I-
M. H. Saladin, whose “Manual
of Moslem Architecture” was published in 1907,
ends his chapter on Morocco with the words: “It
is especially urgent that we should know, and penetrate
into, Morocco as soon as possible, in order to study
its monuments. It is the only country but Persia
where Moslem art actually survives; and the tradition
handed down to the present day will doubtless clear
up many things.”
M. Saladin’s wish has been partly
realized. Much has been done since 1912, when
General Lyautey was appointed Resident-General, to
clear up and classify the history of Moroccan art;
but since 1914, though the work has never been dropped,
it has necessarily been much delayed, especially as
regards its published record; and as yet only a few
monographs and articles have summed up some of the
interesting investigations of the last five years.
II-
When I was in Marrakech word was sent
to Captain de S., who was with me, that a Caïd
of the Atlas, whose prisoner he had been several years
before, had himself been taken by the Pasha’s
troops, and was in Marrakech. Captain de S. was
asked to identify several rifles which his old enemy
had taken from him, and on receiving them found that,
in the interval, they had been elaborately ornamented
with the Arab niello work of which the tradition goes
back to Damascus.
This little incident is a good example
of the degree to which the mediaeval tradition alluded
to by M. Saladin has survived in Moroccan life.
Nowhere else in the world, except among the moribund
fresco-painters of the Greek monasteries, has a formula
of art persisted from the seventh or eighth century
to the present day; and in Morocco the formula is
not the mechanical expression of a petrified theology
but the setting of the life of a people who have gone
on wearing the same clothes, observing the same customs,
believing in the same fétiches, and using the
same saddles, ploughs, looms, and dye-stuffs as in
the days when the foundations of the first mosque
of El Kairouiyin were laid.
Marrakech a street fountain]
The origin of this tradition is confused
and obscure. The Arabs have never been creative
artists, nor are the Berbers known to have been so.
As investigations proceed in Syria and Mesopotamia
it seems more and more probable that the sources of
inspiration of pre-Moslem art in North Africa are
to be found in Egypt, Persia, and India. Each
new investigation pushes these sources farther back
and farther east; but it is not of much use to retrace
these ancient vestiges, since Moroccan art has, so
far, nothing to show of pre-Islamite art, save what
is purely Phenician or Roman.
In any case, however, it is not in
Morocco that the clue to Moroccan art is to be sought;
though interesting hints and mysterious reminiscences
will doubtless be found in such places as Tinmel, in
the gorges of the Atlas, where a ruined mosque of
the earliest Almohad period has been photographed
by M. Doutte, and in the curious Algerian towns of
Sedrata and the Kalaa of the Beni Hammads. Both
of these latter towns were rich and prosperous communities
in the tenth century and both were destroyed in the
eleventh, so that they survive as mediaeval Pompeiis
of a quite exceptional interest, since their architecture
appears to have been almost unaffected by classic
or Byzantine influences.
Traces of a very old indigenous art
are found in the designs on the modern white and black
Berber pottery, but this work, specimens of which
are to be seen in the Oriental Department of the Louvre,
seems to go back, by way of Central America, Greece
(sixth century B.C.) and Susa (twelfth century B.C.),
to the far-off period before the streams of human
invention had divided, and when the same loops and
ripples and spirals formed on the flowing surface
of every current.
It is a disputed question whether
Spanish influence was foremost in developing the peculiarly
Moroccan art of the earliest Moslem period, or whether
European influences came by way of Syria and Palestine,
and afterward met and were crossed with those of Moorish
Spain. Probably both things happened, since the
Almoravids were in Spain; and no doubt the currents
met and mingled. At any rate, Byzantine, Greece,
and the Palestine and Syria of the Crusaders, contributed
as much as Rome and Greece to the formation of that
peculiar Moslem art which, all the way from India
to the Pillars of Hercules, built itself, with minor
variations, out of the same elements.
Arab conquerors always destroy as
much as they can of the work of their predecessors,
and nothing remains, as far as is known, of Almoravid
architecture in Morocco. But the great Almohad
Sultans covered Spain and Northwest Africa with their
monuments, and no later buildings in Africa equal
them in strength and majesty.
It is no doubt because the Almohads
built in stone that so much of what they made survives.
The Merinids took to rubble and a soft tufa, and the
Cherifian dynasties built in clay like the Spaniards
in South America. And so seventeenth century
Meknez has perished while the Almohad walls and towers
of the tenth century still stand.
The principal old buildings of Morocco
are defensive and religious and under the
latter term the beautiful collegiate houses (the medersas)
of Fez and Sale may fairly be included, since the
educational system of Islam is essentially and fundamentally
theological. Of old secular buildings, palaces
or private houses, virtually none are known to exist;
but their plan and decorations may easily be reconstituted
from the early chronicles, and also from the surviving
palaces built in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
and even those which the wealthy nobles of modern
Morocco are building to this day.
