Art in an Early Global World at WAM: A WAM/College of the Holy Cross CollaborationMain MenuAmanda Luyster17d39c1ecea88fb7ff282fe74a410b89478b8327Created by the Worcester Art Museum and the College of the Holy Cross, with the Worcester Public Schools AP Art History class of 2024. Financial support provided by the Medieval Academy of America and "Scholarship in Action" at Holy Cross.
Maqamat
1media/Les_Makamat_de_Hariri_exemplaire_[...]Abou_Mohammad_btv1b52519766k_20_thumb.jpeg2024-04-12T07:25:29-07:00Amanda Luyster17d39c1ecea88fb7ff282fe74a410b89478b8327448012Image of scholars in a library, Bibliothèque Nationale de France Arabe 5847, Maqāmāt, Mesopotamia, possibly Baghdad, 1237, Fol. 5v. Source gallica.bnf.fr / BnFplain2024-08-18T09:38:18-07:00Zoe Zimmer726b0bce27fe407b566d2fd9122871e9e9ddcf50
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12024-03-28T13:31:01-07:00When was this Page from the Qur'an made?7plain2024-10-22T18:51:09-07:00 This page of the Qur'an was made between 850 and 1000 CE. This was a period when books, writing, and scholarship were highly valued in the Islamic world. A century or two before this manuscript was made, in 762 CE, the caliph Al-Mansur had founded the city of Baghdad in present-day Iraq. This planned circular city was founded near the ancient cities of Babylon and Ctesiphon. Medieval Baghdad became a center of science, culture, and invention in what became known as the Golden Age of Islam. In Baghdad in the 800s and 900s many scholars worked at the famous House of Wisdom, a public library and intellectual center. (See image of scholars in a library.) Both religious manuscripts, like this Qur'an, and works of science and philosophy were studied, copied, and translated in this period. In later centuries, manuscripts like Qur'ans remained extraordinarily beautiful and important, and they were made in many locations around the medieval globe.
Yonglong (Ethan) Ren, Class of 2026, College of the Holy Cross