Real Origina Mecca Textile Metal Thread Embroidery Panel For Ka ' Ba Year 1233
Item History & Price
Reference Number: Avaluer:41120 |
real original ottoman islamic mecca textile to used black and red color cotton fabric on silver metal embroidery on gold plated and it have the date on that textile on metal thread embroidery with metal embroidery over black and red fabric panel from the Kaaba , maybe ottoman or egypt work they used to do that be for to mecca year 1233 islamic time A part of the kiswa covering th...e Kaaba at Mecca size high 70 cm and wide 55 cm the cotton fabric filled with an inverted radiating inscription in fine metal thread gld color the central rosette formed of four times repeated phrase 'al hai al kaom ;
the spandrels of pistachio black and red cotton fabric applied with silver and gold thread metal plated
it, s in good condition for that age
this ka;ba textile it be shipping from the holy land off jerusalem where it was been at my mom home near the dom or the rouk near the al aqsa mosque , hi there is what the british museum say abut this textile Square embroidered panels were made to be placed over the kiswa at the four corners of the Ka‘ba below the belt. They are known as samadiyya because of the words from Chapter 112 of the Qur’an ‘Allahu al-Samad’, ‘God, the Eternal’, embroidered within the circle of text. They were also known as kardashiyya. This example was made of black silk with red silk appliqués embroidered in silver and silver-gilt wire over cotton and silk thread padding.
the spandrels of pistachio black and red cotton fabric applied with silver and gold thread metal plated
it, s in good condition for that age
this ka;ba textile it be shipping from the holy land off jerusalem where it was been at my mom home near the dom or the rouk near the al aqsa mosque , hi there is what the british museum say abut this textile Square embroidered panels were made to be placed over the kiswa at the four corners of the Ka‘ba below the belt. They are known as samadiyya because of the words from Chapter 112 of the Qur’an ‘Allahu al-Samad’, ‘God, the Eternal’, embroidered within the circle of text. They were also known as kardashiyya. This example was made of black silk with red silk appliqués embroidered in silver and silver-gilt wire over cotton and silk thread padding.