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Samarkand
Detail of dome and minaret, Gur-Emir Mausoleum, 1404, Samarkand, Uzbekistan, pictured on July 15, 2010, at dawn. Gur-Emir Mausoleum, or Tomb of the Ruler, was built by Timur in 1404 for his favourite grandson, Mohammed Sultan, and became the mausoleum for the Timurid dynasty. The simply formed building is an octagonal drum beneath an azure fluted dome (diameter: 15m, height: 12.5m). Its walls are tiled in blue and white geometric and epigraphic patterns including the words 'God is Immortal' in 3m. high white Kufic script around the top of the drum. Samarkand, a city on the Silk Road, founded as Afrosiab in the 7th century BC, is a meeting point for the world's cultures. Its most important development was in the Timurid period, 14th to 15th centuries. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
Unique Identifier
AR9179848
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
3744px × 5376px
Photo Credit
Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY
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Tags
15TH CENTURY
ARCHITECTURAL
Architecture
ASIA
Asian
blue
Central Asia
Central Asian
Cityscape
color
COLOR IMAGE
colour image
Dawn
DAY
DECORATED
DECORATION
DECORATIVE
detail
Dome
EARLY
Exterior
Funeral
Gour-Emir
Gur-Emir Mausoleum
HISTORICAL
History
IMAGE
Islam
ISLAMIC
Kufic script
Mausoleum
MC
Minaret
Mohammed Sultan
Morning
Mosaic
no people
NOBODY
Outdoors
OUTSIDE
Photograph
Samarkand
Silk Road
Sunrise
Tamberlaine
TAMERLANE
Temur
Tile
TILED
TILES
Timur
Timurid
Tomb
TOURISM
Tourist Attraction
Travel
Turkic
UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITE
Uzbek
Uzbekistan
VERTICAL