Al-Muhdhar Mosque

The Al-Mihdar Mosque (Arabic: مسجد المحضار Masjid al-Miḥḍār) is one of the historical Yemeni mosques in the ancient city of Tarim, the province of Hadramaut, attributed to Omar Al-Mihdar bin Abdul Rahman Al-Saqqaf, a Muslim leader who lived in the city during the 15th-century.[1][2]

Al-Mihdar Mosque
مسجد المحضار
The iconic minaret of Al Muhdhar Mosque
Religion
AffiliationIslam
RegionArabia
StatusActive
Location
LocationTarim, Yemen
Architecture
Architect(s)Awad Salman Afif al-Tirmi (minaret)
TypeMosque
StyleIslamic
Completed1914
Specifications
Minaret(s)1
Minaret height40 metres (130 ft)
Materialsadobe

Architecture

The building is characterized by Islamic geometric design. Its layout consists of an open courtyard surrounded by four corridors, the biggest of which contains the qibla, which is adorned with three exquisite frescoes decorated with geometric, floral and scriptural motifs. In the center of the qibla corridor, there is the iconic minaret, which is about 40 meters high and the highest in the city. It is square-shaped and there is a staircase reaching to the top inside. It was built around 1914 CE (1333 AH) and is built of adobe. This minaret is designed by an architect Awad Salman Afif al-Tirmi, who had already carried out many designs and constructions of clay lattices and domes, and the maintenance and supervision were conducted by Abu Bakr bin Shihab (d. 1345 AH). It is considered as one of the most important architectural sites and destinations for visitors and researchers of the city of Tarim.[3]

Al-Ahqaf Library

Al-Ahqaf Library occupies the ground floor of the mosque building, which was built to accommodate the need to store the large number of manuscripts in the city of Tarim and neighboring cities. Tarim has been considered as a distinguished Islamic scientific center since the 10th-century in Wadi Hadramaut region.

See also

References

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