This article is about the roadside inns. For the album by Santana, see
Caravanserai (album). For the tour by Santana, see
Caravanserai Tour. For the European equivalent, see
Inn.
"Funduq" redirects here. For the Palestinian village, see
al-Funduq.
A caravanserai (or caravansary; /kærəˈvænsəˌraɪ/)[1] was a roadside
inn where travelers (
caravaners) could rest and recover from the day's journey.[2] Caravanserais supported the flow of commerce, information and people across the network of
trade routes covering Asia,
North Africa and
Southeast Europe, most notably the
Silk Road.[3][4] Often located along rural roads in the countryside, urban versions of caravanserais were also historically common in cities throughout the
Islamic world, and were often called other names such as khan, wikala, or funduq.[5]
Terms and etymology
Caravanserai
Caravanserai (
Persian: کاروانسرای,
romanized: kārvānsarāy), is the Persian compound word variant combining kārvān "
caravan" with -sarāy "palace", "building with enclosed courts".[6] Here "caravan" means a group of traders, pilgrims or other travellers, engaged in long-distance travel. The word is also rendered as caravansary, caravansaray, caravanseray, caravansara, and caravansarai.[4] In scholarly sources, it is often used as an umbrella term for multiple related types of commercial buildings similar to inns or hostels, whereas the actual instances of such buildings had a variety of names depending on the region and the local language.[5] However, the term was typically preferred for rural inns built along roads outside of city walls.[7]
Khan
The word khan (خان) derives from a clipping of
Middle Persian: 𐭡𐭩𐭲𐭠, romanized: xānag,
lit. 'house'.[8][5] It could refer to an urban caravanserai built within a town or a city[5][9] or to any caravanserai in general, including those built in the countryside and along desert routes.[10]
In Turkish the word is rendered as han.[5] The same word was used in
Bosnian and Bulgarian, having arrived through the
Ottoman conquest. In addition to Turkish and Persian, the term was widely used in Arabic as well, and examples of such buildings are found throughout the Middle East from as early as the
Umayyad Caliphate.[5][9] The term han is also used in Romanian being adopted from Ottoman Turkish.[citation needed]
Funduq
The term funduq (
Arabic: فندق; sometimes spelled foundouk or fondouk from the
French transliteration) is frequently used for historic inns in Morocco and around the
Maghreb.[5][11][12]: 116
The word comes from
Koinē Greek: πανδοκεῖον, romanized: welcoming all; an inn;[13][5] it appears as
Hebrew: פונדק,
romanized: pundaq, fundaco in
Venice, fondaco in
Genoa and alhóndiga[14] or fonda in Spanish. In the cities of this region such buildings were also frequently used as housing for artisan workshops.[15][11][16]: 318
Wikala
The Arabic word wikala (وكالة), sometimes spelled wakala or wekala, is a term found frequently in historic Cairo for an urban caravanserai which housed merchants and their goods and served as a center for trade, storage, transactions and other commercial activity.[17] The word wikala means roughly "agency" in
Arabic, in this case a commercial agency,[17] which may also have been a reference to the
customs offices that could be located here to deal with imported goods.[18] The term khan was also frequently used for this type of building in Egypt.[5]
Okelle
The term okelle or okalle, the
Italianized rendering of the Arabic word wikala, is used for a type of large urban buildings in 19th century Egypt, specifically in
Alexandria. Here, the older Egyptian wikala was reinterpreted in an
Italianate style by the Italian architect
Francesco Mancini. Directed by
Muhammad Ali, he designed and built a number of okelles delineating the
Place des Consuls (the main square of Alexandria's European quarter), which served as consular mansions, a European-style hotel, and a stock exchange, among other functions.[19]
Caravanserais were a common feature not only along the Silk Road, but also along the
Achaemenid Empire's
Royal Road, a 2,500-kilometre-long (1,600 mi) ancient highway that stretched from
Sardis to
Susa according to
Herodotus: "Now the true account of the road in question is the following: Royal stations exist along its whole length, and excellent caravanserais; and throughout, it traverses an inhabited tract, and is free from danger."[25] Other significant urban caravanserais were built along the
Grand Trunk Road in the
Indian subcontinent, especially in the region of
MughalDelhi and
Bengal Subah.
