Barzan Tower | |
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برج برزان Umm Salal Mohammed Fort Towers | |
Umm Salal Mohammed, Umm Salal, ![]() | |
![]() Barzan Tower (with staircases). | |
Coordinates | 25°25′05″N 51°24′47″E / 25.418024°N 51.413094°E |
Type | Historical Watchtowers |
Height | 16 m (52 ft) |
Site information | |
Owner | ![]() |
Controlled by | Late 19th century–present: ![]() |
Site history | |
Built | Late 19th century |
In use | 1910–2003: Watchtowers 2003–present: Museum |
Barzan Towers (Arabic: برج برزان "High Place"), also known as the Umm Salal Mohammed Fort Towers, are watchtowers that were built in the late 19th century and renovated in 1910 by Sheikh Mohammed bin Jassim Al Thani.[1][2] They are located at the southern side of the defensive system established at the end of the 19th century and start of the 20th century to protect the 'rawdat', a valley where precious rainwater is collected when it flows down from higher ground. In Arabic "barzan" means "high place".[1][2]
The buildings were restored in 2003. The towers measure 16 metres (52.49 ft) high.[2] The fort links to two other fortified buildings towards the west and another tower towards the north. Barzan Towers may have been built near the sea to keep an observant eye on pearl divers, as a look-out for approaching ships, and as an observatory for keeping track of the moon.[2][3] The Barzan Towers have been rebuilt with features such as air-conditioners.[1]
Originally built with coral rock and limestone cementing the structures featured traditional Qatari design and building methods including "marazim" wooden to drain rainwater during storms away from the building walls, a "majilis" room between the towers to receive guests, and four-layer roofs with "danchal" wood pole construction, 'basgijl,' woven bamboo strips, mangrove mesh and a layer of compressed mud.
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