Category
page 1Islamic metal art
Peacock Throne
seat of the Mughal emperors of India
Pisa Griffin
medieval Islamic bronze sculpture
sarpech
thumb|Shah Abbas I of [[Safavid Persia]]
thumb|Sarpech (Turban ornament) with Safed chalwan back
The sarpech (/, from Persian), is a turban ornament that was worn by significant Hindu, Sikh and Muslim princes. Sar means "head" or "front" and pech means "screw", giving the word "sarpech" the literal meaning "that which is screwed onto the front (of the turban)". The sarpech was also worn in Persia, where it was known as jikka or jiqa (), meaning "crest" or "tuft", and in Turkey, where it was known as the sorguch, a name considered a corrupt form of the Persian word .
Kahramana
thumb | right | alt=Kahramana Square, Baghdad. | Kahramana Square, Baghdad.
Kahramana is a fountain located in Baghdad's al-Sa'doun Street depicting a scene from the legend of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves; a story taken from One Thousand and One Nights in which the slave girl Marjana outwitted the thieves by tricking them into hiding inside jars over which she poured hot oil. The statue was officially opened in 1971 and was the work of the Iraqi sculptor, Mohammed Ghani Hikmat. It has become one of Baghdad's most iconic public artworks. In the aftermath of the US-led invasion of 2003, the wo