Scents of Space: Early Islamic Pilgrimage, Perfume, and Paradise
Publication date
2020
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Abstract
Within some of the earliest textual and material evidence for the history of Islam, pilgrimage appears as an important ritual of devotion, identity, and community. Yet modern scholarship has given little attention to early Muslims’ sensory experiences of pilgrimage sites and what they physically encountered while there. This article examines the importance of smell within Islamic pilgrimage practices of the first/seventh and second/eighth centuries CE. Drawing upon literary and material evidence, I reconstruct several olfactory components of pilgrimage in this period, including intensive usage of perfume and incense at pilgrimage destinations such as the Kaʿba and the Dome of the Rock, as well as pilgrims’ collection and ingestion of scented materials from these locations. I then argue that the prominence of pleasing aromas at these sacred spaces is connecting to early Islamic ideas about the proximity of paradise to these pilgrimage sites.
Keywords
Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem, Mecca, smell, perfume, incense, paradise, pilgrimage, ḥaǧǧ
Citation
Bursi, A C 2020, 'Scents of Space : Early Islamic Pilgrimage, Perfume, and Paradise', Arabica, vol. 67, no. 2-3, pp. 200-234. https://doi.org/10.1163/15700585-12341557