aniconic

Aniconism, in religion, opposition to the use of icons or visual images to depict living creatures or religious figures. Such opposition is particularly relevant to the Jewish, Islāmic, and Byzantine artistic traditions. The Biblical Second Commandment, part of the First Commandment to Roman Catholics and Lutherans:

Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness [of any thing]

that [is] in heaven above, or that [is] in the earth beneath, or that [is] in the water under the earth

Figural representations were absolutely prohibited in the early period of Islām and under the Berber dynasties of Africa and the Mamlūks of Egypt and Syria, though under the ʿAbbāsids and most of the Shīʿite and Turkish dynasties, it was excluded only from public buildings. In the Byzantine Empire, during the Iconoclastic Controversy (725–843), a ban was imposed on the representations of saintly or divine personages

Iconoclastic Controversy  Byzantine Empire in the 8th and 9th centuries  – Encyclopædia Britannica

Florence and Baghdad: Renaissance Art and Arab Science – Hans Belting 2011

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