Jump to content

Great Mosque of Kairouan

From Wikipedia
Great Mosque of Kairouan
mosque
Part ofMedina of Kairouan Edit
Get usestructure of worship Edit
Religion anaa worldviewIslam Edit
CountryTunisia Edit
Edey de administrative territorial entity insydKairouan Edit
Coordinate location35°40′53″N 10°6′14″E Edit
Heritage designationlisted monument of Tunisia, part of UNESCO World Heritage Site Edit
Map
Interior view of de hypostyle prayer hall insyd de Mosque of Uqba (Great Mosque of Kairouan)

De Great Mosque of Kairouan (Arabic: جامع القيروان الأكبر), dem sanso know am as de Mosque of Uqba (جامع عقبة بن نافع), be a mosque wey dey situate insyd de UNESCO World Heritage town of Kairouan, Tunisia wey ebe one of de largest Islamic monuments insyd North Africa.[1]

De Arab general Uqba ibn Nafi establish am insyd de year 50 AH (670AD/CE) for de founding of de city of Kairouan, de mosque dey occupy an area of over 9,000 square metres (97,000 sq ft). Ebe one of de oldest places of worship insyd de Islamic world, wey ebe a model give all later mosques insyd de Maghreb.[2] Ein perimeter, of about 405 metres (1,329 ft), dey contain a hypostyle prayer hall, a marble-paved courtyard den a square minaret. For addition to ein spiritual prestige,[3] de Mosque of Uqba be one of de masterpieces of Islamic architecture,[4][5][6] notable among oda things for de first Islamic use of de horseshoe arch.

Extensive works under de Aghlabids two centuries later (9th Cent.AD/CE) give de mosque ein present aspect.[7] De fame of de Mosque of Uqba den of de oda holy sites for Kairouan help de city make e develop den expand. De university, dey consist of scholars wey teach insyd de mosque, na ebe a centre of education both insyd Islamic thought den insyd de secular sciences.[8] Dem fi compare ein role for de time to dat of de University of Paris insyd de Middle Ages.[9] Plus de decline of de city from de mid-11th century, de centre of intellectual thought move go de University of Ez-Zitouna insyd Tunis.[10]

Location den general aspect

[edit | edit source]
Map of Kairouan (1916) wey dey show de location of ein Great Mosque insyd de northeast corner of de medina
De outsyd get chaw buttresses. Hie be de northwest corner.
View of de southern façade
Dusk panorama of de mosque

E locate insyd de north-east of de medina of Kairouan, de mosque be insyd de intramural district of Houmat al-Jami (literally "area of de Great Mosque").[11] Dis location correspond originally to de heart of de urban fabric of de city Uqba ibn Nafi found. However given de natural lay of de land dem cross by chaw tributaries of de wadis, de urban development of de city spread southwards. Human factors wey dey include Hilalian ein invasions insyd 449 AH (1057 AD) lead to de decline of de city wey e halt development. For all dese reasons, na de mosque wich once occupy de center of de medina wen dem first build am insyd 670 be now for de easternmost quarter wey dey abut de city walls.

The building be a vast slightly irregular quadrilateral wey dey cover sam 9,000 m2. E be longer (127.60 metres) for de east syd dan de west (125.20 metres), den shorter for de north syd (72.70 metres) dan de south (78 metres). De main minaret be centered for de north.

From de outsyd, de Great Mosque of Kairouan be a fortress-like building plus ein 1.90 metres thick massive ocher walls, a composite of well-worked stones plus intervening courses of rubble stone den baked bricks.[12] De corner towers dey measure 4.25 metres for each syd be buttressed plus solid projecting supports. Structurally dem give de soft grounds subject to compaction, de buttressed towers add stability to de entire mosque.[13] Despite de austere façades, de rhythmic patterns of buttresses den towering porches, sam dem surmount by cupolas, give de sanctuary a sense of striking sober grandeur.[14]

Architecture den decoration

[edit | edit source]
Annotated diagram of the mosque, seen from several angles.
Overview of de building (centre), southern façade to de outsyd (left) wey dem fi see de Minaret de courtyard (right)
Panoramic view of de Great Mosque of Kairouan, from de right to de left, de prayer hall (plus domes), de courtyard den de minaret

Exterior

[edit | edit source]

Enclosure

[edit | edit source]

Courtyard

[edit | edit source]
Panorama of de inner courtyard of de Great Mosque of Kairouan
De courtyard dem see from ein southwest angle

Details of de courtyard

[edit | edit source]

Minaret

[edit | edit source]
A square stone tower rises high above a wall.
De world ein oldest surviving minaret, 8th–9th centuries.

