Tower near to, or built into, the structures of a
mosque, which is used by the muezzin to call out the
adhan in order to make people to come to prayers in
Islam.
The earliest mosques were built without minarets, and
the action of adhan could be performed in many other
locations. The hadiths tell us that the Muslim community
of Madina called out to prayers from the roof of the
house of Muhammad, a house that doubled as a house for
prayers.
First around 80 years after Muhammad's death did the
first minarets we know of appear. This happened in
places as far between as Kairouan in Tunisia and
Damascus in Syria. It is good reason to believe that the
Great Mosque of Damascus, built in 705, was inspired by
the churches of the city, yet the Muslim minaret served
its own functions, continuing the old traditions from
the house of Muhammad.
Minaret are now very much symbols of Islam, even if they
technically are bid'a. Minarets are often adorned, high
and striving to be as slim and elegant as possible.
Modern minarets are often giving even more room for
artistic achievements than in earlier times. The ground
floor of minarets are always fitted into a square, with
the higher parts of the minaret being everything from
square to round — many are even octagonal. On top there
is a tiny room from where the muezzin either is or where
the loudspeakers are. This room is covered with a
pointed roof.
Early wahhabism outlawed minarets, a regulation imposed
for only very short time. The Mosque of the Prophet in
Madina has a record 10 minarets, lying right in the
state of the wahhabi movment.
1 comment:
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