From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of mosques in the Arab League.

Name Images Country City Year G Remarks
Djamaa el Kebir   Algeria Algiers 1097 U
Ketchaoua Mosque
  Algeria Algiers 1612 U
El Jedid Mosque
  Algeria Algiers 1880s U
Great Mosque of Tlemcen   Algeria Tlemcen 1082 U
Al Fateh Mosque   Bahrain Juffair 1990s U
Khamis Mosque   Bahrain Khamis ? U Believed to be the first mosque in Bahrain.
Mosque of Amr ibn al-As
  Egypt Cairo 642 A
Abu Haggag Mosque
  Egypt Luxor 11th Century A
El-Tabia Mosque
  Egypt Aswan A
Mosque of Muhammad Ali
  Egypt Cairo Citadel 1848 T Most visible site in the city.
Mosque-Madrassa of Sultan Hassan
  Egypt Cairo 1356 T
Mosque of Al-Hakim   Egypt Cairo 985 A
Al-Azhar Mosque
  Egypt Cairo 969 A National mosque
Blue Mosque
  Egypt Cairo 1347 A
Al Hussein Mosque
  Egypt Cairo 1154 T
Mosque of Ibn Tulun
  Egypt Cairo 876-879 U
Abu Haggag Mosque
  Egypt Luxor 11th Century A
El-Mursi Abul Abbas Mosque
  Egypt Alexandria ? U
Al Qa'ed Ibrahim Mosque
  Egypt Alexandria ? U
Imam Husayn Mosque
  Iraq Karbala 680 U National mosque
Al Abbas Mosque
  Iraq Karbala 680 U National mosque
Imam Ali Mosque
  Iraq Najaf ? U Shrine of Ali
Al Kadhimiya Mosque
  Iraq Kadhimayn ? U Shrine of Twelver Shi'ah 7th and 9th Imam.
Al-Askari Mosque
  Iraq Samarra ? U Mosque with golden dome and shrine of Twelver Shi'ah 10th and 11th Imam.
Great Mosque of Samarra
  Iraq Samarra 852 U
King Abdullah I Mosque
  Jordan Amman 1989 U [1]
King Hussein Mosque   Jordan Amman 2006 U Praying hall 5,500 worshipers, outdoor praying area 2,500 worshippers, inaugurated on April 11, 2006, Islamic architectural style prevalent in Bilad Sham, Umayyad-style ornamentation carved in Jordanian stone. [2]
Chinguetti Mosque
  Mauritania Chinguetti ? U
Grand Mosque   Kuwait Kuwait City 1979–1986 U
Sayyida Khawla Mosque   Lebanon Baalbek ? U
Khatem Al-Anbiyaa Mosque   Lebanon Beirut ? U
Mohammad Al-Amin Mosque
  Lebanon Beirut 2005 U
Fakhredine Mosque
  Lebanon Deir el Qamar 1493 U
Great Mosque of Tripoli
  Lebanon Tripoli ? U
Central Mosque of Nouakchott
  Mauritania Nouakchott ? U
Hassan II Mosque   Morocco Casablanca 1993 U Masjid al Malik Hassan II
Koutoubia Mosque
  Morocco Marrakech 1158 U
Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque   Oman Muscat 2001 A
Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound / Haram Ash-Sharif
  Israel Jerusalem (old city) Unknown, considered the second oldest mosque, [3] U Al-Masjid al-Aqṣá, [4] the former Qiblah, [5] site of the significant event of Al-Isra' wal-Mi'raj, third holiest site in Islam. The term properly refers to the whole Temple Mount compound (seen as a single mosque). [note 1]
Mosque of Omar
  Israel Jerusalem 1193 U
Sultan Ibrahim Ibn Adham Mosque   State of Palestine Beit Hanina ? U
Mosque of Omar
  State of Palestine Bethlehem 1860 U The mosque was built on the spot where the Rashidun Caliph Umar prayed when he entered Bethlehem and is the oldest mosque in that city.
Sayed al-Hashim Mosque   Gaza Strip Gaza 1850 U The grandfather of Muhammad is said to be buried under the dome. Originally mosque built in the 12th century. Present day mosque built in 1850.
Great Mosque of Gaza   Gaza Strip Gaza 1344 U The Great Mosque is the largest and one of the oldest mosques in the Gaza Strip and throughout its history it was Philistine temple, a Byzantine church, an Arab mosque, a Crusader cathedral and was finally transformed back to a mosque by the Mamluks.
Ibrahimi Mosque   State of Palestine Hebron ? U
Al-Khadra Mosque
  State of Palestine Nablus 1288-90 U
King Saud Mosque   Saudi Arabia Jeddah 1987 SA
Masjid al-Haram   Saudi Arabia Mecca 638, 1571 U National mosque
Al-Masjid al-Nabawi
  Saudi Arabia Medina 1817 SA
Masjid al-Quba   Saudi Arabia Medina 1986 (rebuilt) SA
Arba Rucun Mosque
  Somalia Mogadishu ? U
Fakr ad-Din Mosque
  Somalia Mogadishu 1269 U Oldest mosque in Mogadishu. Built by the Sultanate of Mogadishu's first Sultan, Fakr ad-Din.
Mosque of Islamic Solidarity
  Somalia Mogadishu 1987 U National mosque. Largest masjid in the Horn of Africa.
Hajja Soad mosque
  Sudan Khartoum ? U
Great Mosque of Aleppo
  Syria Aleppo 715 U Shrine of Zechariah, father of John the Baptist
Sayyidah Zaynab Mosque
  Syria Damascus 682 U Shrine of Zaynab bint Ali
Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque
  Syria Damascus ? U Shrine of Fatimah, the youngest daughter of Husayn ibn Ali
Sulaymaniyya Takiyya
  Syria Damascus ? U
Nabi Habeel Mosque
  Syria Damascus ? U Tomb of Abel, son of Prophet Adam
Umayyad Mosque
  Syria Damascus 715 U National mosque
Sinan Pasha Mosque   Syria Damascus 1590 U
Aqsab Mosque   Syria Damascus 1234 U
Darwish Pasha Mosque   Syria Damascus 1574 U
Al-Fadael Mosque   Syria Homs 1062 U
Al-Nouri Mosque   Syria Homs 1129 U
Mosquée Ennasr
  Tunisia Aryanah ? U
Bassi Mosque
  Tunisia Djerba ? U
Mosque of Uqba
  Tunisia Kairouan 670 U also known as the Great Mosque of Kairouan
Great Mosque of Mahdia
  Tunisia Mahdia ? U
Great Mosque of Sousse
  Tunisia Sousse ? U
Great Mosque Halfaouine
  Tunisia Tunis ? U
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque
  United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi City 2000 A National mosque
Grand Mosque of Dubai
  United Arab Emirates Dubai City 1998 A
Mudhaffar Mosque   Yemen Ta'izz A
Al-Hadi Mosque
  Yemen Sa'dah A
Al Khair Mosque, Sana'a   Yemen Sana'a A
Saleh Mosque   Yemen Sana'a 2008 A
Group
SA Islamist ( Salafism/Wahhabism)
TJ Tablighi Jamaat
A Arab group
T Turkish group
U Unknown group (or undetermineted)

