Djamaa el Kebir (Arabic: الجامع الكبير, romanized: djama' el-kebir), also known as the Great Mosque of Algiers (French: Grande mosquée d'Alger), is a historic mosque in Algiers, Algeria. It is located within the Casbah (old city), near the city's harbor.[1] Dating to 1097, it is one of the few remaining examples of Almoravid architecture, although it has undergone other additions and reconstructions since its foundation. It is the oldest mosque in Algiers and is said to be one of the oldest mosques in Algeria after Sidi Okba Mosque and Sidi Ghanem Mosque .[2]
Djamaa el Kebir | |
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الجامع الكبير (in Arabic) Grande Mosquée (in French) | |
Religion | |
Affiliation | Sunni Islam |
Year consecrated | 1097 |
Location | |
Location | Algiers, Algeria |
Geographic coordinates | 36°47′7″N 3°3′51″E / 36.78528°N 3.06417°E |
Architecture | |
Type | Mosque |
Style | Islamic, Almoravid |
Completed | 1097, 1322 (minaret) and 1837 (portico) |
Minaret(s) | 1 |
History
editAn inscription on the mosque's minbar (pulpit) records the date of 1 Rajab, 490 AH, testifying to the fact that the mosque was built in or around 1097 CE, during the reign of Yusuf ibn Tashfin.[4]: 191 [5]: 32 The inscription on the base of the minaret indicates that it was built in 1322 CE (17 Dhu al-Qadah, 722 AH) by the Zayyanid sultan Abu Tashfin I of Tlemcen.[4]: 273 [6]: 234 [5]: 33
The mosque was severely damaged during the French bombardment of Algiers in 1682 and again in 1683, resulting in the subsequent reconstruction of its mihrab and its qibla (southern) wall.[7][6]: 234
The gallery at the outside of the mosque was built in 1837 during French colonial rule.[6]: 234 Its construction was a consequence of a complete reconstruction of the street by the French.[8][7]
Geography
editThe Great Mosque is located in the northeastern part of the city in the historic Casbah (or Kasbah) district near the harbor, next to the Chamber of Commerce. Earlier, the mosque was located on the Rue de la Marine in Algiers during French colonial rule of Algeria, which was then the entrance street to Algiers Harbor.[1][9] Rue de la Marine no longer exists and has been surpassed by the Rue d' Angkor and Boulevard de Ernesto Guevara and in the mosque area by a fork road called Rue Saadi et Mokhtar Ben Hafidh which it now lies on.[citation needed]
Architectural features
editThe mosque has a rectangular floor plan 46 meters wide and 38 meters deep.[8] Materials used in constructing the mosque were stone, brick, roofing tiles and wood, and ornamentation of ceramics and wood was applied.[3]
Interior
editThe prayer hall is subdivided into eleven aisles running perpendicular to the southern qibla wall, divided by rows of horseshoe arches supported by whitewashed masonry pillars. The central aisle is wider than the others, hinting at the T-plan layout which would become standard in subsequent mosque architecture in Maghreb. A rectangular courtyard measuring about 11 by 21 meters is located in the northern part of the mosque, surrounded by arcades.[8][7]
The mihrab, which was originally built as an integral part of the mosque in 1097, was destroyed by the 17th-century French bombardment.[10][7] The reconstructed mihrab is a typical design followed in 18th-century Algiers in the form of indented lobed arches at the end of the central and a much wider nave. It is a simple fresco façade with two small spiral columns flanking it on either side with an ogive stucco arch seen in relief.[7] The mihrab is set in a niche with a flat floor. Adjoining the mihrab on either side, there are two door openings which lead to small oblong rooms, one of which housed the minbar which used to be shifted on rails to the prayer hall for the Imam to say the daily prayers and give sermons. While the rails that were used to shift the minbar are still embedded in the floor, the minbar itself is now preserved in the National Museum of Antiquities and Islamic Arts in Algiers.[3]
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Interior of the mosque's prayer hall
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View of the aisle leading towards the mihrab
