Great Mosque of Sanaa

Coordinates: 15°21′11″N 44°12′54″E / 15.3531°N 44.2149°E / 15.3531; 44.2149
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Great Mosque of Sana'a
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Great Mosque of Sanaa
al-Jāmiʿ al-Kabīr bi-Ṣanʿāʾ
الجامع الكبير بصنعاء
Umayyad
Groundbreaking630 AD
CompletedRenovation 705 and 715 AD
Specifications
Length80 m
Width60 m
Minaret(s)Two
MaterialsBrick and stone

The Great Mosque of Sana'a (

Church of al-Qalis that formerly occupied the site.[1][4] The Great Mosque is the largest and most notable of over one hundred mosques in the Old City of Sana’a.[3]

The building has undergone renovations in the 8th century, the 13th century, and in the Ottoman period.

Sana'a manuscript, discovered there during restoration in 1972. Today, the Great Mosque of Sana’a is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site of the Old City of Sana'a.[5]

Location

The city of Sana'a was the military center of the pre-Islamic kingdom of the Sabeans and was an important center for the Himyarite Kingdom.[3] The mosque, commissioned by Muhammed, who instructed for its construction within the garden of the Persian governors,[6] was built upon the ruins of Sheba's Ghumdan Palace,[1] between the two areas of Sana'a at the time: al-Qati and al-Sirar.[7] The Great mosque was built near the suq, which was already in place at the time of its construction.[6]

In later years, city planning, expansion and orientation were greatly influenced by the construction of the Great Mosque and two other mosques on the city's north side.[7]

History

Great Mosque of Sana'a in 2001

Around 630 CE (6 AH), according to early Islamic sources, Muhammad was said to have commanded  the construction of the Great Mosque of Sana’a,[5][4][8] and the mosque is known as the first mosque to have been built outside of the Islamic holy cities of Mecca and Medina.[5] During this post-Hijra period (622-632 CE), Sana'a was central in the propagation of the Islamic religion. Many of the archaeological finds discovered in the Great Mosque substantiate an argument for its construction to the era when Muhammad was alive, including a number of spolia from the Axumite Cathedral as well as from the Himyarite Ghumdan Palace.[4] During the 7th century, the remains of pre-Islamic Sana'a were largely destroyed[5] when it became the center for the spread of the Islamic faith during the early years of the Hijrah. This is evidenced by the architectural remains of pre-Islamic buildings found within the Great Mosque.[5]

From 705 to 715 (86–96 AH), the Umayyad caliph

Abbasid period.[4]

In 876/7 CE, floods twice caused substantial damage to the mosque, after which it was totally renovated.[4][9]

In the early 9th century, a minaret was constructed on the east side. In the year 911 CE, Karmatis invaded the city, damaging the mosque.[4]

In the twelfth century, 1130 CE, the Isma`ili Queen Arwa al-Sulayhi restored much of the mosque. She was responsible for the sculpted ceilings of the mosque's eastern, western, and northern wings. The mosque's western minaret was built as a part of this restoration.[4]

In the early 16th century, the mosque was renovated with a domed square structure and the paving of its courtyard.[4]

Architecture

One of two minarets of Great Mosque in Sana'a

The Great Mosque is built in a style of stepped stone, which is linked to similar ancient Abyssinian Axumite stonework.[6] The wooden ceilings, made of lacunari's wood, are carved and painted. The central courtyard measures 80 by 60 metres (260 ft × 200 ft), with prayer halls arranged in a north–south direction.

Axumite Empire.[4][6] This is evidenced by the fact that the Axumite Empire erected its largest cathedral within the city of Sana'a and that remains of this cathedral, as well as from Gumdan palace and Christian and Jewish places of worship, are incorporated into the Great Mosque.[4] Further evidence of this relation is an inscription in the pre-Islamic language of the region, Sabaic,[3] in a reused stone arch support implies it is connected to Byzantine architecture.[4]

The two white minarets on the left are those of the Great Mosque.

The western minaret, built during Queen Arwa bint Ahmad's restoration, is similar to those of the mosques of the same period built in Cairo, due to her close links with the Fatimid dynasty in Egypt.[4]

Discoveries

In 1972–73, when plaster was removed by archaeologists, they discovered some 65 artifacts, including large quantities of old manuscripts and parchments, as well as the

Sana'a manuscript, found by construction workers while renovating an attic wall.[9] Four thousand rare Arabic manuscripts were also uncovered that are linked to the start of Islam, the Umayyad period, and Sheba's Palace of Ghamdan and its destruction.[1] One of the Koran found here is said to have been written or compiled by Imam Ali, which is preserved by the mosque library.[1] Early book bindings found at the mosque have been well documented by scholars such as Ursula Dreibholz[10]
(1997).

Other archaeological finds at the Great Mosque are remnants of vaults and old buildings connected to the capital when it contained the Axumite

Church of al-Qalis , unearthed in 2006.[1][4]

Preservation

One of the Qur'an fragments found in 1972 in the mosque's loft

The Great Mosque is included on the UNESCO World Heritage Site List, designated in 1986 as list no. 345, under Criteria: (iv)(v)(vi), which includes 103 mosques, 14 hammams and over 6,000 houses of Sana'a, all built prior to the eleventh century.[5] Preservation of the Great Mosque, which is of exceptional religious and historical value, has been supported by UNESCO's World Heritage Institute of Training and Research-Asia and Pacific (Shanghai). Analysis of the damage suffered by the mosque over several centuries includes evidence of floods, rains, soil subsidence, old electrical wiring and connections, groundwater seepage, vandalism and wars, and also weak old buildings adjoining the mosque.[1]

Repairs and maintenance, initiated in 2003, continue to be carried out in phases, such as electrical system renovation. Plastering has been redone, including restoration of the old traditional plaster known as qudad. Pavings have been improved and minarets are being restored. Improvements have been made in ablution areas and modern toilets were added. Other improvements have been made to the water supply and sewerage systems, as well as removal of old buildings which do not match with the historical and architectural features of the mosque.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "World Heritage Institute of Training and Research-Asia and Pacific - Restoration of the Great Mosque in Sana'a, Yemen". www.whitr-ap.org. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  2. .
  3. ^ First published online: 2012 First print edition: , 1960-2007
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "Jami' al-Kabir | Aerial view over the Great Mosque of Sana'a". Archnet. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Old City of Sana'a". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "The Old City of Sana'a". Archnet. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  7. ^ . Sana'a before Islam in the seventh century was divided in two halves […] the Great Mosque between Al-Qati and Al-Sirar
  8. ^ "درجة الحديث الوارد في مسجد صنعاء الكبير وكيفية تحديد قبلته - إسلام ويب - مركز الفتوى". www.islamweb.net. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  9. ^ .
  10. .

Further reading