Bab al-Maqam
Bab al-Maqam (Arabic: بَاب الْمَقَام, romanized: Bāb al-Maqām), meaning the Gate of Maqam is one of the Gates of Aleppo.[1]
| Bab al-Maqam | |
|---|---|
بَاب الْمَقَام  | |
![]() Bab al-Maqam in 2010  | |
![]()  | |
| Alternative names | Gate of Maqam | 
| General information | |
| Status | restored | 
| Type | City gate | 
| Architectural style | Islamic architecture | 
| Town or city | Aleppo | 
| Country | |
| Completed | 1230 | 
| Owner | Al-Aziz Muhammad | 
| Known for | One of the 9 main gates of the ancient city walls of Aleppo | 
The 13th century structure was built by al-Aziz Muhammad on the road that connected the Maqamat with the Citadel.[1]
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View of the gate from street
Deviations in its design from the majority of medieval Syrian gates suggest that its function was ceremonial rather than military.[1]
In Constructions of Power and Piety in Medieval Aleppo (1997), Yasser Tabbaa details some of these differences, noting that they reinforce the possibility that the gate had primarily a religious and political function, serving as homage to Abraham and contrasting with the eastern shrines of Mashhad al-Dikka and Mashhad al-Husayn.[2]
References
    
- "Bab al-Maqam". Archnet. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
 - Tabbaa, Yasser, 1997, Constructions of Power and Piety in Medieval Aleppo, The Pennsylvania State University Press, pp. 21.
 
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