Islamic$40995$ - Übersetzung nach italienisch
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Islamic$40995$ - Übersetzung nach italienisch

POTTERY OF ISLAMIC LANDS
Islamic ceramics; Islamic tilework
  • Albarello with fleur-de-lys decoration, early 14th century, Syria, musée du Louvre
  • Chief places named in connection with Islamic pottery.
  • ''Bowl of Reflections'', early 13th century [[Iran]]. [[Brooklyn Museum]].
  • Ceramic bowl decorated with slip beneath a transparent glaze, [[Gorgan]], 9th century CE, Early Islamic period, [[National Museum of Iran]]
  • Bowl with hunters, [[Persian pottery]] from 12th–13th century.
  • 9th-century [[lustreware]] bowl from [[Iraq]]
  • Khorasan]] (Iran), 11th–12th century.
  • freer gallery from Washington]]
  • Early Chinese [[blue and white porcelain]], c 1335, early [[Yuan dynasty]], [[Jingdezhen]], using a Middle-eastern shape
  • Baldosa of lustrada ceramics, dated del 862,  manufactured in Mesopotamia in the Abasíd period. Decorated with foliage and hatching, formed part of a group of baldosas of ceramics with metallic reflections that adorn the upper part of the mihrab of the Gran Mezquita de Kairuán, in Tunisia.
  • İznik Pottery Candlesticks,Ottoman Turkey
  • İznik]] dish
  • Contoured marli dish decorated with a large composite flower, Iznik, Ottoman Turkey, circa 1550-1560, Lyon Museum of Fine Arts
  • Plate with dragon. Persia, 17th century, inspired by 15th-century Chinese blue and white porcelain
  • "Cooking-pot", Syria, 10th century, unglazed ceramic, champlevé decoration, Paris, Louvre MAO 279
  • A horseman and a horsewoman, Tile, 19th century, [[Tehran]], [[Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon]]
  • Wall covering tiles with cuerda seca decor.

Islamic      
adj. islamico
Muslim holiday         
  • The Fanoos, or Fanoos Ramadan, is a lantern used to light up homes, mosques, and streets, during the holy month of Ramadan
HOLIDAYS IN ISLAM
Muslim holidays; Islamic festivals; Islamic Festivals; Islamic Holiday; Islamic holiday; Muslim Holidays; Muslim festivals; Muslim holiday; Eid celebration; Islamic festivities; Eid day; Muslim festival; Islamic festival; Islamic holy days; Islamic national holidays; Holidays in Islam
Festività della religione musulmana
Islamic movement         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Islamic movement; Islamic Movement (disambiguation)
il movimento islamico

Definition

ISIS
1. A toolkit for implementing fault-tolerant distributed systems, developed at Cornell and now available commercially 2. A dialect of JOSS. [Sammet 1969, p. 217].

Wikipedia

Islamic pottery

Medieval Islamic pottery occupied a geographical position between Chinese ceramics, the unchallenged leaders of Eurasian production, and the pottery of the Byzantine Empire and Europe. For most of the period it can fairly be said to have been between the two in terms of aesthetic achievement and influence as well, borrowing from China and exporting to and influencing Byzantium and Europe. The use of drinking and eating vessels in gold and silver, the ideal in ancient Rome and Persia as well as medieval Christian societies, is prohibited by the Hadiths, with the result that pottery and glass were used for tableware by Muslim elites, as pottery (but less often glass) also was in China but was much rarer in Europe and Byzantium. In the same way, Islamic restrictions greatly discouraged figurative wall-painting, encouraging the architectural use of schemes of decorative and often geometrically patterned titles, which are the most distinctive and original specialty of Islamic ceramics.

The era of Islamic pottery started around 622. From 633, Muslim armies moved rapidly towards Persia, Byzantium, Mesopotamia, Anatolia, Egypt and later Andalusia. The early history of Islamic pottery remains somewhat obscure and speculative as little evidence has survived. Apart from tiles that escaped destruction due to their use in architectural decoration of buildings and mosques, much early medieval pottery vanished.

The Muslim world inherited significant pottery industries in Mesopotamia, Persia, Egypt, North Africa (African Red Slip) and later other regions. Indeed, the origin of glazed pottery has been traced to Egypt where it was first introduced during the fourth millennium BCE. However most of these traditions made heavy use of figurative decoration, which was greatly reduced, though not entirely removed, under Islam. Instead Islamic pottery developed geometric and plant-based decoration to a very high level and made more use of decorative schemes made up of many tiles than any previous culture.