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Unit No67

Unknown

Coordinates of the main entrance

30.045049N - 31.274334E

Attribution

Unknown

Higri (AH)Dates as given in the Inscription

1338

Miladi (AD)Dates as given in the Inscription

Inscription Contemporary with the building?

Yes

Multiple date(s) In the inscription?

Yes

Assumed Date

Based on

Original Use

Funerary enclosure

Current Use

Funerary enclosure

Overall condition

Fair

Features of unit 67

Present Count Material Comments (see description for details)
Free standing structure No
Walled enclosure Yes 1 stone
Rooms by the perimeter wall Yes 1 stone Inaccessible
Freestanding structure(s) in enclousure No
Dome over the tomb chamber No
Neo-Mamluk architectural decoration No
Garden layout No Trees in the courtyard, no formal layout
Sabil(s) No
Wall fountain(s) No
Canopy on columns / pillars No
Carved marble cenotaph(s) No
Decorated limestone tomb-markers No Interior and courtyard inaccessible
Decorated gateway Yes 2 stone Interior and courtyard inaccessible
Decorative door-leaves No
Decorative window grilles No
Decorative shutters No
Painted ceiling(s) No Possibly present, interiors inaccessible
Decorative paving(s) No Possibly present, interiors inaccessible

Description (The direction towards Mecca (Qibla) is described as eastern and other directions are named accordingly)

A small rectangular enclosure measuring ca 8 x 16 metres, facing streets to the west and south and adjoining neighbouring structures to the east and north. The entrance façade faces west.
The unit comprises a small single storey building in the western part, and an open courtyard that occupies the eastern part of the site. The front façade, as well as the entrance to the courtyard in the southern façade, corners of the enclosure and the cornice are built of ashlar stone; the rest of the walls are constructed of rough stone and plastered. The entrance door is placed in the left side of the western façade. It is a very simplified Classically-based gate topped with a rusticated semi-circular arch. To the right are two plain rectangular windows with lintels formed by flat arches of simple, step-joggled vuissoirs. The right one has been walled up completely, the left one, partially. The gate to the courtyard in the southern façade is identical to the western entrance; it is currently walled up. The front building had two rectangular windows facing south; the right one has been walled up completely, the left one, partially. If there were any decorative window grilles in the arches of the entrance gate (as is usually the case with similar buildings in the area), they have been removed. The building is topped with a simple Classical cornice, with no traces of crenellations. There are no neo-Mamluk or otherwise Islamic elements in the architecture of the unit.

Condition of preservation

The unit is abandoned, disused and dilapidating, although it is not in immediate danger of collapse. There is serious damage from rising damp to the lower portions of the walls.

Information abut the founder, family history, etc.

The architectural design and details are very similar to those of the nearby group of larger enclosures further north (No 58-65 in this survey and neighbouring ones). Those units were apparently built as part of a new urban layout; some are dated by inscriptions to 1908 -1918.

Field recording by
Hadeer Ahmad, Muhammad Esam, and Esraa al-Mahdi, edited by Jaroslaw Dobrowolski

Date recorded
August 8, 2023

Data entered by
Hadeer Ahmad

Date entered
May 2, 2024