The first glass factories were thus built by Muslim craftsmen in the Islamic Golden Age.
The combination of figurative and intricate geometric designs was a collaborative effort of Syrian Muslim craftsmen with Byzantine Christians.
So a class of Muslim craftsmen and merchants appeared in the history of Anatolia.
He worked as a leather dealer in Kayseri and began organizing Muslim craftsmen in the cities.
Decorative stucco fragments from the only surviving synagogue in Cordoba were carved by Muslim craftsmen.
William's account provided an extensive description of the city's walls, markets and temples, and the separate quarters for Muslim and Chinese craftsmen among a surprisingly cosmopolitan population.
Probably made by Muslim craftsmen, some of the iconography is Christian, suggesting they may have been made for export or for Christian clients.
Muslim craftsmen also produce the crowns of Hindu temple deities.
Christian buildings such as the Cappella Palatina in Palermo, Sicily, incorporated Islamic elements, probably usually created by local Muslim craftsmen working in their own traditions.
Ikats are 19th-century wall hangings and caftans once produced by Jewish and Muslim craftsmen in the ancient silk route cities of Bukhara and Samarkand.