Ancient Ganja Gate

Ganja gate is a masterpiece of craftsmanship of the 10th to 11th centuries. The gate consisted of cast iron decorated with stamped ornaments and patterns from the outside made by a smith named Ibragim ibn Osman in 1063 during the Seddadid dynasty. In 1063 Shawur, a ruler of Shaddadid dynasty, decided to build a castle surrounding Ganja. Six large gates were erected in different directions of the town. Upon Shawur's order Azerbaijani master Ibrahim ibn Osman built this gate in 1063. The ornament contained the name of the master in Kufi language and the date the gate completion. The inscriptions in Kufi Arabic on the surviving leaf of the gate read: "With the name of Allah, the merciful and benevolent. The Excellency Sayyid Shawur ibn Al-Fazl - May Allah keep his supremacy longer! - ordered this door to be built with the help of Abul Faraj Muhammad ibn Abdulla - Let Allah give success to him too. Smith Ibrahim ibn Osman Angaveyh's work. (1063)".[1]

In 1139 a strong earthquake happened in Ganja and practically destroyed the city. The earthquake was so strong that top part of Mount Kapaz to the south-west of the town was broken and fell down onto the Aghsu River and created Lake Göygöl and other small lakes. Georgian Tsar Demeter I took the advantage of the earthquake to attack and looting the defenseless Ganja. He captured the gate as his trophy. The gate weighing a few tons was carried by the surviving citizens of Ganja on their backs. Only one half of the gate has survived. It is built in the wall of Gelati Monastery across from the tomb of Georgian King David IV. Today, a leaf of this gate is fastened to the wall facing David I's grave in the yard of the monastery. [2] [3] [4]

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