2012
DOI: 10.1007/s00004-012-0108-6
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The Decagonal Tomb Tower at Maragha and Its Architectural Context: Lines of Mathematical Thought

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Cited by 16 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
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“…Five-fold symmetry consists of a "large regular decagon with an interstitial pentagonal star such that the length of the side of the decagon equals the edge length of the interstitial star". The extant and most well-known examples of patterns generated by aperiodic symmetry are the Gonbade Qabud tower in Maragha during the twelfth century and the Darb-i Imam shrine in Isfahan, Iran during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries [51,52]. Other studies found some evidence for the presence of quasiperiodic IGPs in western Islamic art, including details [53], octagonal and decagonal types [54][55][56], muqarnas dome [57,58], and the multigrid generation method [59,60].…”
Section: Aesthetic-based Criteriamentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Five-fold symmetry consists of a "large regular decagon with an interstitial pentagonal star such that the length of the side of the decagon equals the edge length of the interstitial star". The extant and most well-known examples of patterns generated by aperiodic symmetry are the Gonbade Qabud tower in Maragha during the twelfth century and the Darb-i Imam shrine in Isfahan, Iran during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries [51,52]. Other studies found some evidence for the presence of quasiperiodic IGPs in western Islamic art, including details [53], octagonal and decagonal types [54][55][56], muqarnas dome [57,58], and the multigrid generation method [59,60].…”
Section: Aesthetic-based Criteriamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholars like Cromwell [66] and Chorbachi [10] believe Islamic artists have had the tools to construct quasiperiodic designs without the theoretical framework to appreciate the possibility or significance of doing so. However, Bier [52] believes that folio 180a, a design from Al-Buzjani [67], may have been used as the generative form of a planar pattern of overlapping decagons related to the aperiodic decagonal/pentagonal pattern on the Gonbad-e Qabud. The aperiodic tiling method was introduced to the modern world much later by Roger Penrose [68], who discovered quasicrystal tiling systems in the 1970s using non-crystallographic symmetry.…”
Section: Aesthetic-based Criteriamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pentagonal symmetry and the golden section based 2D patterns in particular are studied in articles by Lu and Steinhardt (2007), Makovicky (1992), Fleurent (1992), Chorbachi and Loeb (1992) and Sarhangi (2012). Multilayered patterns are studied by Bier (2012). The pattern based on a rectangular triangle that has its longest side equal to the sum of its shortest side and its height is studied by Özdural (1995, 2000, 2015).…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently there has been a renewed interest on that type of Persian Islamic star patterns from different points of view especially for its relationships with cuasi-crystals. (Rull Pérez,1987), (Bonner, 2003), (Lu and Steinhardt, 2007a y b), (Saltzman, 2008), (Cromwell, 2008), (Prange, 2009), (Cromwell and Beltrami, 2011), (Hogendisjk, 2012) and (Bier, C. (2012). Aside from ornamental Islamic star pattern we can regard in historic Persian architecture there are very interesting documents known as Topkapi Scrolls (Necipoglu, 1995) dated to the XVI century (Topkapi Palace, Istanbul, Turkey).…”
Section: Aperiodic Tilings and Other Tilingsmentioning
confidence: 99%