'Picture of the Mausoleum of Our Lord Amir Hamza, May God Be Pleased upon Him'. Photographer: H. A. Mirza & Sons

Photo 174/10

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The record is made up of 1 b&w photographic print held within a blue card window mount. It was created in c 1907. It was written in Urdu and English. The original is part of the British Library: Visual Arts.

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Content

Genre/Subject Matter

This photograph depicts the mausoleum dedicated to Amir Hamza as well as, in the background, Mount Uhud, approximately 4-5 km north of the Masjid al-Nabawi, Medina. It was taken from a position southeast or southwest of the mausoleum.

The surrounding text makes reference to the martyrdom of Hamza and other ‘companions of the prophet’, as well as the incident in which Mohammed lost two teeth in the battle. Born ‘Abd al-Muttalib, Hamza was the paternal uncle of Mohammed and is venerated for his heroism and ultimate martyrdom at this site during the Battle of Uhud (625 CE) against the Meccans.

The structure in this image may have been, at least in location and outline, the same as that rebuilt in the twelfth century – which in turn followed a traditional site of veneration dating to the second century A.H. – however, the aspects of the building visible here are clearly more modern, particularly the hewn-stone outer wall. Richard Burton, in his Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to El Medinah and Meccah (1857, Vol. I, pp. 407–08), describes and illustrates a ground plan of a mausoleum-cum-mosque at this site, which is identical in description to that illustrated here.

Pilgrims can be seen entering into the mausoleum, while a lone Ottoman soldier stands in the centre of the image at the corner of the building. Some figures are blurred from movement during the exposure. To the right of the entrance and adjacent to the neighbouring low-lying building in the right middleground a stand bearing rows of earthenware or wooden vessels is situated: these may have had a ceremonial function for pilgrims and bear a resemblance to the Ibrīqs illustrated by Christian Snouck Hurgronje in his 1888 publication, Bilder-Atlas zu Mekka . Compare also the vessels in evidence in the foreground in Photo 174/9.

Inscriptions

Recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. :

Upper centre: ‘Picture of the Mausoleum of Our Lord Amir Hamza, May God Be Pleased upon Him’

To the right and left of the title:

‘The sacred tomb of the lord of martyrs

Hamza, the lion of Divine Truth and friend of God

The holy uncle of the Prophet and the lion of [the battle of] Uhud,

Devotee of the path of God's will.’

To the right and left of the image:

‘This pilgrimage site is located at a distance of approximately three miles from the city of Medina the Radiant. A guide-instructor here makes pilgrims recite the benedictions. Here takes place the pilgrimage to the mausoleum of Amir Hamza and the companions [of the Prophet], the treasury of martyrs, the relic of the blessed teeth, the relic of the blessed head of Khalid ibn Walid, the cave with the fissure, the mountain, the place of martyrdom of the Amir, and so on. Here also is Mount Uhud concerning which the Prophet has said, “I have toward it and the mountain has toward me a very special love”.’

Lower centre: 'H. A. Mirza & Sons, Photographers, Chandni Chowk, Delhi'

Lower right corner, along right edge, in pencil: ‘10’ ‘147’

Verso The back of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'v'. :

In pen, upper right corner:

‘I.O / 147

4th [?] [? 07?] [illegible]’

In pencil (cataloguer’s note):

‘This caption refers to photo 148’ [sic]

Recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. :

In red ink on lower centre right of image and – faintly – beneath lower left intersection of cruciform double-barred frame:

رجسطری شد

[superscript ط]

Label

Labels ( verso The back of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'v'. ):

1 – Letterpress

‘147 H. A. Mirza and Sons, Photographers.

نقشه مزار سیر حمزه رضی الله عذه (Naqsha-i-

Mazár-i-Saiyiyadana Amir Hamaza, Razi

Allah-o-Anho. A photo. [sic] of the tomb of Amir

Hamaza at Medina, with a brief descrip-

tion.) One sheet. Published by the Pho-

tographers: Delhi. (Octr. 15, 1907.)

14 x 18º. Litho. Ist Edition.

Price, Re. I, A. 4.’

2 – Ink stamp

‘India Office

19 May 1909

Library.’

Other Notes

The image was formerly referred to as ‘The tomb of Amir Hamaza at Medina’

An erroneous cataloguer's note handwritten in pencil beneath the letterpress on verso The back of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'v'. states that the letterpress ('caption') refers to the following image in the sequence, Photo 174/11. This is incorrect.

Extent and format
1 b&w photographic print held within a blue card window mount
Physical characteristics

Dimensions

Mount (external): 348 x 445 mm

Mount (internal): 202 x 276 mm [landscape]

Format

Photographic print held within window mount in landscape format

Materials

Mottled blue-tinted window mount, card, gelatin silver The principal photographic process used for black and white photography from the 1870s. print, indigo ink (printed), red ink (hand-painted)

Condition

Mount is mildly bowed, with light staining along all edges, particularly right-hand. Some dark spatter-marks extend from the upper left and are unknown in origin. A lengthy crease extends across the upper bar from left-hand edge almost to right-hand edge. Light staining and scuffing is also visible on the paper verso The back of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'v'. backing, which is otherwise in good condition.

The print is welled slightly throughout, but otherwise shows no sign of toning. One small surface loss is visible in the lower right corner. A blemish in the upper right is post-printing.

Foliation

10 (147)

Process

Gelatin silver The principal photographic process used for black and white photography from the 1870s. print

Written in
Urdu and English in Arabic and Latin script
Type
Photograph

Archive information for this record

Access & Reference

Original held at
British Library: Visual Arts
Access conditions

Unrestricted

Archive reference
Photo 174/10
Former British Library reference
147

History of this record

Date(s)
c 1907

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'Picture of the Mausoleum of Our Lord Amir Hamza, May God Be Pleased upon Him'. Photographer: H. A. Mirza & Sons, British Library: Visual Arts, Photo 174/10, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023493445.0x00000a> [accessed 28 March 2024]

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