Door Boss thumbnail 1
Door Boss thumbnail 2
Not currently on display at the V&A

Door Boss

9th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The description of Samarra by Al-Ya qubi (d.897/8) in the Kitab al-Buldan states: 'He wrote for the despatch of the workmen, builders, and skilled people such as iron-workers, carpenters, and other crafts, and for the bringing of teak, other woods, and palm trunks from al-Basra and the adjacent areas of Baghdad and the rest of al-Sawad and from Antakiya and the other coastal areas of al-Sham, and for the bringing of worked marble and the houses for working of marble were establed at al-Ladhiqiyya and other places.'


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
wood, carved and painted
Brief description
Door boss, wood, hemispherical with two square-shaped holes, traces of coloured pigments; Iraq (Samarra), 9th century.

Physical description
Circular boss, of hemispherical form with two square carved apertures, from which a metal ring handle may have been suspended. There are perforations at the back of each presumably to secure the boss to a frame or door. The wood of reddish colour with prominent grain, possibly Accacia. There are traces of white, red and blue pigment.
Dimensions
  • Weight: 0.5kg
  • Diameter: 142mm
  • Depth: 83mm
  • Height: 29mm
  • Width: 2.3mm
Dimension of aperture
Style
Marks and inscriptions
  • Transliteration
Credit line
Given by H.M. Government

The research, cataloguing and digitisation of the V&A's Samarra collection has been made possible by a pilot project grant from the British Institute for the Study of Iraq (2013).
Object history
The German Archaeologist, Ernst Herzfeld (1879- 1948) chose Samarra as the site for the first large-scale archaeological investigation into Islamic antiquities. Two excavations took place, in 1911 and later from 1912-1913. The list of Herzfeld's finds numbered in excess of 1161 objects. These included wall paintings, stucco wall revetments, carved and painted woodwork, architectural details carved from marble and alabaster and smaller finds of glass, ceramics, steatite and mother of pearl.

All of the finds were stored at Samarra except for 100 panels of carved stucco which were shipped back to Germany and are now in the Museum für Islamische Kunst in Berlin. After Samarra was captured by the British in World War I, the remaining finds were moved to Basra via Baghdad, where Gertrude Bell (1868-1926) as honorary Director of Antiquities in Iraq, acted as the art advisor to the V&A. Due to the efforts of the directors of both the V&A and the British Museum, the finds were eventually shipped to London in 1921.

The Foreign and Colonial Office convened a commission at the British Museum, which Herzfeld was invited to preside over to divide the Samarra finds into type sets. These were later offered to over twenty different museums and collections including the V&A which received several hundred objects in all media, accessioned in 1922.
Historical context
Samarra was founded by the Abbasid Caliph al-Mu'tasim (r. 833-842) in 836 AD to serve as his imperial capital. The sight chosen was about 125km upstream from Baghdad on the left bank of the Tigris. The founding of new cities was an important way of displaying values of kingship. Al-Mu'tasim ordered the construction of a planned city including a network of canals, streets, monumental mosques, palaces, gardens and racecourses. He also allocated land to military and court officials, who built richly decorated palace complexes and greatly increased the size of the city. His son and successor, Caliph al-Mutawakkil (r. 847-861) ordered the construction of the famous spiral minaret at the great mosque. Construction halted at Samarra in about 880 AD and later was abandoned by the Caliph and his court in 892. At 57 km2, Samarra is today the largest Islamic archaeological site in the world.

The construction of the many mosques and palaces at Samarra fostered an early flowering of architectural decoration. What mainly survives today are wall revetments in carved stucco and wall paintings on fine gypsum surfaces. Earlier Iranian (Sassanian) decorative styles influenced much of the carved stucco panels found at Samarra. The decoration was primarily based on vegetal forms but later developed into more abstract motifs. The wall paintings illustrate a wide range of subjects such as geometric patterns and courtly scenes with figurative representations of listening and playing music, banqueting and dancing. Depictions of animals, especially camels and birds also feature on fragments recovered from the site.
Summary
The description of Samarra by Al-Ya qubi (d.897/8) in the Kitab al-Buldan states: 'He wrote for the despatch of the workmen, builders, and skilled people such as iron-workers, carpenters, and other crafts, and for the bringing of teak, other woods, and palm trunks from al-Basra and the adjacent areas of Baghdad and the rest of al-Sawad and from Antakiya and the other coastal areas of al-Sham, and for the bringing of worked marble and the houses for working of marble were establed at al-Ladhiqiyya and other places.'
Bibliographic references
  • Lucia Burgio, Robin J.H. Clark, Mariam Rosser-Owen, "Raman analysis of ninth-century Iraqi stuccoes from Samarra", Journal of Archaelogical Science 34 (2007) 756-762
  • The Ernst Herzfeld papers. Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archives (FSA). Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Series 7, Records of Samarra Expeditions, 1906-1945.
  • Iraq Government, Department of Antiquities, Hÿafrÿyÿt Sÿmarrÿa': 1936-1939 , 2 vols, Baghdad, 1940
  • Matthew D. Saba, 'Impermanent Monument, Lasting Impression: The Abbasid Dar Al-Khilafa Palace of Samarra', Unpublished PhD. Thesis, University of Chicago, August 2014.
Other number
I-N 923 - Herzfeld's red inventory number on object
Collection
Accession number
A.133-1922

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Record createdJune 25, 2009
Record URL
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