Minaret
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A minaret (/ˌmɪnəˈrɛt, ˈmɪnəˌrɛt/;[1] Persian: مناره menare, Turkish: minare,[2]), from Arabic: منارة manāra, lit. "lighthouse", also known as Goldaste (Persian: گلدسته), is a distinctive architectural structure akin to a tower and typically found adjacent to mosques. Generally a tall spire with a conical or onion-shaped crown, usually either free-standing or taller than associated support structure. The basic form of a minaret includes a base, shaft, and gallery.[3] Styles vary regionally and by period. Minarets provide a visual focal point and are traditionally used for the Muslim call to prayer.
Functions
The purpose of Minarets in traditional Eastern region Architecture is to serve as a ventilation system for a building in very hot climate. Usually, the building would consist of a tower with large open windows that would allow for cold air to enter, and a dome in the center of the building that would ( In ancient times ) have an opening in the ceiling that would both accumulate and allow warm air to leave the building through a cupola.[4] The reason for buildings having a center hall room with raised ceiling is to allow for heat to accumulate and rise upwards leaving the cold air on the lower floors allowing for a system of natural air conditioning.
However in Modern times, with the inventions of mechanical air conditioners, the Purpose of minarets has changed to be a tradition symbolic tower that would call people to prayers in Muslim countries. In addition to providing a visual cue to a Muslim community, the main function at present is to provide a vantage point from which the call to prayer, or adhan, is made. The call to prayer is issued five times each day: dawn, noon, mid-afternoon, sunset, and night. In most modern mosques, the adhān is called from the musallah (prayer hall) via microphone to a speaker system on the minaret.
History
The earliest mosques lacked minarets, and the call to prayer was performed elsewhere;[6] hadiths relay that the Muslim community of Medina gave the call to prayer from the roof of the house of Muhammad, which doubled as a place for prayer. Around 80 years after Muhammad's death, the first known minarets appeared.[7]
Minarets have been described as the "gate from heaven and earth", and as the Arabic language letter aleph (which is a straight vertical line).[8]
The massive minaret of the Great Mosque of Kairouan in Tunisia is the oldest standing minaret.[5][9] Its construction began during the first third of the 8th century and was completed in 836 CE.[10] The imposing square-plan tower consists of three sections of decreasing size reaching 31.5 meters.[10] Considered as the prototype for minarets of the western Islamic world, it served as a model for many later minarets.[10]
The tallest minaret, at 210 metres (689 ft) is located at the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca, Morocco. The tallest brick minaret is Qutub Minar located in Delhi, India.[11]
In some of the oldest mosques, such as the Great Mosque of Damascus, minarets originally served as illuminated watchtowers (hence the derivation of the word from the Arabic nur, meaning "light").
Construction
The basic form of minarets consists of three parts: a base, shaft, and a gallery. For the base, the ground is excavated until a hard foundation is reached. Gravel and other supporting materials may be used as a foundation; it is unusual for the minaret to be built directly upon ground-level soil. Minarets may be conical (tapering), square, cylindrical, or polygonal (faceted). Stairs circle the shaft in a counter-clockwise fashion, providing necessary structural support to the highly elongated shaft. The gallery is a balcony that encircles the upper sections from which the muezzin may give the call to prayer. It is covered by a roof-like canopy and adorned with ornamentation, such as decorative brick and tile work, cornices, arches and inscriptions, with the transition from the shaft to the gallery typically sporting muqarnas.
Local styles
Styles and architecture can vary widely according to region and time period. Here are a few styles and the localities from which they derive:
- Tunisia
- (7th century) Quadrangular, the Mosque of Uqba of Kairouan has the oldest minaret in the Muslim world.
- Turkish (11th century)
- 1, 2, 4 or 6 minarets related to the size of the mosque. Slim, circular minarets of equal cross-section are common.
- Egypt (7th century) / Syria (until 13th century)
- Low square towers sitting at the four corners of the mosque.
- Iraq
- For a free-standing conical minaret surrounded by a spiral staircase, see Malwiya.
