions d'art et d'histoire|year=1937|location=Paris|pages=38–53}}{{Rp|133}} A similar example is also found in the Grand Mosque of Meknes but was built much later in 1715 (during the reign of the Alaouite sultan Moulay Ismail).{{Cite book|last1=Touri|first1=Abdelaziz|title=Le Maroc andalou : à la découverte d'un art de vivre|last2=Benaboud|first2=Mhammad|last3=Boujibar El-Khatib|first3=Naïma|last4=Lakhdar|first4=Kamal|last5=Mezzine|first5=Mohamed|publisher=Ministère des Affaires Culturelles du Royaume du Maroc & Museum With No Frontiers|year=2010|isbn=978-3902782311|edition=2}} Some other post-Marinid examples also include the anaza of the 16th-century Mouassine Mosque in Marrakesh (from the Saadian period).{{Cite book|last=Salmon|first=Xavier|title=Marrakech: Splendeurs saadiennes: 1550-1650|publisher=LienArt|year=2016|isbn=9782359061826|location=Paris}} The anaza of the near-contemporary Bab Doukkala Mosque in Marrakesh, on the other hand, is a modern replacement of the original one.
File:Qarawiyyin anaza detail2 IMG 2395.jpg|Details of the anaza of the Qarawiyyin Mosque
File:Qarawiyyin anaza detail IMG 2395.jpg|Details of the anaza of the Qarawiyyin Mosque (central lower panel)
File:Meknes grand mosque anaza DSCF1798.jpg|The anaza of the Grand Mosque in Meknes, dating from 1715 but copying the form of earlier Marinid examples
References
{{Reflist}}
{{Islamic architecture}}
Category:Architecture in Morocco