Al-Aqsa Mosque
Al-Aqsa Mosque "the Farthest Mosque") also known as Al-Aqsa
and Bayt al-Muqaddas, is the third holiest site in Islam and is located
in the Old City of Jerusalem. The site on which the silver domed mosque sits,
along with the Dome of the Rock, also referred to as al-Haram ash-Sharif
or "Noble Sanctuary," is the Temple Mount, the holiest site in
Judaism, the place where the Temple is generally accepted to have stood.
Muslims believe that Muhammad was transported from the Sacred Mosque in Mecca
to al-Aqsa during the Night Journey. Islamic tradition holds that Muhammad led
prayers towards this site until the seventeenth month after the emigration,
when God directed him to turn towards the Ka'aba.
The mosque was originally a small prayer house built by the Rashidun caliph Umar,
but was rebuilt and expanded by the Umayyad caliph Abd al-Malik and finished by
his son al-Walid in 705 CE. After an earthquake in 746, the mosque was
completely destroyed and rebuilt by the Abbasid caliph al-Mansur in 754, and
again rebuilt by his successor al-Mahdi in 780.
Another earthquake destroyed
most of al-Aqsa in 1033, but two years later the Fatimid caliph Ali az-Zahir
built another mosque which has stood to the present-day. During the periodic
renovations undertaken, the various ruling dynasties of the Islamic Caliphate
constructed additions to the mosque and its precincts, such as its dome,
facade, its minbar, minarets and the interior structure. When the Crusaders
captured Jerusalem in 1099, they used the mosque as a palace and church, but
its function as a mosque was restored after its recapture by Saladin in 1187.
More renovations, repairs and additions were undertaken in the later centuries
by the Ayyubids, Mamluks, Ottomans, the Supreme Muslim Council, and Jordan.
Today, the Old City is under Israeli control, but the mosque remains under the
administration of the Palestinian-led Islamic waqf.
Construction by the Umayyads
It is known that the current construction of the al-Aqsa Mosque is dated to
the early Umayyad period of rule in Palestine. Architectural historian K. A. C.
Creswell, referring to a testimony by Arculf, a Gallic monk, during his
pilgrimage to Palestine in 679–82, notes the possibility that the second caliph
of the Rashidun Caliphate, Umar ibn al-Khattab, erected a primitive
quadrangular building for a capacity of 3,000 worshipers somewhere on the Haram
ash-Sharif. However, Arculf visited Palestine during the reign of Mu'awiyah I,
and it is possible that Mu'awiyah ordered the construction, not Umar. This
latter claim is explicitly supported by the early Muslim scholar al-Muthahhar
bin Tahir.
According to several Muslim scholars, including Mujir ad-Din, al-Suyuti, and
al-Muqaddasi, the mosque was reconstructed and expanded by the caliph Abd
al-Malik in 690 along with the Dome of the Rock. Guy le Strange claims that Abd
al-Malik used materials from the destroyed Church of Our Lady to build the
mosque and points to possible evidence that substructures on the southeast
corners of the mosque are remains of the church. In planning his magnificent
project on the Temple Mount, which in effect would turn the entire complex into
the Haram al-Sharif ("the Noble Sanctuary"), Abd al-Malik wanted to
replace the slipshod structure described by Arculf with a more sheltered
structure enclosing the qibla, a necessary element in his grand scheme.
However, the entire Haram al-Sharif was meant to represent a mosque. How much
he modified the aspect of the earlier building is unknown, but the length of
the new building is indicated by the existence of traces of a bridge leading
from the Umayyad palace just south of the western part of the complex. The
bridge would have spanned the street running just outside the southern wall of
the Haram al-Sharif to give direct access to the mosque. Direct access from
palace to mosque was a well-known feature in the Umayyad period, as evidenced
at various early sites. Abd al-Malik shifted the central axis of the mosque
some 40 meters (130 ft) westward, in accord with his overall plan for the
Haram al-Sharif. The earlier axis is represented in the structure by the niche
still known as the "mihrab of 'Umar." In placing emphasis on the Dome
of the Rock, Abd al-Malik had his architects align his new al-Aqsa Mosque
according to the position of the Rock, thus shifting the main north–south axis
of the Noble Sanctuary, a line running through the Dome of the Chain and the
Mihrab of Umar.