The whole of civilian Moslem architecture
from Persia to Morocco is based on four unchanging
conditions: a hot climate, slavery, polygamy
and the segregation of women. The private house
in Mahometan countries is in fact a fortress, a convent
and a temple: a temple of which the god (as in
all ancient religions) frequently descends to visit
his cloistered votaresses. For where slavery
and polygamy exist every house-master is necessarily
a god, and the house he inhabits a shrine built about
his divinity.
The first thought of the Moroccan
chieftain was always defensive. As soon as he
pitched a camp or founded a city it had to be guarded
against the hungry hordes who encompassed him on every
side. Each little centre of culture and luxury
in Moghreb was an islet in a sea of perpetual storms.
The wonder is that, thus incessantly threatened from
without and conspired against from within with
the desert at their doors, and their slaves on the
threshold these violent men managed to
create about them an atmosphere of luxury and stability
that astonished not only the obsequious native chronicler
but travellers and captives from western Europe.
Rabat gate of the Kasbah of the Oudayas]
The truth is, as has been often pointed
out, that, even until the end of the seventeenth century,
the refinements of civilization were in many respects
no greater in France and England than in North Africa.
North Africa had long been in more direct communication
with the old Empires of immemorial luxury, and was
therefore farther advanced in the arts of living than
the Spain and France of the Dark Ages; and this is
why, in a country that to the average modern European
seems as savage as Ashantee, one finds traces of a
refinement of life and taste hardly to be matched
by Carlovingian and early Capetian Europe.
III-
The brief Almoravid dynasty left no monuments behind
it.
Fez had already been founded by the
Idrissites, and its first mosques (Kairouiyin and
Les Andalous) existed. Of the Almoravid
Fez and Marrakech the chroniclers relate great things;
but the wild Hilalian invasion and the subsequent
descent of the Almohads from the High Atlas swept
away whatever the first dynasties had created.
The Almohads were mighty builders,
and their great monuments are all of stone. The
earliest known example of their architecture which
has survived is the ruined mosque of Tinmel, in the
High Atlas, discovered and photographed by M. Doutte.
This mosque was built by the inspired mystic, Ibn-Toumert,
who founded the line. Following him came the great
palace-making Sultans whose walled cities of splendid
mosques and towers have Romanesque qualities of mass
and proportion, and, as M. Raymond Koechlin has pointed
out, inevitably recall the “robust simplicity
of the master builders who at the very same moment
were beginning in France the construction of the first
Gothic cathedrals and the noblest feudal castles.”
Fez Medersa Bouanyana]
In the thirteenth century, with the
coming of the Merinids, Moroccan architecture grew
more delicate, more luxurious, and perhaps also more
peculiarly itself. That interaction of Spanish
and Arab art which produced the style known as Moorish
reached, on the African side of the Straits, its greatest
completeness in Morocco. It was under the Merinids
that Moorish art grew into full beauty in Spain, and
under the Merinids that Fez rebuilt the mosque Kairouiyin
and that of the Andalusians, and created six of its
nine Medersas, the most perfect surviving buildings
of that unique moment of sober elegance and dignity.
The Cherifian dynasties brought with
them a decline in taste. A crude desire for immediate
effect, and the tendency toward a more barbaric luxury,
resulted in the piling up of frail palaces as impermanent
as tents. Yet a last flower grew from the deformed
and dying trunk of the old Empire. The Saadian
Sultan who invaded the Soudan and came back laden
with gold and treasure from the great black city of
Timbuctoo covered Marrakech with hasty monuments of
which hardly a trace survives. But there, in
a nettle-grown corner of a ruinous quarter, lay hidden
till yesterday the Chapel of the Tombs: the last
emanation of pure beauty of a mysterious, incomplete,
forever retrogressive and yet forever forward-straining
people. The Merinid tombs of Fez have fallen;
but those of their destroyers linger on in precarious
grace, like a flower on the edge of a precipice.
IV-
Moroccan architecture, then, is easily
divided into four groups: the fortress, the mosque,
the collegiate building and the private house.
The kernel of the mosque is always
the mihrab, or niche facing toward the Kasbah
of Mecca, where the imam stands to say the
prayer. This arrangement, which enabled as many
as possible of the faithful to kneel facing the mihrab,
results in a ground-plan necessarily consisting of
long aisles parallel with the wall of the mihrab,
to which more and more aisles are added as the number
of worshippers grows. Where there was not space
to increase these lateral aisles they were lengthened
at each end. This typical plan is modified in
the Moroccan mosques by a wider transverse space,
corresponding with the nave of a Christian church,
and extending across the mosque from the praying niche
to the principal door. To the right of the mihrab
is the minbar, the carved pulpit (usually of
cedar-wood incrusted with mother-of-pearl and ebony)
from which the Koran is read. In some Algerian
and Egyptian mosques (and at Cordova, for instance)
the mihrab is enclosed in a sort of screen
called the maksoura; but in Morocco this modification
of the simpler plan was apparently not adopted.
Fez the praying-chapel in the Medersa
el Attarine]
The interior construction of the mosque
was no doubt usually affected by the nearness of Roman
or Byzantine ruins. M. Saladin points out that
there seem to be few instances of the use of columns
made by native builders; but it does not therefore
follow that all the columns used in the early mosques
were taken from Roman temples or Christian basílicas.