Throughout most of the
Islamic period (seventh century and after), caravanserais were a common type of structure both in the rural countryside and in dense urban centers across the
Middle East,
North Africa, and
Ottoman Europe.[5] A number of 12th to 13th-century caravanserais or hans were built throughout the
Seljuk Empire, many examples of which have survived across
Turkey today[26][27] (e.g. the large
Sultan Han in
Aksaray Province) as well as in
Iran (e.g. the
Ribat of Sharaf in
Khorasan province). Urban versions of caravanserais also became important centers of economic activity in cities across these different regions of the Muslim world, often concentrated near the main
bazaar areas, with many examples still standing in the historic areas of
Damascus,
Aleppo,
Cairo,
Istanbul,
Fes, etc.[28][29][30][31][16]
Ibn Battuta, a 14th-century Muslim traveler, described the function of a caravenserai in the region of China:
China is the safest and best country for the traveller. A man travels for nine months alone with great wealth and has nothing to fear. What is responsible for this is that in every post station in their country is funduq which has a director living there with a company of horse and foot. After sunset or nightfall the director comes to the funduq with his secretary and writes down the names of all the travellers who will pass the night there, seals it and locks the door of the funduq. In the morning he and his secretary come and call everybody by name and write down a record. He sends someone with the travellers to conduct them to the next post station and he brings back a certificate from the director of the funduq confirming that they have all arrived. If he does not do this he is answerable for them. This is the procedure in every post station in their country from Sin al-Sin to Khan Baliq. In them is everything the traveller needs by way of provisions, especially hens and geese. Sheep are rare among them.[32]
In many parts of the Muslim world, caravanserais also provided revenues that were used to fund charitable or religious functions or buildings. These revenues and functions were managed through a waqf, a protected agreement which gave certain buildings and revenues the status of
mortmain endowments guaranteed under
Islamic law.[33][34] Many major religious complexes in the
Ottoman and
Mamluk empires, for example, either included a caravanserai building (like in the külliye of the
Süleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul) or drew revenues from one in the area (such as the
Wikala al-Ghuri in Cairo, which was built to contribute revenues for the nearby
complex of Sultan al-Ghuri).[31][30][35]
Architecture
Most typically a caravanserai was a building with a square or rectangular walled exterior, with a single portal wide enough to permit large or heavily laden beasts such as
camels to enter. The courtyard was almost always open to the sky, and the inside walls of the enclosure were outfitted with a number of identical
animal stalls, bays, niches or chambers to accommodate merchants and their servants, animals, and merchandise.[36]
Caravanserais provided water for human and animal consumption, washing and
ritual purification such as wudu and ghusl. Sometimes they had elaborate public baths (
hammams), or other attached amenities such as a fountain or a
sabil/sebil. They kept
fodder for animals and had shops for travellers where they could acquire new supplies. Some shops bought goods from the travelling merchants.[37] Many caravanserais were equipped with small mosques, such as the elevated examples in the Seljuk and Ottoman caravanserais in Turkey.[31][38][30]
In Cairo, starting in the
Burji Mamluk period, wikalas (urban caravanserais) were frequently several stories tall and often included a rab', a low-income rental apartment complex, which was situated on the upper floors while the merchant accommodations occupied the lower floors.[39][29] While making the best use of limited space in a crowded city, this provided the building with two sources of revenue which were managed through the waqf system.[34][40]
View of a typical courtyard layout in the Shah-Abbasi caravansarai in
Karaj, Iran
^Petersen, Andrew (1996). "khan". Dictionary of Islamic architecture. Routledge. pp. 146–147.
ISBN9781134613663.
^
abTouri, Abdelaziz; Benaboud, Mhammad; Boujibar El-Khatib, Naïma; Lakhdar, Kamal; Mezzine, Mohamed (2010). Le Maroc andalou : à la découverte d'un art de vivre (in French) (2 ed.). Ministère des Affaires Culturelles du Royaume du Maroc & Museum With No Frontiers.
