Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Khan As'ad Pasha

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Address
  
Al-Buzuriyah Souq

Client
  
As'ad Pasha al-'Azem

Floor area
  
2,500 m²

Completed
  
1752

Construction started
  
1751

Location
  
Renovated
  
1990s

Floors
  
2

Architectural style
  
Ottoman architecture

Function
  
Museum

Khan As'ad Pasha Behind closed doors Wall Street International

Alternative names
  
As'ad Pasha al-Azm Khan

Similar
  
Azm Palace, National Museum of Damascus, House of Saint Ananias, Tekkiye Mosque, Maktab Anbar

Khan As'ad Pasha (Arabic: خان أسعد باشا‎‎) is the largest khan in the Old City of Damascus, covering an area of 2,500 square metres (27,000 sq ft). Situated along Al-Buzuriyah Souq, it was built and named after As'ad Pasha al-Azm, the governor of Damascus, in 1751-52. Khan As'ad Pasha has been described as one of the finest khans of Damascus, and the most "ambitious" work of architecture in the city. Throughout the Ottoman era, it hosted caravans coming from Baghdad, Mosul, Aleppo, Beirut and elsewhere in the Middle East.

Contents

Khan As'ad Pasha As39ad Pasha Khan Restoration Archnet

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Architecture

Khan As'ad Pasha Panoramio Photo of Khan As39ad Pasha Old Damascus

The building follows a typical Ottoman khan layout with two floors giving onto a central courtyard. Khan As'ad Pasha is entered from Suq al-Buzuriyyah, through a monumental gateway decorated with stone carvings and roofed by a muqarnas semi-dome. The entrance leads to a square-shaped courtyard with old shops on the ground floor. The second floor, accessible by a staircase located to the right of the main entrance, was used mainly for lodging and has eighty rooms arranged along a gallery facing the courtyard.

Khan As'ad Pasha Khan As39ad Pasha a photo on Flickriver

The space of the central courtyard is divided into nine equal square modules, where each module is covered with a dome raised on a drum pierced with twenty windows. The domes are supported by pendents that transfer the load onto four piers and to the courtyard walls. An octagonal marble fountain occupies the center of the courtyard below the central dome. Each of the four courtyard walls has three doorways on the ground floor, flanked by two rectangular windows. The symmetry is maintained on the second floor where each gallery façade has three archways flanked by two smaller ones. The khan is built of alternating courses of basalt and limestone.

Khan As'ad Pasha Khan As39ad Pasha Attraction in Damascus Wanderant

Three of the courtyard domes were destroyed in an earthquake in 1758. The openings were covered with wooden planks until 1990 when the khan was restored and the domes rebuilt. At the beginning of the 20th century, Khan As'ad Pasha was no longer used for commercial purposes. Until its restoration in 1990, it was used for manufacturing and storage. Today, it is designated as a tourist site and hosts the Natural History Museum of Damascus.

The restoration of the Khan won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture.

Khan As'ad Pasha Khan As39ad Pasha Wikipedia

Khan As'ad Pasha Behind closed doors Wall Street International



References

Khan As'ad Pasha Wikipedia