Why was the Dome of the Rock built? A new perspective on a long-discussed question
Why was the Dome of the Rock built? A new perspective on a long-discussed question
The existing discussion regarding the motives for building the Dome of the Rock revolves around two suggestions: that the incentive for building was the fierce competition between Abd al-Malik and Abdallah b. al-Zubayr in Mecca, and that it was competition with local Christian monuments that moved Abd al-Malik to building this outstanding edifice. This paper suggests that a third incentive lay in the political and ideological rivalry with Constantinople that was at its peak during that period. This rivalry drove Abd al-Malik to build a monument that would outdo those of Constantinople, and especially that of the Hagia Sophia. Muslim tradition emphasized that Constantinople had contaminated the site of the Temple and had claimed to inherit its place as God's throne on earth. The building of the Dome of the Rock, the New Temple of Solomon, was thus meant to redeem the Temple of Jerusalem's honour as of old against the claims of Constantinople.
CITATION: Levy-Rubin, Milka. Why was the Dome of the Rock built? A new perspective on a long-discussed question . : Cambridge University Press , 2017. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, Vol. 80, No. 3, October 2017, pp. 441-464 - Available at: https://library.au.int/why-was-dome-rock-built-new-perspective-long-discussed-question