ISBN978-3902782311.
^Wilbaux, Quentin (2001). La médina de Marrakech: Formation des espaces urbains d'une ancienne capitale du Maroc (in French). Paris: L'Harmattan.
ISBN2747523888.
^Parker, Richard (1981). A practical guide to Islamic Monuments in Morocco. Charlottesville, VA: The Baraka Press.
^
abLe Tourneau, Roger (1949). Fès avant le protectorat: étude économique et sociale d'une ville de l'occident musulman (in French). Casablanca: Société Marocaine de Librairie et d'Édition.
^
abHathaway, Jane (2008). The Arab Lands under Ottoman Rule: 1516-1800. Routledge. p. 141.
ISBN9780582418998.
^Mamun, Muntasir. Dhaka: Smriti Bismritir Nagari ঢাকা: স্মৃতি বিস্মৃতির নগরী [Dhaka: City of Memories and Oblivion] (in Bengali) (3rd ed.). pp. 201–206.
ISBN984-412-104-3.
^Rahman, Mahbubur. City of an Architect. Dhaka: Delvistaa Foundation.
ISBN978-984-33-2451-1.
^Ahmed, Nazimuddin (1980). Islamic Heritage of Bangladesh. Dacca: Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh. pp. 50–51.
OCLC8476199.
^Asher, Catherine B (1984). Inventory of Key Monuments. Art and Archaeology Research Papers: The Islamic Heritage of Bengal. Paris:
UNESCO.
^Hasan, S. Mahmudul (1980). Muslim Monuments of Bangladesh. Dhaka:
Islamic Foundation.
^Sims, Eleanor. 1978. Trade and Travel: Markets and Caravansary.' In: Michell, George. (ed.). 1978. Architecture of the Islamic World - Its History and Social Meaning. London: Thames and Hudson Ltd, 101.
^Denoix, Sylvie; Depaule, Jean-Charles; Tuchscherer, Michel, eds. (1999). Le Khan al-Khalili et ses environs: Un centre commercial et artisanal au Caire du XIIIe au XXe siècle (in French). Cairo: Institut français d'archéologie orientale.
^Vladimir Braginskiy. Tourist Attractions in the USSR: A Guide. Raduga Publishers, 1982. 254 pages. Page 104.
"The whole of the centre of Sheki has been proclaimed a reserve protected by the state. To take you back to the time of the caravans, two large eighteenth-century caravanserais have been preserved with spacious courtyards where the camels used to rest, cellars where goods were stored, and rooms for travellers."
Further reading
Branning, Katharine. 2018.
turkishhan.org, The Seljuk Han in Anatolia. New York, USA.
Kīānī, Moḥammad-Yūsuf; Kleiss, Wolfram (1990).
"Caravansary". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. IV, Fasc. 7. pp. 798–802.
Erdmann, Kurt, Erdmann, Hanna. 1961. Das anatolische Karavansaray des 13. Jahrhunderts, 3 vols. Berlin: Mann, 1976,
ISBN3-7861-2241-5
Gibb, H.A.R. (2010), The Travels of Ibn Battuta, AD 1325-1354, Volume IV
Hillenbrand, Robert. 1994. Islamic Architecture: Form, function and meaning. New York: Columbia University Press. (see Chapter VI for an in depth overview of the caravanserai).
Kiani, Mohammad Yusef. 1976.
Caravansaries in Khorasan Road. Reprinted from: Traditions Architecturales en Iran, Tehran, No. 2 & 3, 1976.
Schutyser, Tom. 2012. Caravanserai: Traces, Places, Dialogue in the Middle East. Milan: 5 Continents Editions,
ISBN978-88-7439-604-7
Yavuz, Aysil Tükel. 1997. The Concepts that Shape Anatolian Seljuq Caravansara. In: Gülru Necipoglu (ed). 1997. Muqarnas XIV: An Annual on the Visual Culture of the Islamic World. Leiden: E. J. Brill, 80–95. [archnet.org/library/pubdownloader/pdf/8967/doc/DPC1304.pdf Available online as a PDF document, 1.98 MB]
External links
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