2024-03-28T09:18:57Zhttps://scholarlypublications.universiteitleiden.nl/oai2oai:scholarlypublications.universiteitleiden.nl:item_31347422024-01-29T10:20:50Zhdl_1887_4540hdl_1887_9744hdl_1887_20765
Ishak Bakhoum, D.
Buskens, L.P.H.M.
Volait, M.
Eck, C.A. van (Committee member)
Keurs, P.J. ter (Committee member)
Orgeix, E. 'd (Committee member)
Paskaleva, E.G. (Committee member)
Poulot, D. (Committee member)
Staëvel, J.P. van (Committee member)
The restorations of the Comité de Conservation des Monuments de l'Art Arabe in Egypt: "Conservation" or "reinvention" of monuments? = Les restaurations du Comité de conservation des monuments de l'art arabe en Égypte: « conservations » ou « réinvention » des monuments?
Leiden University and Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne
en
20212021-01-21
Doctoral Thesis
info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis
Text
Historic Cairo (Egypt)
restoration and reconstruction
Islamic art and architecture
Mamluk minarets
reinforced concrete domes
Mamluk wooden minbars
waqf/awqāf [Islamic religious endowments]
the years 1850s-1950s
Egyptian and European expertise
<p>The Comité de conservation des monuments de l’art arabe [Laǧnat Ḥifẓ al-Āṯār al-‘Arabiyya al-Qadīma] was established in Egypt in December 1881 under the Ministry of Awqāf [Islamic religious endowments] and operated under it until 1936, when it was transferred to the Ministry of Public Instruction. It was the body in charge of the conservation and restoration of Islamic (and later also Coptic) monuments and remained active till the 1950s. Its members were European and Egyptian specialists, alongside ex-officio officials. This dissertation scrutinizes and analyzes the Comité’s interventions on minarets, domes and minbars [pulpits] of Mamluk mosques, examining the restoration and reconstruction methodologies, approaches and the rationale for the decisions taken. Through the art-historical lens, this research shows that the analysis of the Comité’s modern layer raises questions on the ‘conservation’ or ‘reinvention’ of these historic buildings and their ‘authenticity’. It argues that such an endeavor is indispensable for the comprehension of these architectural palimpsests composed of historic and modern layers. The dissertation explores the information that could be obtained when moving beyond the post-colonial discourses through which the Comité has generally been studied so far. The research demonstrates that the factual and careful investigation of the specificities of the Comité’s actions and actors in a contextualized manner and without making a posteriori judgements reveals significant information on its work modalities as well as new nuanced narratives and interpretations.<br></p>
Middle Eastern Studies
lucris-id: 364421970
https://hdl.handle.net/1887/3134742https://hdl.handle.net/1887/license:5application/pdf