In contrast, Creswell, while referring to the Aphrodito Papyri, claims that
Abd al-Malik's son, al-Walid I, reconstructed the Aqsa Mosque over a period of
six months to a year, using workers from Damascus. Most scholars agree that the
mosque's reconstruction was started by Abd al-Malik, but that al-Walid oversaw
its completion. In 713–14, a series of earthquakes ravaged Jerusalem,
destroying the eastern section of the mosque, which was subsequently rebuilt
during al-Walid's rule. In order to finance its reconstruction, al-Walid had
gold from the dome of the Rock minted to use as money to purchase the
material.The Umayyad-built al-Aqsa Mosque most likely measured 112 x 39 meters.
Architecture
The rectangular al-Aqsa Mosque and its precincts are 144,000 square metres
(1,550,000 sq ft), although the mosque itself is about 35,000 square
metres (380,000 sq ft) and could hold up to 5,000 worshippers.It is
272 feet (83 m) long, 184 feet (56 m) wide.
Al-Aqsa's dome is one of the few domes to be built in front of the mihrab
during the Umayyad and Abbasid periods, the others being the Umayyad Mosque in
Damascus (715) and the Great Mosque at Sousse (850). The interior of the dome
is painted with 14th-century-era decorations. During the 1969 burning, the
paintings were assumed to be irreparably lost, but were completely
reconstructed using the trateggio technique, a method that uses fine
vertical lines to distinguish reconstructed areas from original ones.
Minarets
The mosque has four minarets on the southern, northern and western sides.
The first minaret, known as al-Fakhariyya Minaret, was built in 1278 on the
southwestern corner of the mosque, on the orders of the Mamluk sultan Lajin. It
was named after Fakhr al-Din al-Khalili, the father of Sharif al-Din Abd
al-Rahman who supervised the building's construction. It was built in the
traditional Syrian style, with a square-shaped base and shaft, divided by
moldings into three floors above which two lines of muqarnas decorate the muezzin's
balcony. The niche is surrounded by a square chamber that ends in a
lead-covered stone dome.
The second, known as the Ghawanima minaret, was built at the northwestern
corner of the Noble Sanctuary in 1297–98 by architect Qadi Sharaf al-Din
al-Khalili, also on the orders of the Sultan Lajin. Six stories high, it is the
tallest minaret of the Noble Sanctuary. The tower is almost entirely made of
stone, apart from a timber canopy over the muezzin's balcony. Because of
its firm structure, the Ghawanima minaret has been nearly untouched by
earthquakes. The minaret is divided into several stories by stone molding and stalactite
galleries. The first two stories are wider and form the base of the tower. The
additional four stories are surmounted by a cylindrical drum and a bulbous
dome. The stairway is externally located on the first two floors, but becomes
an internal spiral structure from the third floor until it reaches the muezzin's
balcony.
In 1329, Tankiz—the Mamluk governor of Syria—ordered the construction of a
third minaret called the Bab al-Silsila Minaret located on the western border
of the al-Aqsa Mosque. This minaret, possibly replacing an earlier Umayyad
minaret, is built in the traditional Syrian square tower type and is made
entirely out of stone. Since the 16th-century, it has been tradition that the
best muezzin ("reciter") of the adhan (the call to
prayer), is assigned to this minaret because the first call to each of the five
daily prayers is raised from it, giving the signal for the muezzins of
mosques throughout Jerusalem to follow suit.The last and most notable minaret was built in 1367, and is known as Minarat
al-Asbat. It is composed of a cylindrical stone shaft (built later by the Ottomans),
which springs up from a rectangular Mamluk-built base on top of a triangular
transition zone.The shaft narrows above the muezzin's balcony, and is
dotted with circular windows, ending with a bulbous dome. The dome was
reconstructed after the Jordan Valley earthquake of 1927.There are no minarets in the eastern portion of the mosque. However, in
2006, King Abdullah II of Jordan announced his intention to build a fifth
minaret overlooking the Mount of Olives. The King Hussein Minaret is planned to
be the tallest structure in the Old City of Jerusalem.
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