Name

Saladin, Henri

Birth and Death
Bolbec (Seine-Maritime) 22.11.1851 – 16.12.1923 Paris
Author and Date of Entry
Sarah Keller 2024; Francine Giese 2024
Locations With Objects
Biographical Data

Shortly after graduating as an architect from the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, Henri Saladin was dispatched by the French Ministry of Public Education to Tunisia, charged with the task of making a survey of antiquities. Since then, Henri Saladin has been recognized as an authority on the ancient and Islamic art of North Africa, which he came to promote untiringly, whilst encouraging the study and restoration of Tunisian monuments. Saladin popularized Islamic architecture by publishing several books, among them the Manuel d’Art Musulman, 1907, written together with Gaston Migeon, and Tunis et Kairouan, 1908… More

Literature

Bacha. M. (2009). „Henri Saladin (1851-1923). Un architecte «Beaux-Arts» promoteur de l’art islamique tunisien“, in: Nabila Oulebsir, Mercedes Volait (Hrsg.) L’Orientalisme architectural entre imaginaires et savoirs, Paris: Picard, 2009, 215-230. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.4000/books.inha.4916.

Henri Saladin, Les Monuments historiques de la Tunisie. 2e* *partie. Les monuments arabes. 1. La mosquée de Sidi Okba de Kairouan, Paris: Leroux, 1899.

Henri Saladin, Notes sur des monuments de la calaâ des Beni-Hammâd, commune mixte des Maadid, province de Constantine (Algérie)… More

Works by this Artist

2 objects
List View
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