Water and Everyday Life
‘An attendant hired to distribute water in cups sat behind the grille and handed the water out.’
The obligation to provide fresh water to the urban population led to the development of a distinctive public monument: the water fountain, or sabil. Sabils – of which a number were built by the Mamluks (r. 648–92 / 1250–1517) in Cairo and Jerusalem – consisted of an underground cistern and a chamber with window grilles facing onto the street at ground level. An attendant hired to distribute water in cups sat behind the grille and handed the water out to passers-by. The sabil-kuttab had a similar fountain arrangement, with the addition of a covered first-floor gallery which served as a children’s elementary school (kuttab).
Sabil (Water Dispensary) and Kuttab (Qur'anic School) of 'Abd al-Rahman Katkhuda

Hegira 1157 / AD 1744
Ottoman
Cairo, Egypt
The form of the Sabil-kuttab of Abd al-Rahman Katkhuda reflects its dual function as a public sabil at street level and a school or kuttab in the porch on the first and second floors.