The Cotton Merchants' Gate (Arabic: باب القطانينBāb al-Qaṭṭānīn) is one of the gates of the al-Aqsa Compound (al-Ḥaram ash-Sharīf). It is by the western esplanade of the compound and leads to the Cotton Merchants' Market, a sūq, it is also called the Gate of the Cotton Merchants' Market (وباب سوق القطانينBāb Sūq al-Qaṭṭānīn).[1][2]
Its intricate eastern façade makes it one of the most recognizable and "the grandest of the Haram gates".[3]
History
It was built under the supervision of Tankiz in 1336, during the time of Sultan an-Nasir Muhammad of the Mamluk Sultanate.[4]
The 14th-century historian al-ʿUmarī explained that the gate was constructed in order to link the compound with the sūq's market street, [5]
which was also built by Tankiz around that time: in 1336-37.[2]
Description
There are ten descending steps to reach the gate.[4]
Its eastern façade faces the inside of the compound and features a recess with a semi-dome.[3] The semi-dome has a gently pointed arch, and its voussoir has ablaq (alternating) masonry of red and beige bricks. It also contains five rows of muqarnas.[6]
Between the semi-dome and the door is a trefoil-shaped arch,[6] with ablaq patterns in black and beige bricks. Above the door is a straight stone lintel, which is composed of three external pieces.
There used to be a small window in the trefoil arch's tympanum, but the window was blocked in 1927.[4]
^Burgoyne, Michael Hamilton; et al. (1987). Mamluk Jerusalem. British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem by World of Islam Festival Trust. p. 278. ISBN978-0-905035-33-8. In short, all the indications are that Bāb al-Qaṭṭānīn is an original Mamluk construction, 'recently constructed and newly opened' in al-ʿUmarī's words, to link the new market-street with the Haram.