The Old German Consulate in British East Africa: A Mombasa Mansion and Its Carved Door
Contenu
Frankl, P.J.L. 2002. « The Old German Consulate in British East Africa: A Mombasa Mansion and Its Carved Door ». British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 30 (2): 137-53, bibliographie, consulté le 9 mai 2025, https://ibadica.org/s/bibliographie/item/35704
- Titre
- The Old German Consulate in British East Africa: A Mombasa Mansion and Its Carved Door
- Auteur
- Frankl, P.J.L. Voir tous les contenus avec cette valeur
- Date
- 2003
- Dans
- British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies Voir tous les contenus avec cette valeur
- Résumé
- Mombasa and the entire Swahili coast of EasternAfrica have long had historical and cultural links with the rest of the Indian Ocean region, and this article reflects those links. The mansion in question is a nineteenth century house situated between the Portuguese-built fort and what is now the Old Port. Over the past century the house has hadfour owners, three of them Muslim.The first was a gentleman from Oman, who almost certainly built the house and commissioned the carved door. The second was Tharia Topan,an Isma'ili from Gujarat, who accumulated vast wealth. The third was a Parsi firm originating in Bombay; it was towards the end of the period that this structure became dilapidated and that,probably, the two original leaves of the carved door were removed. Shaykh Mbarak 'Ali Hinawy,the fourth owner, restored both the house and its carved door.
- Sujet
- Zanzibar Voir tous les contenus avec cette valeur
- Langue
- eng
- volume
- 30
- numéro
- 2
- pages
- 137-153
Frankl, P.J.L. 2002. « The Old German Consulate in British East Africa: A Mombasa Mansion and Its Carved Door ». British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 30 (2): 137-53, bibliographie, consulté le 9 mai 2025, https://ibadica.org/s/bibliographie/item/35704
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