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Roberts, David; Croly, George
The Holy Land: Syria, Idumea, Arabia, Egypt, and Nubia (Band 6): = Egypt & Nubia [3] — 1849

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.4645#0013
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These are the minarets of some of the ruined mosques which are seen scattered over the Desert, just
without the walls of Cairo, and are generally called the Tombs of the Mamlooks,—Wilkinson says
erroneously, and his authority is great; but this name is so commonly given to them, that it is
scarcely desirable to change it. These beautiful and ever-varied architectural objects are numerous, and
at no remote period must, with their tombs and mosques, have given to this district a striking
character; but they are nearly all falling to decay, and some are in ruins. The mosque of the
principal minaret in this sketch has disappeared; its dome and tomb no longer exist. That the
minarets, which are generally light and fragile in their structure, should remain, is remarkable. There
is little doubt that the mosques have been destroyed by violence, but history has not preserved when
or why; some religious feeling, perhaps, preserved the minarets, when the tombs, and names of the
founders of the mosques, were devoted to oblivion.

Roberts's Journal.
 
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