Al-Arba'een Mosque

Al-Arba'een Mosque
جامع الأربعين شهيداً
The mosque before its 2014 destruction
Religion
AffiliationSunni Islam (former)
Ecclesiastical or organisational statusMosque
(11th century–2014)
StatusDestroyed
(under reconstruction)
Location
LocationTikrit, Saladin Governorate
CountryIraq
Location of the mosque in Iraq
Geographic coordinates34°35′56″N 43°40′34″E / 34.59889°N 43.67611°E / 34.59889; 43.67611
Architecture
TypeMosque architecture
FounderAmr ibn Jundab Al-Ghafari
Completed5th century AH
(11th century CE)
Destroyed24 September 2014
Specifications
Length47 m (154 ft)
Width47 m (154 ft)
Dome(s)Five (since destroyed)
Minaret(s)One (since destroyed)
Shrine(s)Two:
MaterialsGravel; plaster

The Al-Arba'een Mosque (Arabic: جامع الأربعين شهيداً) is a former Sunni mosque, that was located in the city of Tikrit, in the Saladin Governorate of Iraq. It contained a shrine for Amr ibn Jundab Al-Ghafari, and another shrine for Sitt Nafisa.[1] The mosque was destroyed by ISIL on 24 September 2014.

History

The building dates from the 5th century AH (11th century CE).[1] The name of the mosque, "Al-Arba'een" (The Forty), is derived[2] from a belief that forty martyrs killed during an Islamic conquest of Tikrit[3] and were buried under the mosque, although this claim is contested as reports of the forty graves are weak.[1]

The building was used as an Islamic university in 1262 CE.[4]

Architecture

The mosque building was a square shape, with five domes. Each side was approximately 47 metres (154 ft) long.[1] Its dimensions are 36.5 by 35.5 metres (120 by 116 ft).[2] Gravel and plaster were mostly used to construct the building[1] and the two venerated rooms are 10 metres (33 ft) tall.[1]

One of these venerated rooms was a shrine that contained a tomb of Amr ibn Jundab Al-Ghafari,[3] a companion of the Rashidun caliph Umar ibn Al-Khattab. There was also a cellar in the building which is believed by locals to house the resting place of a female saint, Sitt Nafisa.[5]

The mosque was destroyed by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in 2014 by explosives.[4] The explosion completely destroyed the shrines but did not damage the rest of the mosque. The surrounding cemetery was damaged.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f الأحمدي, مصطفى. عبد الله بن المعتم وعمرو بن جندب الغفاري أبرز المدفونين فيه.. ما قصة مزار الأربعين صحابيا في تكريت؟. Al Jazeera (in Arabic). Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  2. ^ a b تكريت, مدونة (July 19, 2013). تكريت: مزار الاربعين في تكريت الموقع و التاريخ. تكريت (in Arabic). Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  3. ^ a b بالصور .. تحفة إسلامية تحتضن مرقد صحابي تعاني الإهمال في تكريت. قناه السومرية العراقية (in Arabic). Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  4. ^ a b "ISIS destroys shrine in Iraq amid U.S. strikes". Al Arabiya English. September 25, 2014. Retrieved June 7, 2022.
  5. ^ موسوعة شذرات المطر ..مدونة المهندس رائد جعفر مطر : مزار الاربعين ولي في تكريت. موسوعة شذرات المطر ..مدونة المهندس رائد جعفر مطر (in Arabic). February 25, 2019. Retrieved June 9, 2022.

Media related to Al-Arba'een Mosque at Wikimedia Commons