Interior

[edit | edit source]

Prayer hall

[edit | edit source]
Interior view of de prayer hall


Columns den ceiling
[edit | edit source]
Forest of columns insyd de prayer hall
Ancient Corinthian capitals
Partial view of de ceiling of de prayer hall
Mihrab den minbar
[edit | edit source]
Close view of de mihrab, wey ein current state dey date from de ninth century
Upper part of de mihrab
View of de minbar; dis pulpit, de oldest for existence, still dey insyd ein place of origin (insyd de prayer hall). Dem dey protect am by a glass pane
Maqsura
[edit | edit source]
View of de maqsura dem decorate plus a frieze wey dey include a kufic character calligraphic inscription

Role insyd Muslim civilisation

[edit | edit source]

For de time of ein greatest splendor, between de ninth den eleventh centuries AD, na Kairouan be one of de greatest centres of Islamic civilisation wey ein reputation as a hotbed of scholarship cover de entire Maghreb. During dis period, na de Great Mosque of Kairouan be both a place of prayer den a centre for teaching Islamic sciences under de Maliki current. One fi conceivably compare ein role to dat of de University of Paris during de Middle Ages.[15]

For addition to studies for de deepening of religious thought den Maliki jurisprudence, de mosque sanso host chaw courses insyd secular subjects such as mathematics, astronomy, medicine den botany. Na de transmission of knowledge be assured by prominent scholars den theologians wich include Sahnun ibn Sa'id den Asad ibn al-Furat, eminent jurists wey contribute greatly to de dissemination of de Maliki thought, Ishaq ibn Imran den Ibn al-Jazzar insyd medicine, Abu Sahl al-Kairouani den Abd al-Monim al-Kindi insyd mathematics. Thus, de mosque, headquarters of a prestigious university plus a large library wey dey contain a large number of scientific den theological works, na ebe de most remarkable intellectual den cultural centre insyd North Africa during de ninth, tenth den eleventh centuries.[16]

References

[edit | edit source]
  1. || Géotunis 2009 :: Kairouan ||
  2. Great Mosque of Kairouan (discoverislamicart.org) Archived 2013-04-07 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Great Mosque of Kairouan – Kairouan, Tunisia". Archived from the original on 2019-08-15. Retrieved 2009-08-24.
  4. "Kairouan – UNESCO World Heritage Centre". Archived from the original on 2022-08-23. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
  5. "Kairouan 499" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2012-10-26. Retrieved 2019-12-26.
  6. The Great Mosque (kairouan-cci2009.nat.tn)
  7. M’hamed Hassine Fantar, De Carthage à Kairouan: 2000 ans d’art et d’histoire en Tunisie, éd. Agence française d’action artistique, Paris, 1982, p. 23
  8. Wilfrid Knapp and Nevill Barbour, North West Africa : a political and economic survey, Editions Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1977, page 404
  9. Henri Saladin, Tunis et Kairouan, Editions Henri Laurens, Paris, 1908, page 118
  10. Mahmud Abd al-Mawla, L’université zaytounienne et la société tunisienne, éditions Maison Tiers-Monde, Tunis, 1984, page 33
  11. Kerrou, Mohamed (September 10, 1998). "Quartiers et faubourgs de la médina de Kairouan. Des mots aux modes de spatialisation". Genèses. Sciences sociales et histoire. 33 (1): 49–76. doi:10.3406/genes.1998.1539 – via www.persee.fr.
  12. "Mosquée Okba Ibn Nafi à Kairoua – Enceinte et porches". islamickairouan.net. Archived from the original on August 18, 2011.
  13. Néji Djelloul, op. cit., p. 8
  14. Henri Saladin, Tunis et Kairouan, coll. Les Villes d’art célèbres, éd. Henri Laurens, Paris, 1908, p. 120
  15. Henri Saladin, Tunis et Kairouan, p. 118
  16. "Nurdin Laugu, « The Roles of Mosque Libraries through History », Al-Jami'ah, vol. 45, n°1, pages 103 and 105, 2007" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 21, 2011.

Read further

[edit | edit source]
  • Néji Djelloul, 2000. Kairouan, the Great Mosque. Editions Contrastes.
  • Paul Sebag, 1965. Great Mosque of Kairouan. New York Macmillan.
  • John D. Hoag, 1987. Islamic architecture. Rizzoli.
  • Jonathan M. Bloom, 2002. Early Islamic art and architecture. Ashgate.
  • G. T. Rivoira, 2009, Moslem Architecture. Its Origins and Development. ASLAN PR.
[edit | edit source]