This book represents over twelve years of Klaus Herdeg's work on the architecture of Iran and Turkistan.  The principle purpose is to illustrate and explicate selected buildings, spaces, and city fabrics, rather than to give a traditonal historical account of them.  While the analysis of form and its associated meanings is primarily visual, the accompanying text for each example further refines the comprehension of a building or a city  by positioning it within its cultural context.  Throughout, there is a deliberate interplay of monumental public structures with their symbolic significance and the urban tissue surrounding them.  Thus, an Islamic city is addressed in its entirety.  Over one hundrerd photographs carry the central message.
Hammam Ganj-i-Ali Khan, Kerman
Type
book section
Year
1990
This book represents over twelve years of Klaus Herdeg's work on the architecture of Iran and Turkistan. The principle purpose is to illustrate and explicate selected buildings, spaces, and city fabrics, rather than to give a traditonal historical account of them. While the analysis of form and its associated meanings is primarily visual, the accompanying text for each example further refines the comprehension of a building or a city by positioning it within its cultural context. Throughout, there is a deliberate interplay of monumental public structures with their symbolic significance and the urban tissue surrounding them. Thus, an Islamic city is addressed in its entirety. Over one hundrerd photographs carry the central message.
Citation
Herdeg, Klaus. 1990. Hammam Ganj-i-Ali Khan, Kerman. In Formal Structure in Islamic Architecture of Iran and Turkistan. New York: Rizzoli International Publications, 38-39.
Parent Publications
Copyright
Rizzoli International Publications
Terms of Use
Public Domain
Country
Iran
Language
English
Keywords