Junblatt Palace

Junblatt Palace
قصر جنبلاط

Junblatt Palace
Location within Ancient City of Aleppo
Alternative names Qasr Junblatt
General information
Type Palace, Museum
Architectural style Syrian
Location Aleppo, Syria
Address Al-Bandarah, al-Farafira district
Ancient Aleppo
Completed 16th century
Client Janpolad bek ibn Qasim
Technical details
Floor count 2

Junblatt Palace (Arabic: قصر جنبلاط); originally Janpolad Palace (Arabic: قصر جان بولاد), is a palace in Aleppo, Syria, built during the 2nd half of the 16th century by the emir of the Jumblatt family, Jumblatt ibn Qasim.[1] In 1604-1605, it has briefly served a residence for the Ottoman wāli of Aleppo Hussein Pasha Janpolad.

The palace is located at al-Bandarah neighbourhood of al-Farafira district within the walls of the Ancient City of Aleppo. According to the Aleppine historian sheikh Kamel al-Ghazzi, emir Janpolad spent one thousand Ottoman gold lira to build the palace. Since 1766, the palace became the property of al-Kawakibi family. In 1814, its served as the residence of the mufti of Aleppo sheikh Hasan Afandi al-Kawakibi.

Junblatt Palace is believd to have the largest iwan in Aleppo, decorated with fine qashani ceramic-tiled mosaic wall, depicting several Persian-type inscriptions.[2] Like the vast majority of Arabic traditional houses, the square-shaped courtyard of the palace has a large water fountain in the centre mainly used for wudu.

However, many associated external buildings around the palace -including a military barack and stables- were ruined during the 1960s.

References

Coordinates: 36°12′13″N 37°09′31″E / 36.20361°N 37.15861°E / 36.20361; 37.15861


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