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A’li
Qapoo Palace - Isfahan
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Ali Qapu
(pronounced, ah-lee gah-pooh) is in
effect but a pavilion that marks the
entrance to the vast royal residential
quarter of the Safavid Isfahan which
stretched from the Maidan Naqsh-i-Jahan
to the Chahar Bagh Boulevard. The name
is made of two elements: "Ali", Arabic
for exalted, and "Qapu" Turkic for
portal or royal threshold. The compound
stands for "Exalted Porte". This name
was chosen by the Safavids to rival the
Ottomans' celbrated name for their court
: Bab-i Ali, or the "Sublime Porte").
The building, another wonderful Safavid
edifice, was built by decree of Shah
Abbas the Great in the early seventeenth
century. It was here that the great
monarch used to entertain noble
visitors, and foreign ambassadors. Shah
Abbas, here for the first time
celebrated the Nowruz (New Year's Day)
of 1006 AH / 1597 A.D. A large and
massive rectangular structure, the Ali
Qapu is 48 m (157 ft) high and has six
floors, fronted with a wide terrace
whose ceiling is inlaid and supported by
wooden columns.
Ali Qapu is rich in naturalistic wall
paintings by Reza Abbassi, the court
painter of Shah Abbas I, and his pupils.
There are floral, animal, and bird
motifs. The highly ornamented doors and
windows of the palace have almost all
been pillaged at times of social
anarchy. Only one window on the third
floor has escaped the ravages of time.
Ali Qapu was repaired and restored
substantially during the reign of Shah
Sultan Hussein, the last Safavid ruler,
but fell into a dreadful state of
dilapidation again during the short
reign of invading Afghans. under the
Qajar Nasir al-Din shah's reign
(1848-96), the Safavid cornices and
floral tiles above the portal were
replaced by tiles bearing inscriptions.
Shah Abbas II was enthusiastic about the
embellishment and perfection of Ali Qapu.
His chief contribution was given to the
magnificent hall, construct red on the
third floor. The 18 columns of the hall
are covered with mirrors and its ceiling
is decorated with great paintings.
The chancellery was stationed on the
first floor.
On the sixth floor, the royal reception
and banquets were held. The largest
rooms are found on this floor. The
stucco decoration of the banquet hall
abounds in motif of various vessels and
cups. The sixth floor was popularly
called (the music room) as it was here
that various ensembles performed music
and sang songs. From the upper
galleries, the Safavid ruler watched
polo games, maneuvers and horse-racing
below in the Naqsh-i-Jahan square.
The Ali Qapu has multiple connotations,
but generally connotes entrance or
supreme gate to the complex of palaces
and public buildings of the Safavid
Government.
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