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Caravansaries

Caravansaries, also caravanserais, are roadside inns that provided lodging, security, and supplies for travelers and their caravans along long-distance trade routes in the Islamic world and beyond. They were common on the Silk Road, in the Middle East, North Africa, Anatolia, and parts of Central Asia and Iberia, spanning from late antiquity into the medieval and early modern eras.

Typical caravansaries consisted of a large enclosed courtyard surrounded by a covered arcade and a ring of

Caravansaries were often funded as waqf or built by rulers, mosques, or wealthy merchants. They were typically

With the rise of sea routes, railways, and modern hotels in the 18th to 20th centuries, traditional

guest
rooms
along
the
perimeter.
A
fortified
gateway
led
into
a
stable
area
for
pack
animals,
a
cistern
or
well
for
water,
kitchens,
and
storerooms;
many
included
a
prayer
hall
or
mosque
and
spaces
for
merchants
to
rest
and
trade.
The
design
emphasized
privacy
and
security,
shielding
the
occupants
from
the
street
and
the
animals
from
the
living
quarters
while
enabling
efficient
handling
of
goods
and
animals.
spaced
at
intervals
along
caravan
routes
to
provide
a
day’s
journey
between
stops,
roughly
20
to
40
miles,
and
served
as
hubs
for
commerce,
information,
and
hospitality.
caravanserais
declined
in
use.
Many
were
abandoned,
repurposed
as
inns
or
warehouses,
or
restored
as
museums
and
hotels.
Today
they
are
studied
as
examples
of
vernacular
architecture
and
historical
commercial
networks,
valued
for
their
urban
form,
courtyard
layouts,
and
regional
variation.