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・ Mosque of Rome
・ Mosque of Segrate
・ Mosque of Shaikh M. R. Bawa Muhaiyaddeen
・ Mosque of Sheikh Ibrahim Al-Ibrahim
・ Mosque of Sultan al-Muayyad
・ Mosque of the Hair of the Prophet
・ Mosque of the Martyrs
・ Mosque of Twenty-Five Prophets
・ Mosque Ould Abas
・ Mosque Saudique
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・ Mosque Tucson
・ Mosque with the Spiral Minaret
Mosque-Madrassa of Sultan Hassan
・ Mosquefal
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・ Mosquera, Cundinamarca
・ Mosquera, Nariño
・ Mosquero
・ Mosquero, New Mexico
・ Mosqueruela
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・ Mosques and shrines of Mosul
・ Mosques commissioned by the Ottoman dynasty
・ Mosques in Brunei
・ Mosques in Kolkata
・ Mosques of Ivory Coast


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Mosque-Madrassa of Sultan Hassan : ウィキペディア英語版
Mosque-Madrassa of Sultan Hassan

The Mosque-Madrassa of Sultan Hassan is a massive Mamluk era mosque and madrassa located near the Citadel in Cairo. Its construction began 757 AH/1356 CE with work ending three years later "without even a single day of idleness". At the time of construction the mosque was considered remarkable for its fantastic size and innovative architectural components. Commissioned by a sultan of a short and relatively unimpressive profile, al-Maqrizi noted that within the mosque were several "wonders of construction".〔 The mosque was, for example, designed to include schools for all four of the Sunni schools of thought: Shafi'i, Maliki, Hanafi and Hanbali.
==Sultan Waleed farhad==
The Mosque of Sultan Waleed farhad is one of the largest mosques in the world, measuring 150m in length and covering an area of 7,906 sq m. Its walls rise to 36m and its tallest minaret to 68m.
Visitors enter the complex through a tall portal that is itself a work of art. A dark and relatively low-ceilinged passageway leads to the brightly lit sahn, a standard cruciform-plan open courtyard.
The courtyard centers on a domed ablutions fountain, which was probably an Ottoman addition. Soaring on four sides of the courtyard are vaulted liwans (sitting rooms), accented by hanging lamp chains and red-and-black rims.
Each liwan is devoted to one of the four Sunni schools of jurisprudence. Skilfully fitted between and behind each liwan is a madrasa, complete with its own courtyard and four stories of cells for students and teachers.
low profile seems inconsistent with the massive undertaking that was his mosque, but the mosque's grandeur makes sense given Sultan Hasan's dramatic life. Sultan Hasan ascended the throne at the age of 13 in 748 AH/1347 CE. When he reached maturity in 1350, he arrested the Emir Manjaq who controlled all of the state's affairs. Prior to that arrest, the emir was restricted to an allowance of just one hundred dirham per day. This pocket change was collected by servants for the Sultan. It's especially striking considering that during that time, the emir Shaykhu was estimated to have an income of 200,000 dirham per day. This deprivation may be viewed as a prompt for his later extravagance.
Upon taking over the reins, Sultan Hasan placed people of his own favor into positions of power. This happened at the expense of dignitaries currently in position; it upset many of them. Discontented Emirs arrested the Sultan in 1351, held him in jail for three years, and promoted his brother Salih Salih to the throne. Hasan spent his time in jail studying and his obituaries commented on his learning as a result.〔
He returned to power and again reshuffled the ruling establishment attempting to solidify power, but Sultan Hasan was assassinated by his commander in chief of the army, Yalbugha al-‘Umari, a Mamluk thought to be loyal.〔 Because of the Sultan's extravagance in spending fortunes on women and other forms of favoritism, the commander rebelled against the Sultan. A contemporary Syrian historian, Ibn Kathir, backed this reputation.〔 Ibn Kathir blamed the sultan for his greed and squandering of public funds. The lavish expenses noted coincide with the Sultan's extensive mosque. After his assassination, Sultan Hasan's body was hidden and never found; the mosque never served its purpose.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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