Building Name: | Tomb of Shaykh Haydar |
Religious Affiliation: | Twelver Shi'a |
Map Type: | Iran |
Map Size: | 275 |
Location: | Meshginshahr, Iran |
Coordinates: | 38.4013°N 47.6804°W |
Province: | Ardabil Province |
Consecration Year: | 14th century |
Architecture: | yes |
Architecture Type: | mausoleum |
Architecture Style: | Persian architecture |
Year Completed: | 16th century |
Width: | 10.5 metres |
Height Max: | 18.5 metres |
Materials: | brick |
The Tomb of Shaykh Haydar (Persian: آرامگاه شیخ حیدر) is located in the city of Meshginshahr, Iran.[1] It was first built in the 14th century during the Ilkhanate period, and later served as a mausoleum for Shaykh Haydar, the father of Shah Ismail I. It is number 184 on the list of Iranian national heritage monuments.[2]
Shaykh Haydar, a leader of the militaristic Safaviyya Sufi movement, was killed in a battle in Tabasaran in the year 1460, and only his severed head was buried in Tabriz. The rest of his remains were buried in Meshginshahr, and a tomb was said to have been built over his grave there. However, an inscription found during an archeological investigation dates the construction of the tomb to the final years of the reign of the Ilkhani ruler, Abu Sa'id Bahadur Khan. This predates the birth of Shaykh Haydar who was born in the year 1459, and by then the Ilkhanate had been dissolved, with only the Aq Qoyunlu ruling Iran at the time. The place was known as an Imamzadeh many years before his burial.Later in the early 16th century, Shaykh Haydar's son, Shah Ismail, transferred his remains to Ardabil, and entombed them in the Sheikh Safi al-Din Khānegāh and Shrine Ensemble. Hence, the current tomb in Meshginshahr is only a symbolic monument, and not the actual grave of Shaykh Haydar itself. Tiling works were completed during the Safavid period, while the building was restored in the modern era and there is now a mosque, as well as several houses and facilities built around it.[3]
The mausoleum, made out of brick, is octagonal in shape, and has twelve sides.[4] It is 18.5 metres tall, with a width of 10.5 metres. Decorative calligraphy on the outside of the mausoleum, dating back to the Safavid period and using tiles, reveals the words Jalal-Allah and an inscribed version of the Al-Fatiha. The octagonal mausoleum is built on top of a stone platform which is situated in the center of the courtyard of the remains of a larger complex.Inside the mausoleum, one has to enter a crypt to access the tomb of Shaykh Haydar. There are seven graves in the crypt. Six of them are located in the main part of the crypt, but the grave of Shaykh Haydar is in the center of a room attached to the crypt, enclosed by a zarih.