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Seller's Description:
Very good in very good dust jacket. Light shelfwear, small bubbles under the laminate of the jacket, No ownership marks 2nd printing. 128 p. : illus., maps, plans.; 26 cm. Includes: Illustrations, Maps, Plans. Bibliography: p. 119-121.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good- in Very Good- jacket. 4to-over 9¾"-12" tall. 128 pp. Original olive green paper covered boards w/ gilt title on black cloth spine. Very bright and clean. Faint sunning to edges. Bottom corners bumped. DJ has light wear to edges. Price clipped. Illust. w/ over 100 illustrations, including photos, plans and drawings. Contents very nice.
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Seller's Description:
GOOD. JACKET: FAIR+ 7.5 X 10. Pictorial dust jacket: mild to moderate wear, corner bumps, discoloration, soiled, rubs, price clipped, the back flap of the dust jacket is glued to the back free end paper. Boards: mild wear, corner bumps, edge wear, some discoloration, gilt title on spine. Interior: Princeton Antiques Bookshop bookplate on the front pastedown paper, black and white photos. _PAB_
Islamic architecture is recognizable from Spain to India. It was all part of Muslim rule over one-half the known world that they achieved after Muhammad?s death. Dr. John D. Hoag makes an interesting statement early in his concise history of Islamic architecture. ?When Muhammad redirected his prayers from the Temple at Jerusalem to the Kaaba at Mecca, the ancient Arabian center of pagan pilgrimage, he turned Islam into a national Arab movement.?
Muslim civilization concentrated their architectural efforts around 2 types of buildings: The mosque and the palace. ?The mosque is a shelter and a refuge from the turbulent life of the crowded city.? Each Muslim is involved in his own salvation ? ?each wrapped in an inner calm that is unknown to a Westerner.?
?The palace, on the other hand, uses every resource of architectural symbolism to emphasize the power and authority of the ruler. At times, Dr. Hoag?s writings are lyrical in his understanding of the methods and goals of various architectural changes.
During the first 40 pages, Hoag tells readers what is unique about what they will see in the succeeding pages. Then, he shows extraordinary examples of Islamic architecture. I found it helpful to go back-and-forth between the text and the photos.
I was surprised to see how much I learned in less than 140 pages. Dr. Hoag added something important to the usual photos ? he gave a floor plan and sometimes drawings to show how the finished building fit into the whole. I don?t know much about architecture but these additions added much to my understanding.
Dr John D. Hoag was a graduate of Harvard and worked as chief librarian at Yale. Later, he taught at the U of Colorado, Boulder. Incredibly, Hoag mastered Mayan, Aztec, Egyptian, Islamic art and architecture ? and it shows in his ability to cover concisely 1300+ years of the Muslim?s urge to convey the centrality of God in his life through architecture.