Entre el arte y la devoción: estudio global del certificado de peregrinación islámica Add. MS 27566 (s. XV)

Publication date

2026-01-14T11:00:04Z

2026-01-14T11:00:04Z

2021

2026-01-14T11:00:03Z



Abstract

In the year 836 AH (1432/33 AD), a woman named Maymu¯na bt. Muh. ammad `Abd Alla¯h al-Zarda¯l¯ made the pilgrimage to Mecca and visited the tomb of the Prophet Muh. ammad in Medina. As proof of compliance with this precept Maymu¯na acquired a luxurious certificate, now preserved in the British Library (London) with the inventory number Add.MS 27566. The scroll, reported for the first time by the French orientalist Jean Renaud (1828), has fifteen sections with colorful illustrations detailing the spaces and rituals of the Islamic pilgrimage. This article seeks to complete the preliminary description of this certificate and offers a global study of its iconographic and textual content. This includes the reading of decorative calligraphies and labels identifying the architectural elements represented in the certificate, absent in Renaud's work. The sharing of these elements suggest an underlying instructional function that will be analyzed in this article.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

Spanish

Publisher

SISMEL - Edizioni del Galluzzo

Related items

Iconographica. 2021;20:59-74

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

© SISMEL - Edizioni del Galluzzo

This item appears in the following Collection(s)