See also

List of mosques in the United Arab Emirates

Notes

  1. ^ According to historian Oleg Grabar, "It is only at a relatively late date that the Muslim holy space in Jerusalem came to be referred to as al-haram al-sharif (literally, the Noble Sacred Precinct or Restricted Enclosure, often translated as the Noble Sanctuary and usually simply referred to as the Haram). While the exact early history of this term is unclear, we know that it only became common in Ottoman times, when administrative order was established over all matters pertaining to the organization of the Muslim faith and the supervision of the holy places, for which the Ottomans took financial and architectural responsibility. Before the Ottomans, the space was usually called al-masjid al-aqsa (the Farthest Mosque), a term now reserved to the covered congregational space on the Haram, or masjid bayt al-maqdis (Mosque of the Holy City) or, even, like Mecca's sanctuary, al-masjid al-ḥarâm," [6]

References

  1. ^ "King Abdullah I Mosque". Archived from the original on 2016-12-02. Retrieved 2009-09-29.
  2. ^ King Hussein Ben Talal Mosque Archived 2012-02-22 at the Wayback Machine, The King Hussein Ben Talal Mosque
  3. ^ National Geographic Society (U.S.); de Blij, H.J.; Downs, R.; John Wiley & Sons (2007). Wiley/National Geographic College Atlas of the World. Wiley. p. 49. ISBN  978-0-471-74117-6. Retrieved 2022-06-15. Al 'Aqsa is the second oldest mosque in Islam after the Kaaba in Mecca and is third in holiness after the mosques in Mecca and Medina. It holds up to 400,000 worshippers at one time.
  4. ^ Quran 17:1-7 Quran  17:1–7
  5. ^ "The Spiritual Significance of Jerusalem: The Islamic Vision. The Islamic Quarterly. 4 (1998): pp.233–242
  6. ^ Grabar 2000, p. 203.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of mosques in the Arab League.

