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Image:Storks samarkand.jpg|Intricate designs on the iwan of the Ulugh Beg Madrassa, ], ]. Image:Storks samarkand.jpg|Intricate designs on the iwan of the Ulugh Beg Madrassa, ], ].
Image:TajEntryArch.jpg|The entrance iwan of the ], ], ]. Image:TajEntryArch.jpg|The entrance iwan of the ], ], ].
Image:Model of Jame Mosque.jpg|], scale model showing the court with the four iwans.</gallery> Image:Model of Jame Mosque.jpg|], scale model showing the court with the four iwans.
Image:King_Saud_Mosque2_(5).jpg|King Saud Mosque, Jeddah, an Iwan in the central court.
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Revision as of 08:31, 20 May 2008

For other uses, see Iwan (disambiguation).
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Great Mosque of Esfahan, View of the north iwan from the courtyard

Iwan or eyvan (Persian: ayvān) is defined as a vaulted hall or space, walled on three sides, with one end entirely open.

Iwans were a trademark of the Sassanid architecture of Persia, later finding their way into Islamic architecture. This transition reached its peak during the Seljuki era when iwans became established as a fundamental design unit in Islamic architecture.

Typically, iwans open on to a central courtyard, and have been used in both public and residential architecture.


See also


Iranian architecture
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Pre-Islamic
Islamic
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Traditional cities
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