All Collections
Previous Next
Back to Collection

Mahmal

TXT 442 | Cairo, Egypt | 1867–76

Print Download

Artwork Details

Title: Mahmal

Date: 1867–76

Location: Cairo, Egypt

Materials: mahmal cover, banners and finial banners of red silk, with green and gold-coloured silk appliqués, embroidered in silver and silver-gilt wire over cotton thread padding; finials of copper alloy; contemporary wooden frame

Dimensions: 400 (approximate height, as assembled) x 130 x 102cm

Accession Number: TXT 442

Other Notes:

The mahmal was a ceremonial palanquin that represented the authority of the Sultan over the Holy Places. It was carried by a camel – specially chosen for the purpose for its appearance and strength. The Mamluk sultan Baybars (r 1260 – 1277) is reported to be the first to have sent a mahmal with the caravan of pilgrims from Cairo, and the custom was continued under Ottoman rule and almost without interruption until the early 20th century. Following the Ottoman conquest of Egypt, a second mahmal  – also representing the Ottoman sultan – left Damascus with the caravan of Syrian and Turkish pilgrims. [see ARC.pp 30.9] The Egyptian and Syrian mahmals were occasionally joined by a third mahmal from the Yemen. [see MSS 1038, folio 29a, where the three mahmals are shown at the bottom of the image]

Great celebrations accompanied the departure of the Egyptian mahmal from Cairo and its return to the city. The mahmal and the various textiles that make up the kiswah of the Ka‘bah were paraded in the streets of Cairo before being officially handed over to the Amir al-Hajj, the Commander of the pilgrim caravan. [see ARC.pt 76; ARC.pt 83; ARC.pt 101; ARC.pt 123]

This sitr (‘cover’) for the mahmal is one of seven (three Syrian and four Egyptian) mahmals in the Khalili Collection. The earliest is a Syrian mahmal cover in the name of Sultan Muhammad (Mehmet) IV, dated AH 1076 (AD 1656–7) [see TXT 289], while the latest, an Egyptian mahmal, is in the names of the Ottoman sultan ‘Abd al-Hamid (Abdulhamid) II and the Egyptian khedive ‘Abbas Hilmi II, and bears two dates, 1316 and 1318 AH (1898–9 and 1900–01 AD).

The Egyptian mahmal had two covers: an official, richly embroidered one such as TXT 442, which was used during the various parades, when the caravan passed through major cities, as the caravan entered Mecca, and as it entered Medina and the Prophet’s mosque. This cover was not renewed annually, but was used over several years. The second ‘daily’ cover was a simple one, normally green in colour and with appliqué decoration [see ARC.pp 40]. In the 19th and early 20th century (if not earlier) the embroidered cover was replaced by the simple daily cover as the mahmal was carried into the Holy Sanctuary in Mecca.

TXT 442 comprises the sitr itself – a tent-like cover with a pyramidal roof and an almost-square base with a slit opening at the front; a contemporary wooden frame with five finial supports; five finials, four for the corners and a larger one for the top; five small banners, one for each finial; and two larger double-sided banners (bayraq) bearing the name of the Ottoman State. The large central finial, which bears the name and tughra of Sultan Mahmud II (r 1808–1839), was obviously reused. 

Related Artworks

Sitarah for the Door of the Ka‘bah

TXT 474
Cairo

A Short Note on the Design and Issue of Postage Stamps

ARC.pt 677
Cairo

La Marche de la Caravane du Grand Caire pour la Mecque

ARC.pt 171.2
printed in Rouen, France

Postcard of Haifa Station

ARC.pc 450
Turkey

Official Hijaz Railway Postcard

ARC.pc 433
Germany

Panorama: al-haram almakki wa-ma hawluhu (‘The Meccan sanctuary and its environs’)

ARC.pp 0254.1
Signed Sadic Bey, and in Arabic, Sadiq bayk

Panorama: al-ka‘bah al-mukarramah wa al-haram al-makki (‘The honoured Ka‘bah and the Meccan sanctuary’)

ARC.pp 0254.2
Signed Sadic Bey (3 times), and in Arabic Sadiq bayk

Panorama: al-hujjaj bi-mina yawn al-‘id al-akbar (‘The pilgrims at Mina on the day of the big feast’)

ARC.pp 0254.3
Signed, several times, Sadic Bey and in Arabic Sadiq bayk

Panorama: al-madinah al-munawwarah (‘Medina, the Radiant’)

ARC.pp 0254.4
Signed Sadic Bey and in Arabic, Muhammad Sadiq sanat

al-tawaf hawl al-ka‘bah (‘Circumambulation around the Ka‘bah’)

ARC.pp 0254.5
Signed in Arabic Sadiq bayk

al-salat hawl al-ka‘bah (‘Prayers around the Ka‘bah’)

ARC.pp 0254.6
Signed in Arabic Sadiq bayk

bab al-safa bi-makkah (‘The Safa gate in Mecca’)

ARC.pp 0254.7
Signed Sadic Bey

‘Arafat

ARC.pp 0254.8
Signed Sadic Bey and in Arabic, Sadiq bayk

al-ma‘allat bi-makkah (‘al-Ma‘alla cemetery in Mecca’)

ARC.pp 0254.9
Signed in Arabic, Sadiq bayk

al-madinah al-munawwarah/ al-bab al-shami (‘Medina, the Dasmascus gate’)

ARC.pp 0254.10
Signed Sadic Bey and in Arabic, Sadiq bayk

al-haram al-madani (‘The Sanctuary at Medina’)

ARC.pp 0254.11
Signed Sadic Bey and in Arabic, Sadiq bayk

sa‘adat Shawkat Basha shaykh al-haram al-madani/ aghawat of al-hujrah al-sharifah (‘Shawkat Pasha, the Saykh of the sanctuary at Medina, with two of the eunuchs of the Noble Chambre’)

ARC.pp 0254.12
Signed Sadic Bey and in Arabic, Sadiq bayk

sa‘adat Shawkat Basha shaykh al-haram al-madani wa aghawat of al-hujrah al-sharifah al-nabawiyyah (‘Shawkat Pasha, the Saykh of the sanctuary at Medina, with three of the eunuchs of the Noble Chambre of the Prophet’)

ARC.pp 0254.13
Signed Sadic Bey and in Arabic, Sadiq bayk

Hilyah, with Four Certificates of Calligraphic Merit

CAL 479
Ottoman Turkey

Life-size Template for One Side of the Cover of Maqam Ibrahim

MSS 1128.2
Dar al-Kiswah, Cairo, Egypt

Zoom

Close

Khalili Collections Logo

Share this page