Name Images Country City Year G Remarks
Djamaa el Kebir   Algeria Algiers 1097 U
Ketchaoua Mosque
  Algeria Algiers 1612 U
El Jedid Mosque
  Algeria Algiers 1880s U
Great Mosque of Tlemcen   Algeria Tlemcen 1082 U
Al Fateh Mosque   Bahrain Juffair 1990s U
Khamis Mosque   Bahrain Khamis ? U Believed to be the first mosque in Bahrain.
Mosque of Amr ibn al-As
  Egypt Cairo 642 A
Abu Haggag Mosque
  Egypt Luxor 11th Century A
El-Tabia Mosque
  Egypt Aswan A
Mosque of Muhammad Ali
  Egypt Cairo Citadel 1848 T Most visible site in the city.
Mosque-Madrassa of Sultan Hassan
  Egypt Cairo 1356 T
Mosque of Al-Hakim   Egypt Cairo 985 A
Al-Azhar Mosque
  Egypt Cairo 969 A National mosque
Blue Mosque
  Egypt Cairo 1347 A
Al Hussein Mosque
  Egypt Cairo 1154 T
Mosque of Ibn Tulun
  Egypt Cairo 876-879 U
Abu Haggag Mosque
  Egypt Luxor 11th Century A
El-Mursi Abul Abbas Mosque
  Egypt Alexandria ? U
Al Qa'ed Ibrahim Mosque
  Egypt Alexandria ? U
Imam Husayn Mosque
  Iraq Karbala 680 U National mosque
Al Abbas Mosque
  Iraq Karbala 680 U National mosque
Imam Ali Mosque
  Iraq Najaf ? U Shrine of Ali
Al Kadhimiya Mosque
  Iraq Kadhimayn ? U Shrine of Twelver Shi'ah 7th and 9th Imam.
Al-Askari Mosque
  Iraq Samarra ? U Mosque with golden dome and shrine of Twelver Shi'ah 10th and 11th Imam.
Great Mosque of Samarra
  Iraq Samarra 852 U
King Abdullah I Mosque
  Jordan Amman 1989 U [1]
King Hussein Mosque   Jordan Amman 2006 U Praying hall 5,500 worshipers, outdoor praying area 2,500 worshippers, inaugurated on April 11, 2006, Islamic architectural style prevalent in Bilad Sham, Umayyad-style ornamentation carved in Jordanian stone. [2]
Chinguetti Mosque
  Mauritania Chinguetti ? U
Grand Mosque   Kuwait Kuwait City 1979–1986 U
Sayyida Khawla Mosque   Lebanon Baalbek ? U
Khatem Al-Anbiyaa Mosque   Lebanon Beirut ? U
Mohammad Al-Amin Mosque
  Lebanon Beirut 2005 U
Fakhredine Mosque
  Lebanon Deir el Qamar 1493 U
Great Mosque of Tripoli
  Lebanon Tripoli ? U
Central Mosque of Nouakchott
  Mauritania Nouakchott ? U
Hassan II Mosque   Morocco Casablanca 1993 U Masjid al Malik Hassan II
Koutoubia Mosque
  Morocco Marrakech 1158 U
Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque   Oman Muscat 2001 A
Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound / Haram Ash-Sharif
  Israel Jerusalem (old city) Unknown, considered the second oldest mosque, [3] U Al-Masjid al-Aqṣá, [4] the former Qiblah, [5] site of the significant event of Al-Isra' wal-Mi'raj, third holiest site in Islam. The term properly refers to the whole Temple Mount compound (seen as a single mosque). [note 1]
Mosque of Omar
  Israel Jerusalem 1193 U
Sultan Ibrahim Ibn Adham Mosque   State of Palestine Beit Hanina ? U
Mosque of Omar
  State of Palestine Bethlehem 1860 U The mosque was built on the spot where the Rashidun Caliph Umar prayed when he entered Bethlehem and is the oldest mosque in that city.
Sayed al-Hashim Mosque   Gaza Strip Gaza 1850 U The grandfather of Muhammad is said to be buried under the dome. Originally mosque built in the 12th century. Present day mosque built in 1850.
Great Mosque of Gaza   Gaza Strip Gaza 1344 U The Great Mosque is the largest and one of the oldest mosques in the Gaza Strip and throughout its history it was Philistine temple, a Byzantine church, an Arab mosque, a Crusader cathedral and was finally transformed back to a mosque by the Mamluks.
Ibrahimi Mosque   State of Palestine Hebron ? U
Al-Khadra Mosque
  State of Palestine Nablus 1288-90 U
King Saud Mosque   Saudi Arabia Jeddah 1987 SA
Masjid al-Haram   Saudi Arabia Mecca 638, 1571 U National mosque
Al-Masjid al-Nabawi
  Saudi Arabia Medina 1817 SA
Masjid al-Quba   Saudi Arabia Medina 1986 (rebuilt) SA
Arba Rucun Mosque
  Somalia Mogadishu ? U
Fakr ad-Din Mosque
  Somalia Mogadishu 1269 U Oldest mosque in Mogadishu. Built by the Sultanate of Mogadishu's first Sultan, Fakr ad-Din.
Mosque of Islamic Solidarity
  Somalia Mogadishu 1987 U National mosque. Largest masjid in the Horn of Africa.
Hajja Soad mosque
  Sudan Khartoum ? U
Great Mosque of Aleppo
  Syria Aleppo 715 U Shrine of Zechariah, father of John the Baptist
Sayyidah Zaynab Mosque
  Syria Damascus 682 U Shrine of Zaynab bint Ali
Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque
  Syria Damascus ? U Shrine of Fatimah, the youngest daughter of Husayn ibn Ali
Sulaymaniyya Takiyya
  Syria Damascus ? U
Nabi Habeel Mosque
  Syria Damascus ? U Tomb of Abel, son of Prophet Adam
Umayyad Mosque
  Syria Damascus 715 U National mosque
Sinan Pasha Mosque   Syria Damascus 1590 U
Aqsab Mosque   Syria Damascus 1234 U
Darwish Pasha Mosque   Syria Damascus 1574 U
Al-Fadael Mosque   Syria Homs 1062 U
Al-Nouri Mosque   Syria Homs 1129 U
Mosquée Ennasr
  Tunisia Aryanah ? U
Bassi Mosque
  Tunisia Djerba ? U
Mosque of Uqba
  Tunisia Kairouan 670 U also known as the Great Mosque of Kairouan
Great Mosque of Mahdia
  Tunisia Mahdia ? U
Great Mosque of Sousse
  Tunisia Sousse ? U
Great Mosque Halfaouine
  Tunisia Tunis ? U
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque
  United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi City 2000 A National mosque
Grand Mosque of Dubai
  United Arab Emirates Dubai City 1998 A
Mudhaffar Mosque   Yemen Ta'izz A
Al-Hadi Mosque
  Yemen Sa'dah A
Al Khair Mosque, Sana'a   Yemen Sana'a A
Saleh Mosque   Yemen Sana'a 2008 A
Group
SA Islamist ( Salafism/Wahhabism)
TJ Tablighi Jamaat
A Arab group
T Turkish group
U Unknown group (or undetermineted)

