Shabandar Mosque

Shabandar Mosque
Arabic: مسجد الشابندر
The Shabandar Mosque in 1965
Religion
AffiliationSunni Islam
ProvinceBaghdad Governorate
Location
LocationAdhamiyah, Baghdad, Iraq
Shabandar Mosque is located in Iraq
Shabandar Mosque
Shown within Iraq
Geographic coordinates33°22′17″N 44°21′19″E / 33.3713614°N 44.3553220°E / 33.3713614; 44.3553220
Architecture
StyleModern
Completed1902
Capacity140 worshippers

The Shabandar Mosque (Arabic: مسجد الشابندر) is a historic 20th-century mosque located in al-Adhamiyah district of Baghdad, Iraq. The mosque was built by the Iraqi Arab Shabandar family, recognized as an important wealthy merchant and philanthropist family in Iraq that built several mosques with their wealth.

History

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By the late Ottoman period, the Arab Shabandar family gained prominence in Iraq for being wealthy merchants and used their wealth to construct several mosques around Baghdad, including the Shabandar Mosque in al-Adhamiyya area, named after the family itself.[1]

First built in 1902 by the philanthropist Mahmoud Ibrahim al-Shabandar, the mosque can accommodate at least 140 worshippers within its area of 300 square meters. Its summer prayer hall, or musalla, can accommodate at least 50 worshippers.[2][3][4]

In 1906, Mahmoud Ibrahim al-Shabandar died, and he was buried in the garden of the mosque.[2] The mosque also experienced a major renovation in 1938. Currently, the mosque does not have any endowments, but the funding for restoration or repairs is done by the current member of the Shabandar family, Sayyid Sa'eed Ibrahim al-Shabandar.[3][4]

Features

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Other lesser known features of the mosque include a residential space for the needy, as well as a small private cemetery for the al-Shabandar family that is located in the mosque's garden. There is also a small basement underneath the mosque.[5][6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Al-Durabi, Ibrahim (1958). Baghdadis, their news, and councils (in Arabic). Baghdad: Al-Rabita Press. pp. 157–158.
  2. ^ a b "بقية الحديث عن الأسرة الشابندرية ببغداد". www.almadasupplements.com. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  3. ^ a b al-Adhami, Hashim (1964–1965). History of the Imam al-Azam Mosque and the mosques of Adhamiyah VOLUME 2. Al Ani Press.
  4. ^ a b "Tarikh al-Masajid al-Imam al-Adham fi al-Masajid al-Adhamiyah (2)".
  5. ^ al-Adhami, Walid (1999). History of al-Adhamiya, the city of al-Imam al-Adham Abu Hanifah an-Nu'man (1st ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar al-Bashaer al-Islamiyyah.
  6. ^ سرمد حاتم شكر (2022-10-01). تاريخ الأعظمية مدينة الامام الأعظم أبي حنيفة النعمان رضي الله عنه - الخطاط وليد الأعظمي.