Photographer's Note
scanned from dia. . . .
The architecture is an excellent example of Damascene traditional houses. The structure itself consists of several buildings and two wings: the harem and the selamlik. The harem is the family wing, which was a private space for the residents (originally, the Azm family). This wing includes the kitchen, servant quarters, and the baths, which are a replica of the public baths in the city but on a smaller scale. The salamlik is the guest wing, and it comprises the formal halls, reception areas and large courtyards with traditional cascading fountains.
Used in the building of this palace were several types of stones including limestone, sandstone, basalt, and marble, chosen to provide a natural decoration for the structure. The ceilings have painted wooden panels that display natural scenes. In fact, Dr.Andrew Petersen, Director of Research in Islamic Archaeology at the University of Wales Lampeter states that the use of Ablaq (alternating courses of white limestone and black basalt) in this building is 鄭 characteristic of the monumental masonry of Damascus.
In 1925, the Azm palace was heavily damaged by French artillery during the Syrian revolution. It has since been restored and became a museum of arts and folk traditions. It received the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 1983
Miguel82 has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
emka
(157280) 2015-07-09 0:11
Hello Erhan,
Old photo but it is not important, great document when we do not know if this palace survive the barbarians in Syria. I remember such nice smiling people in this palace. They looked so happy. . What happened to them? How they are living in the country with war? So tragic..
WArm regard sMAlgo
Photo Information
-
Copyright: ERHAN EKEN (erhan1958)
(15961)
- Genre: 場所
- Medium: カラー
- Date Taken: 2001-02-14
- Categories: Architecture
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2015-07-08 12:35