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The mihrab of the mosque today
Exterior
editFollowing the realignment of the main street of Rue de la Marine, substantial changes in the façade became an essential additional feature.[7] As a result, a gallery or portico of columns was added at the entrance to the mosque and was built in 1837 under French colonial rule in an orientalizing style of polylobed arches. It reuses Italian marble columns from the 18th-century al-Sa'ida Mosque.[6]: 234
According to French scholar Georges Marçais, the minaret, which was first added in the early 14th century, was rebuilt or remodelled again in a later period.[4]: 273 This minaret's surface is indented with rectangular niches decorated by polylobed blind arches, as well as with panels and bands of blue and white ceramic tiles. In another part of the mosque, in the north-east corner, is the Bab al-Jenina which, along with the minaret, is meant for the exclusive use of the imam of the mosque. It has several rooms for routine use.[3]
The minbar
editThe original minbar of the mosque is now preserved in the National Museum of Antiquities and Islamic Arts. It is one of the finest sculpted minbars of its type in Algeria.[3] It bears an inscription in Kufic script saying: بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم أتم هذا المنبر في أول شهر رجب من سنة تسعين وأربعمائة. الذي عمل محمد ('In the name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful. This pulpit has been completed the first of the month of Rajab of the year 490 [AH]. Work of Muhammad.').[3] The minbar is sculpted in wood fixed on wheels for free movement of the Almoravid period. It is patterned in the simple shape of the paneled minbar of the Great Mosque of Qairawan.[11]
Notable Imams
edit- Mohamed Charef (1908-2011)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Waldie's select circulating library, Volume 6. A. Waldie. 1835. p. 337.
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ignored (help) - ^ Hyam, Joseph C. (1900). The illustrated guide to Algiers: a "practical" handbook for travellers (2 ed.). The Anglo-French Press Association.
- ^ a b c d e f "Qantara - Great Mosque of Algiers". www.qantara-med.org. Archived from the original on 2022-04-25. Retrieved 2021-03-02.
- ^ a b c Marçais, Georges (1954). L'architecture musulmane d'Occident. Paris: Arts et métiers graphiques.
- ^ a b Salmon, Xavier (2018). Maroc Almoravide et Almohade: Architecture et décors au temps des conquérants, 1055-1269. Paris: LienArt.
- ^ a b c d Bloom, Jonathan M. (2020). Architecture of the Islamic West: North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula, 700-1800. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300218701. Archived from the original on 2024-01-14. Retrieved 2021-05-03.
- ^ a b c d e f Ali Lafer. "The Great Mosque (djamaa el-kebir)". Museum with no frontiers. Archived from the original on 2016-07-17. Retrieved 2010-11-11.
- ^ a b c "Jami' al-Kabir (Algiers)". Archnet. Archived from the original on 2021-04-18. Retrieved 2021-03-02.
- ^ Temple bar, Volume 16. Ward and Lock. 1866. p. 193.
- ^ "Great Mosque of Algiers – An Excellent Example of Almoravid Architecture". Algeria.com. Archived from the original on October 16, 2017. Retrieved November 11, 2010.
- ^ Kuban, Doğan (1974). Muslim Religious Architecture: The Mosque and its Early Development, Volume 1. BRILL. p. 27. ISBN 90-04-03813-2. Retrieved 2010-11-11.
Further reading
edit- Alger, quelques-unes de ses mosquées, le Comité du Vieil Alger, Feuillets d'El-Djezaïr, Fondateur Henri Klein (1910), Éditions du Tell, 2003
- Bourouiba, R., Les inscriptions commémoratives des mosquées d’Algérie, Algiers, OPU, 1984, p. 81–86
- Bourouiba, R., L’art religieux musulman en Algérie, Algiers, S.N.E.D., 1983
- Bourouiba, R., Apports de l’Algérie à l’architecture religieuse arabo-islamique, Algiers, OPNA, 1956
- Devoulx, A., Les édifices religieux de l'ancien Alger, Algiers, Bastide, 1870
- Marçais, G., L’architecture musulmane d’occident, Tunisie, Algérie, Espagne et Sicile, Paris, Arts et Métiers Graphiques, 1954