THE ARAB COURTYARD
This courtyard was constructed after the Arab pattern. Two porticos were
added to it on its western and southern sides. A fountain of
multicolored veined marble after the later Ottoman style was also put in
the middle of the courtyard.
In the niche, we can see piece of gypsum depicting a lion sitting on a
cubic baser the head is bent under another cube. The piece is probably a
part of a decorative element used as a capital ( H. 101 cm
(
This important archaeological piece was found at the bed of the northern
Euphrates, ar-Raqqah. It goes back to the Abbasid Age.
There
are also two grave-stones found at the cemetery
of
Bab al-Sahgir. Each one bears an epitaph carved in Kufic script of the
5th C. A. H. = 11 A.D. We gather from the epitaphs that the first
tomb-stone belongs to Abu ad-Darda’ , the companion of the Prophet
(Peace be upon him) and the second belongs to his wife Um ad-Darda’ .
The epitaphs are undated. Presumably, the two sepultures were well known
in the cemetery despite the disappearance of their actual location.
Perhaps one of the reformers wanted to immortalize their memory by
putting these two tomb stones in the cemetery after the collapse of the
Fatimids who used to take great care in honoring the family of the
Prophet.
|