Sabil and Kutab of Sultan Qaitbey

Sabil and Kutab of Sultan Qaitbey The Sabil-Kuttab of Sultan Qaytbay is a Mamluk-era charitable foundation and building in Cairo, Egypt. It was built in 1479 on the order of Sultan al-Ashraf Qaytbay and is located on Saliba Street in the historic districts of Cairo. The building is composed of a sabil (a water distribution kiosk) on the ground floor and a kuttab (primary school teaching the Qur’an) on the upper floors. Below the structure, underground, is a cistern from which water was drawn for the sabil. The structure was the first free-standing sabil-kuttab in Cairo; a type of building that would later become quite common during the Ottoman period. The first of its kind, this 500-year-old building was one of Old Cairo’s most famous Qur’anic schools. The Sabil-Kuttab of Sultan Qaitbay is a Mamluk-era charitable foundation established in 1479 on Saliba Street in Old Cairo. Still standing to this day, it was an early example of Cairo’s urban charity. It was composed of a sabil, a water distribution kiosk, on the ground floor and a kuttab, Quranic school, on the upper floors. At its completion, the 500-year-old structure became the first free-standing sabil-kuttab in Egypt; a type of structure that would later become common during the Ottoman period. Previously, they were only ever seen in the corner of a mosque or a madrasa. Arriving at the building, a humbling entrance portal features an example of the rich surface decorations favoured by Sultan Qaitbay, like the red, black and white ablaqs. It’s embedded within an exterior marked by a large, square decorative panel that features stone-carvings divided into nine sections and arranged in three rows consisting of vegetal and geometric designs. Inside the sabil chamber, a perforated window allowed water to be handed out to the public and sufficient ventilation to in turn air-cool the water which flowed over a marble salsabil underneath a painted wooden ceiling. Underground, a cistern was used to draw water.
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