- Egypt (15th century)
- Octagonal. Two balconies, the upper smaller than the lower, projecting mukarnas, surmounted by an elongated finial.
- Persia (17th century)
- Generally two pairs of slim, blue tile-clad towers flanking the mosque entrance, terminating in covered balconies.
- Tatar (18th century)
- Tatar mosque: A sole minaret, located at the centre of a gabled roof.
- Morocco
- Typically, a single square minaret; notable exceptions include a few octagonal minarets in northern cities - Chefchaouen, Tetouan, Rabat, Ouezzane, Asilah, and Tangier - and the round minaret of Moulay Idriss.
- South Asia
- Octagonal, generally three balconied, with the upper most roofed by an onion dome and topped by a small finial.
Examples
- Square three-tiered minaret (the oldest in existence) of the Mosque of Uqba (Great Mosque of Kairouan), Tunisia
- 1000-year-old Qutub Minar in Delhi
- Islamic architecture in a mosque with two minarets in Nishapur
- Minaret in Wangen bei Olten, Switzerland
- The Charminar in Hyderabad, India
- The four minarets of Quba Mosque, the first mosque in history built by Muhammad upon arrival in Medina, Saudi Arabia
- Minaret of Central Java Grand Mosque, Indonesia
- Modern style minaret of Istiqlal Mosque, Jakarta in Indonesia
- Minaret of National Mosque of Malaysia
- Minaret of Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddin Mosque, Brunei
- Old adobe minaret in Kharanagh, Iran
- Simple wooden pole used as minaret in Nouadhibou, Mauritania
- Minaret at mosque in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
- A Burmese-style mosque with an elaborately carved minaret in Amarapura
- Minaret in Kashgar, China
- Chinguetti mosque minaret, in Mauritania
- The four minarets in Mashkhur Jusup Central Mosque, Pavlodar, Kazakhstan
- A minaret of a mosque in central Jubail, Saudi Arabia
- Minaret of Al Othman Mosque in Jebla, Kuwait; built in 1857.
- The Ghawanima Minaret, 1900; one of the four minarets of Al-Aqsa Mosque, Old City Jerusalem
- The Centro Islámico de Puerto Rico in Ponce, Puerto Rico
- The octagonal minaret of Hammouda Pacha Mosque in Tunis, built in the 17th century
- The onion dome of Mecca Masjid minaret, Hyderabad, India.
- The minaret of the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul. Originally a cathedral, the minarets were added after it became a mosque after the conquest of Constantinople
See also
References
- ↑ "minaret". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
- ↑ "minaret." Online Etymology Dictionary. Douglas Harper, Historian. 21 Mar. 2009.
- ↑ Dynamic response of masonry minarets strengthened with Fiber Reinforced Polymer (FRP) composites (Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences) p. 2012
- ↑ Research Gate. The 7th International Conference - Healthy Buildings 2003, At Singapore https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272293471_Ventilation_in_a_Mosque_-_an_Additional_Purpose_the_Minarets_May_Serve. Retrieved 31 August 2016. Missing or empty
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(help) - 1 2 Titus Burckhardt, Art of Islam, Language and Meaning: Commemorative Edition. World Wisdom. 2009. p. 128
- ↑ Donald Hawley, Oman, pg. 201. Jubilee edition. Kensington: Stacey International, 1995. ISBN 0905743636
- ↑ Paul Johnson, Civilizations of the Holy Land. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1979, p. 173
- ↑ University of London, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Volume 68. The School. 2005. p. 26
- ↑ Linda Kay Davidson and David Martin Gitlitz, Pilgrimage: from the Ganges to Graceland: an encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. 2002. p. 302
- 1 2 3 Minaret of the Great Mosque of Kairouan (Qantara Mediterranean Heritage)
- ↑ Jamal Malik, Islam in South Asia: a short history, BRILL, 2008, page 424
Further reading
- Jonathan M. Bloom (1989), Minaret, symbol of Islam, Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-728013-3
External links
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