Moorish Revival

Occasionally Twelve Mile Circle likes to feature lesser known architectural styles. For example Rock Cut, Pueblo Deco, Egyptian Rivival and Octagons all appeared in these pages. I came across another one I found both fascinating and rare that I wanted to share. I’d never heard of Moorish Revival before.

This design became modestly popular during the second half of the Nineteenth Century and the first half of the Twentieth Century. Europeans and North Americans looked nostalgically upon Middle Eastern themes and this reflected in their architecture too. Onion domes, horseshoe arches and ornate design elements came from the Moors, a medieval Islamic culture from North Africa and Spain. Architects found the style particularly suitable for theaters, synagogues and the temples of fraternal organizations. I selected a single example from each category.


Georgian National Opera Theater

Tbilisi opera house. Photo by Henri Bergius (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Georgians always loved opera and long flocked to their magnificent theater in Tbilisi (map). The opera house first opened in 1851 at the beginning of the Moorish Revival. However, it underwent several stressful episodes during its history. It burned twice. It also survived Russian and Soviet occupations. Then it nearly fell during Georgia’s 1991 civil war:

“One day a group of paramilitaries gunned down the front door, telling us they needed the opera for shelter,” he remembers. “After the gunmen left we had no front door and a wall riddled with bullets. When we opened again after the fighting, I wanted to cover that wall in glass and put up a big sign saying: ‘This is not how you treat culture’.”

The opera house underwent an extensive multi-year renovation recently. It finally reopened in January 2016.


Great Synagogue of Stockholm

Synagogue, Stockholm. Photo by nathalie_r; (CC BY 2.0)

I wondered why so many of the notable synagogues built in the 1800’s adopted Moorish Revival designs. The Museum of the Jewish People provided an explanation.

“The style of these synagogues, inspired from the oriental architecture, especially Moorish, was intended to evocate the glorious past of the Jewish people in the land of Israel and in medieval Spain, while the size and location of the synagogues in the city centers expressed the newly acquired legal status and social respectability of the Jewish community.”

The Great Synagogue of Stockholm (map) offered an excellent case study. The building held 900 people at a time when “the entire Jewish community of Stockholm had less than two thousands members.” Also, the year of its completion, 1870, coincided with the lifting of the last legal restriction placed on Sweden’s Jews.


Tripoli Shrine Temple

Milwaukee Tripoli Shrine Center. Photo by Nels Olsen; (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Masonic organizations — branches of the Freemasons — came in many different forms and affiliations. The Shriners offshoot began in the 1870’s in New York City. This happened during a height of fascination with Middle Eastern themes.

“Billy Florence had been on tour in France, and had been invited to a party given by an Arabian diplomat. The exotic style, flavors and music of the Arabian-themed party inspired him to suggest this as a theme for the new fraternity. Walter Fleming, a devoted fraternity brother, built on Fleming’s ideas and used his knowledge of fraternal ritual to transform the Arabian theme into the Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine (A.A.O.N.M.S.).”

They adopted Moorish trappings, most famously the red fezzes they wore on their heads. Also, their logo featured a scimitar and crescent. Their meeting places became Neo-Moorish monuments they called temples. The Tripoli Shrine Temple in Milwaukee, Wisconsin followed these principals upon its construction in 1928 (map).

It attempted to emulate the Taj Mahal. Oddly the Taj Mahal was Mughal not Moorish. Nonetheless, I guess they considered it “close enough” to lump it in with Neo-Moorish styling when adapted in the US.


Opa-locka

Opa Locka City Hall. Photo by Adrian Salgado; (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

If 12MC had to pick a place that went most completely overboard with Moorish Revival themes, I would respectfully bestow the title upon Opa-locka, Florida (map). Glenn Curtiss, its founder, had already been a successful aviation pioneer and entrepreneur. He then developed several towns in Florida during the latter part of his career.

“Curtiss’s interests were not restricted just to vehicles of transportation. In 1921, he essentially left the aviation business and moved to Florida to become a highly-successful land developer. With friends, he developed the Florida cities of Hialeah, Miami Springs, and Opa-Locka. Opa-Locka was intended to be his crowning achievement, a planned community resembling something from the Arabian Nights.”

Curtis built his Opa-locka dream world north of Miami. It even reflected his passion in street names such as Sinbad Avenue, Caliph Street, Ali Baba Avenue and Aladdin Street. Municipal buildings, shopping centers and residences alike adopted a Neo-Moorish style unrivaled anywhere outside of the Middle East. They all became thoroughly Americanized of course. Oddly the name of the town itself came from its earlier Native American inhabitants, from a Seminole phrase meaning “a big island covered with many trees and swamps.”

The city fell into a long, steady decline after an adjacent Naval Air Station closed in the 1950’s. NPR reported in June 2016 that the state took control of Opa-locka’s finances and targeted city officials for corruption investigations. Many of its residents lived in poverty in those Arabian Nights houses. What a shame.

Comments

3 responses to “Moorish Revival”

  1. Katy Avatar
    Katy

    “Curtis built his Opa-locka dream world north of Miami. It even reflected his passion in street names such as Sinbad Avenue, Caliph Street, Ali Baba Avenue and Aladdin Street. Municipal buildings, shopping centers and residences alike adopted a Neo-Moorish style unrivaled anywhere outside of the Middle East. They were all thoroughly Americanized of course.” A kind of architectural appropriation, really.

  2. Kieren Valente Avatar
    Kieren Valente

    Considering I have been long following, reading, deriving great pleasure from this blog (&allied interests,so to speak) I can’t believe I never could be bothered to comment so first things first: A Huge thank you from Croydon & Redondo. Kudos (be? be!) to you and much appreciation.
    To this specific entry I was wondering if countries that were once Moorish (well, before they even existed as we know them, namely Portugal, South of Italy, Spain – East of that I’m fairly sure it’s Turks & Arabs to the west it’s really a hotchpotch – that not a word? oh well.. potpourri then of Berber, Arabs, and their Mozarab and Mudejar issue) can qualify for Moorish revival. I speak as I find so back in my old country we did have a a XVIth church and a 1890s Insurance company headquarters which would qualify but what about, say, the Bussaco Palace, the Rossio Railway station (both further complicated by being also Manueline revival) or the Campo Pequeno former bullring and the Casa do Alentejo (both more purely Moorish as well as the early 20th century sephardi synagogue of Lisbon. Since I have been living in Croydon I found no pure landmarks in London but mixing in either Byzantium or Central Europe Baroque plus neo-Gothic there are sime interesting and very morish quasi-Moorish Revival gems around. I knew some of the buildings on your post (and have actually been to the Synagogue in Stockholm but was so pleasantly surprised & thrilled to find many complete unknowns to me.
    Sorry about the rambling and not using spellchecker it’s gone past 1 AM here. Keep on posting I’m sure I’ll keep on delighting in it. You even rekindled my interest in genealogy and brewing. Well, OK, in beer from a consumer/travelling-the-world-guy POT(aste).
    Hope I caused no offence. TT

    1. Twelve Mile Circle Avatar

      I’m humbled to learn that I’ve had such a longtime mystery reader. I can’t tell most of the time if readers are actually interested in some of my stranger tangents, so thank you for validating that at least one person enjoyed the genealogy and the brewing. I have a long list of potential topics so, no worries, I do plan to keep posting for a long time. Thank you for making yourself known.

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