User:Madisongtuley/Imamzadeh Yahya

The Imamzadeh Yahya (Persian: امامزاده یحیی – Emamzadeh Yahya) is the tomb of a sixth-generation descendent of Hasan ibn Ali, also named Imamzadeh Yahya. This Imamzadeh was built in southern Varamin, Iran throughout the Ilkhanate period between 1260 and 1310. It had multiple patrons including Fakhr al-Din, the local ruler of the Ray province when Varamin had been its capital.

Appearance
Historical accounts describe the monument as including a grand entrance portal with arcades leading to a mosque and an octagonal tower with a conical roof. The octagonal tower, thought to be built before the Seljuk period, had flat interior niches and contained a blue plaster mihrab. The porta and arcades were built during Seljuk rule but no longer exist.

The site can reached off the Varamin-Tehran highway and is entered on the northern side. The exterior of the Imamzadeh is rectangular with a domed roof, enclosed by a low brick wall. At the entrance of the tomb is a neo-Safavid style portal accented with tiles in shades of blue and orange. This portal was added after the Iranian Revolution and includes calligraphy across the top that announces the site as the “Holy Shrine of Emamzadeh Yahya.” After passing through the portal, one arrives in a cemetery filled with tombstones that stand parallel to the qibla. Apart from the main entrance portal, there is a southern gate to the site that is approached from the neighborhood street.

The interior tomb is octagonal and formed with bricks. It was once decorated with painted stucco and luster tiles, highly prized mediums of the time that required valuable materials and cultivated skill to produce. The stucco decorations include text that wrap around the wall at the viewer’s eye level. It begins with the Qur’an 62:1–4, “glorifying God, His Messenger, and His Sacred Word,” is followed by the date, Muharram 707 (July 1307), and concludes with a hadith. This text frames the original location of the tomb’s luster mihrab on the qibla wall, which once was decorated with 50-60 handmade tiles. These tiles were commissioned from master ceramicists in Kashan between 1262 and 1305, who produced them for other features of the shrine such as the dado and cenotaph. The tiles were produced in a variety of shapes to decoratively fill the the interior wall space, as was the case with the interlocking “star and cross” tiles along the dado.

Presently, the qibla in the Imamzadeh Yahya is without a mihrab. However, the tiles are on display at the Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design in Honolulu. The mihrab features a depressed central panel with trefoil arches above a cursive inscription panel. The trefoil arches are surrounded by a cursive band. Surrounding these panels are pilasters in high relief that support a gabled arch. The pilasters are adorned with helical floral designs in blue and white, and there are calligraphic inscriptions along the gables of the arch. Within the portals of the trefoil arch and gabled arch and in their spandrels are red, white, black, and blue arabesque designs. There are calligraphic inscription columns on both sides of these panels, which are themselves bordered by another set of pilasters supporting a gabled arch. The whole composition is enclosed in calligraphic inscriptions with a stylized floral edge.

A cenotaph stands in the center of the chamber and is surrounded by a silver and gold zarih. Green fabric is attached to the zarih and divides the space on the right and left for men and women respectively.

Looting
The Imamzadeh Yahya has been looted over the last 100 years and spread throughout the world in museums or sold on black markets. For example, a set of 160 tiles from the tomb is now in the British Museum, another set is in the Victoria and Albert Museum, and tiles from the gravestone are now in the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg. As of 2020, historian Dr. Keelan Overton suggests that the stones are spread around the world in 30 museums. The pieces are currently placed in museums in cities such as “Doha, St. Petersburg, Tbilisi, London, Oxford, Paris, Glasgow, Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, Tokyo, and probably even Tehran.” Looting was prevalent in many Middle East sacred sites and occurred in the 19th and early 20th century. Scholar Tomoko Masuya details the looting surrounding the Middle East as occurring in two parts. He asserts that many Persian tiles such as the ones at Imamzadeh Yahya were stolen from 1862/63-1875 and 1881-1900. The tiles from Imamzadeh Yahya were stolen during the first phase of 1862/63-1875 where they were systematically removed and sold throughout Europe and the United States during that period. Although some pieces still survive today, for example, the Mihrab from the shrine of lustre tiles is at the Shrine Museum in Mashhad. The looting of Imamzadeh Yahya had a devastating impact on the Qajar government as well as the Iranian people. As a result of these lootings, a law was passed to protect sacred sites in Iran.

Present use of tomb
Local residents actively pray at the Emamzadeh Yahya, and an attendant of the tomb is present to greet visitors. Worshippers who visit the tomb interact with the zarih by touching it, kissing it, praying against it, offering money through the holes in the screen, and adorning it. Shi’a believers regard Emamzadeh Yahya’s personality as resonant in the tomb, meaning that prayers performed in the space are likely to yield positive outcomes. This reputation has attracted the attendance of many Afghan immigrants who have moved to Varamin.

Visitors have added and maintained additional decorations to the space. Fairy lights and garlands hang on the walls. The cenotaph holds a mirror, candlesticks, and a Quran. Visitors place paper bills around the floor. Textile elements such as carpets and pillows decorate the space and serve a functional use for visitors. Also present are filled bookshelves, mirrors, framed artwork, and flowers. Prayer stones made with sacred soil of Karbala are available for Shi’a prayer. One’s forehead must touch these stones as they prostrate themselves.

There is a large, pale indent in the wall where the mihrab once stood. Generally, printed and drawn signs made by local visitors are hung in the void. Some are tilted right to indicate the direction towards Mecca, or explain in text that worshippers should angle themselves twenty degrees. Another sign describes the genealogy of Emamzadeh Yahya. On either side of the void is a collage of four images that includes views of the entire complex and photographs of the tomb’s tiles on display. However, during holidays like Ashura, these hangings may be substituted with relevant banners and decorations.

The Emamzadeh Yahya is regarded as the most important Emamzadeh in Varamin county and has been the focus of renovation within the past few years alongside many other urban shrines. The courtyard is used commonly by locals as park space for picnics, and some visit the graves of family members who have been buried there. It is also used as a general event space. Varamin officials have made efforts to promote the site’s historical significance, which appeals to locals as well as tourists. In 2015, the Emamzadeh was a pilgrimage destination for the observance of Arbaeen.