Qasr Ibrahim

Qasr Ibrahim (Ibrahim Palace) is a historical castle and fort located in Hofuf, Al-Hasa, Eastern Province, Saudi Arabia. Ibrahim palace is the main architectural heritage from the Ottoman period of Al-Hofuf [1] that was a Turkish military barracks [2].

Old photograph of Ibrahim Palace


History

It was built in 1556 by Ali Ibn Ahmed Ibn Lawand Al-Burayki, the Ottoman governor of the time. The castle was renovated in 1801 by the Saudi governor Ibrahim Ibn ‘Ufaysan. Several historians believe that the castle was named after him [3].

Architecture

It is considered as one of the major architectural masterpieces in Alhasa and it combines Islamic and military architecture [2] [3].

UNESCO Site

In 2018, Al-ahsa oasis became the fifth Saudi site to be registered on the UNESCO world heritage [4]. Ibrahim palace is one of 12 sites that were designated as world heritage site within alhasa [2].

gollark: osmarks.net subscribers can choose to have stuff hosted on the actual server™, the spare raspberry pi™, my VPS™, or possibly a spare Android tablet if they need that somehow.
gollark: But it doesn't actually run any critical or important systems so it might not be sensible to count it under osmarks.net costs.
gollark: I pay a ridiculously tiny amount for a VPS somewhere, with the minor tradeoff that it has sub-RPi specs and no IPv6.
gollark: This is because I use "electricity" to power "servers".
gollark: osmarks.net's cost is impractical to quantify.

References

  1. "Al-Ahsa Oasis (Saudi Arabia) No 1563".
  2. "IN PICTURES: Discover the history behind Ibrahim Palace in eastern Saudi Arabia". english.alarabiya.net. Retrieved 2019-10-26.
  3. Cetin, M (2010). "Cultural versus material: conservation issues regarding earth architecture in Saudi Arabia: the case of an Ottoman fort, Ibrahim Palace in Al-Houfuf". International Journal of Civil & Environmental Engineering.
  4. "UNESCO: Al-Ahsa Oasis is a unique heritage landscape and an exceptional example of interaction between humans and the surrounding environment". scth.gov.sa. Retrieved 2019-10-26.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.