See also

List of mosques in the United Arab Emirates

Notes

  1. ^ According to historian Oleg Grabar, "It is only at a relatively late date that the Muslim holy space in Jerusalem came to be referred to as al-haram al-sharif (literally, the Noble Sacred Precinct or Restricted Enclosure, often translated as the Noble Sanctuary and usually simply referred to as the Haram). While the exact early history of this term is unclear, we know that it only became common in Ottoman times, when administrative order was established over all matters pertaining to the organization of the Muslim faith and the supervision of the holy places, for which the Ottomans took financial and architectural responsibility. Before the Ottomans, the space was usually called al-masjid al-aqsa (the Farthest Mosque), a term now reserved to the covered congregational space on the Haram, or masjid bayt al-maqdis (Mosque of the Holy City) or, even, like Mecca's sanctuary, al-masjid al-ḥarâm," [6]

References

  1. ^ "King Abdullah I Mosque". Archived from the original on 2016-12-02. Retrieved 2009-09-29.
  2. ^ King Hussein Ben Talal Mosque Archived 2012-02-22 at the Wayback Machine, The King Hussein Ben Talal Mosque
  3. ^ National Geographic Society (U.S.); de Blij, H.J.; Downs, R.; John Wiley & Sons (2007). Wiley/National Geographic College Atlas of the World. Wiley. p. 49. ISBN  978-0-471-74117-6. Retrieved 2022-06-15. Al 'Aqsa is the second oldest mosque in Islam after the Kaaba in Mecca and is third in holiness after the mosques in Mecca and Medina. It holds up to 400,000 worshippers at one time.
  4. ^ Quran 17:1-7 Quran  17:1–7
  5. ^ "The Spiritual Significance of Jerusalem: The Islamic Vision. The Islamic Quarterly. 4 (1998): pp.233–242
  6. ^ Grabar 2000, p. 203.

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook