Tabrizi tradition
Tabrizi tradition, Tabrizi workshop, was an architectural style that originated in Tabriz, Iran during the Ilkhanate. By the 1330s, a workshop was established in Cairo teaching the Tabrizi tradition of ceramic tile, including the construction and decoration of minarets. By the 1400s, Tabrizi craftsmen were working in the Ottoman Empire constructing the Green Mosque, Bursa, which has similarities to the Blue Mosque in Tabriz and the Muradiye Complex in Bursa. After the sacking of Tabriz, the Ottoman sultan Selim I brought Tabrizi craftsmen to Istanbul to start a royal ceramic workshop based on Tabrizi traditions.
Achievements
Under Ilkhanid rule, Tabriz became a significant hub of commerce linked with key trade routes in Anatolia. The city received considerable support from the Ilkhanids and later the Qara Qoyunlu and Aq Qoyunlu dynasties, with tilework playing a major role in its architectural identity. Due to its cultural prominence, artists of the period may have used Tabrizi nisbas as a form of self-promotion.In the early 1300s, Tabrizi craftsmen had developed multicolor tile mosaic. These multicolored mosaics are found at the tomb complex at Ghazaniyya built by Ilkhanid sultan Ghazan, Rab'-e Rashidi built c. 1307 and the mausoleum of Oljaytu at Soltaniyeh built between 1307 and 1313. The same three colors were used in the construction of the two minarets of al-Nasir's mosque in Cairo. The Tabrizi craftsmen were highly skilled in various tile techniques, including plain or gilt monochrome, under-glaze, cuerda seca, and mosaic-faience.
Only two monuments from the fifteenth century remain in Tabriz, both significantly damaged, from the Qara Qoyunlu period: the Blue Mosque and the .
In 1465, Khatun Jan Begum commissioned the Blue Mosque as a funerary complex for her husband, Jahan Shah. The mosque's tilework is diverse, featuring mosaic tiles alongside blue-and-white pieces; bannāʾī technique ; hexagonal dark-blue tiles with gold detailing; and luster tiles. The tile workshop responsible for this mosque demonstrated a range of skills similar to those seen in the Muradiye Complex in Bursa and later in the Istanbul workshop active during the early reign of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent in the sixteenth century. Two types of blue-and-white tiles have survived from the Blue Mosque of Tabriz: one type includes small square tiles with white geometric or vegetal designs set into brickwork, while the other consists of small, dark-blue triangular tiles adorned with white floral patterns.
In the Uzun Hasan Mosque, remnants such as inscription fragments, molded leaf motifs, and tiles decorated in blue-on-white and white-on-blue have been uncovered. Some of these tiles also display overglaze-painted outlines, similar to the black-line/cuerda seca style.
14th century
Cairo workshop
During 1330, Aitmish brought craftsmen from Tabriz which played a key role in establishing a court workshop in Cairo during the 1330s and 1340s, where they instructed artisans in the Tabrizi tradition. The same masons were responsible for the construction, from 1329 to 1330, of two minarets at Qawsun's mosque in Cairo. They modeled them on minarets of Ali Shah's mosque in Tabriz. They are topped with a bulbous crown, which resemble the minarets at the Shrine ofʿAbd al-Samad in Natanz and the Friday mosque at Yazd. The minarets of the Al-Nasir Muhammad mosque at the Cairo Citadel are adorned with navy blue, turquoise, and white mosaic tiles.The Tabriz tradition influenced Cairene architecture not only in the scale of its buildings and their interiors but also in their decorative style. For example, the lines of the qibla īwān in Sultan Ḥasan's mosque are adorned with a large 2 meter band of finely carved stucco, featuring a Qurʾanic inscription set against a foliate background.
15th century
In the fifteenth century, Tabriz gained widespread recognition for its workshops, particularly for its manuscript production and ceramics. By the century's end, a Tabrizi craftsman was even reported to have tried replicating porcelain, highlighting the vibrant energy of the city's workshops. Craftsmen with the Tabriz nisba carried the reputation of its esteemed workshops as far as Cairo, Damascus, Bursa, and Shahrisabz.A well-known example of work by Tabrizi émigrés is the Yeşil Cami in Bursa, a tomb complex commissioned by Ottoman Sultan Mehmed I in 1412, with construction completed in 1419–20. Similar to the Blue Mosque in Tabriz, the building originally featured a porch with five domes and is renowned for its extravagant tile decoration on both the exterior and interior. The stunning decoration includes a dado of hexagonal monochrome tiles with stenciled gold patterns and a grand miḥrāb with a molded frame and pyramidal muqarnas hood, created using a mix of tile mosaic and underglaze cuerda seca—techniques also used in the Blue Mosque. The tilework is signed on the colonette to the right of the miḥrāb as "work of the masters of Tabriz." The mihrabs in both the convent mosque and the mausoleum of the Yeşil complex share a strong resemblance to the mihrab of the Muradiye Mosque in Edirne. Black-line tiles are also present in the Muradiye Complex, constructed in 1425–26, and are likely products of the same workshop tradition. Patricia Blessing, Stanford professor of art, suggests the signature implies a mobile workshop operating in the Ottoman Empire. The Cem Sultan Mausoleum stands within the cemetery of the Muradiye Complex, a site where the “Masters of Tabriz” had been active in the 1420s. This connection leads Nurhan Atasoy and Julian Raby to propose that the black-line tiles in the Cem Sultan Mausoleum represent the final phase of the waning “Masters of Tabriz” workshop tradition.
The tile masters from Tabriz seem to have relocated from Edirne to Istanbul, as suggested by the two remaining polychrome tile lunettes in the courtyard of Mehmed II's mosque. These lunettes, which replicate intricate Cuerda seca designs using the quicker underglaze method, closely resemble the tiles they produced for the Üç Şerefeli Mosque in Edirne.
The Panja-i 'Ali Mosque in Qom also displays blue-and-white underglaze tile, with a foundation date of 1481–1482.