The Arab invaders brought their architects and engineers
with them; and it is very possible that some of the
earlier mosques were built by prisoners or fortune-hunters
from Greece or Italy or Spain.
At any rate, the column on which the
arcades of the vaulting rests in the earlier mosques,
as at Tunis and Kairouan, and the mosque El Kairouiyin
at Fez, gives way later to the use of piers, foursquare,
or with flanking engaged pilasters as at Algiers and
Tlemcen. The exterior of the mosques, as a rule,
is almost entirely hidden by a mushroom growth of
buildings, lanes and covered bazaars, but where the
outer walls have remained disengaged they show, as
at Kairouan and Cordova, great masses of windowless
masonry pierced at intervals with majestic gateways.
Beyond the mosque, and opening into
it by many wide doors of beaten bronze or carved cedar-wood,
lies the Court of the Ablutions. The openings
in the façade were multiplied in order that, on great
days, the faithful who were not able to enter the
mosque might hear the prayers and catch a glimpse
of the mihrab.
In a corner of the courts stands the
minaret. It is the structure on which Moslem
art has played the greatest number of variations, cutting
off its angles, building it on a circular or polygonal
plan, and endlessly modifying the pyramids and pendentives
by which the ground-plan of one story passes into
that of the next. These problems of transition,
always fascinating to the architect, led in Persia,
Mesopotamia and Egypt to many different compositions
and ways of treatment, but in Morocco the minaret,
till modern times, remained steadfastly square, and
proved that no other plan is so beautiful as this
simplest one of all.
Surrounding the Court of the Ablutions
are the school-rooms, libraries and other dependencies,
which grew as the Mahometan religion prospered and
Arab culture developed.
The medersa was a farther extension
of the mosque: it was the academy where the Moslem
schoolman prepared his theology and the other branches
of strange learning which, to the present day, make
up the curriculum of the Mahometan university.
The medersa is an adaptation of the private house
to religious and educational ends; or, if one prefers
another analogy, it is a fondak built above
a miniature mosque. The ground-plan is always
the same: in the centre an arcaded court with
a fountain, on one side the long narrow praying-chapel
with the mihrab, on the other a classroom with
the same ground-plan, and on the next story a series
of cell-like rooms for the students, opening on carved
cedar-wood balconies. This cloistered plan, where
all the effect is reserved for the interior façades
about the court, lends itself to a delicacy of detail
that would be inappropriate on a street-front; and
the medersas of Fez are endlessly varied in their
fanciful but never exuberant decoration.
M. Tranchant de Lunel has pointed
out (in “France-Maroc”) with what a sure
sense of suitability the Merinid architects adapted
this decoration to the uses of the buildings.
On the lower floor, under the cloister, is a revêtement
of marble (often alabaster) or of the almost indestructible
ceramic mosaic. On the floor above, massive cedar-wood
corbels ending in monsters of almost Gothic inspiration
support the fretted balconies; and above rise stucco
interfacings, placed too high up to be injured by
man, and guarded from the weather by projecting eaves.
Sale interior court of the Medersa]
The private house, whether merchant’s
dwelling or chieftain’s palace, is laid out
on the same lines, with the addition of the reserved
quarters for women; and what remains in Spain and
Sicily of Moorish secular architecture shows that,
in the Merinid period, the play of ornament must have
been as was natural even greater
than in the medersas.
The Arab chroniclers paint pictures
of Merinid palaces, such as the House of the Favourite
at Cordova, which the soberer modern imagination refused
to accept until the medersas of Fez were revealed,
and the old decorative tradition was shown in the
eighteenth century Moroccan palaces. The descriptions
given of the palaces of Fez and of Marrakech in the
preceding articles, which make it unnecessary, in so
slight a note as this, to go again into the detail
of their planning and decoration, will serve to show
how gracefully the art of the mosque and the medersa
was lightened and domesticated to suit these cool chambers
and flower-filled courts.
With regard to the immense fortifications
that are the most picturesque and noticeable architectural
features of Morocco, the first thing to strike the
traveller is the difficulty of discerning any difference
in the probable date of their construction until certain
structural peculiarities are examined, or the ornamental
details of the great gateways are noted. Thus
the Almohad portions of the walls of Fez and Rabat
are built of stone, while later parts are of rubble;
and the touch of European influence in certain gateways
of Meknez and Fez at once situate them in the seventeenth
century. But the mediaeval outline of these great
piles of masonry, and certain technicalities in their
plan, such as the disposition of the towers, alternating
in the inner and outer walls, continued unchanged
throughout the different dynasties, and this immutability
of the Moroccan military architecture enables the
imagination to picture, not only what was the aspect
of the fortified cities which the Greeks built in
Palestine and Syria, and the Crusaders brought back
to Europe, but even that of the far-off Assyrio-Chaldaean
strongholds to which the whole fortified architecture
of the Middle Ages in Europe seems to lead back.
Marrakech the gate of the Portuguese]