Common Types of Mosque Architecture:
Since the 7th century, mosques have been built around the globe. While there are many different types of mosque architecture, three basic forms can be defined.
Since the 7th century, mosques have been built around the globe. While there are many different types of mosque architecture, three basic forms can be defined.
I. The hypostyle mosque:
It makes sense that the first place of worship for muslims,
the house of the Prophet Muhammad, inspired the earliest type of mosque -
the hypostyle mosque. This type spread widely throughout Islamic lands.
The Great Mosque of Kairouan, Tunisia, is an archetypal
example of the hypostyle mosque. The mosque was built in the ninth century
by Ziyadat Allah, the third ruler of the Aghlabid dynasty, an offshoot of the
Abbasid Empire. It is a large, rectangular stone mosque with a hypostyle
(supported by columns) hall and a large inner sahn (courtyard). The
three-tiered minaret is in a style known as the Syrian bell-tower, and may have
originally been based on the form of ancient Roman lighthouses. The interior of
the mosque features the forest of columns that has come to define the hypostyle
type.
The mosque was built on a former Byzantine site, and the
architects repurposed older materials, such as the columns—a decision that was
both practical and a powerful assertion of the Islamic conquest of Byzantine
lands. Many early mosques like this one made use of older architectural
materials (called spolia), in a similarly symbolic way.
On right hand side of mosque’s mihrab is the maqsura, a
special area reserved for the ruler found in some, but not all, mosques. This
mosque’s maqsura is the earliest extant example, and its minbar (pulpit) is the
earliest dated minbar known to scholars. Both are carved from teak wood that
was imported from Southeast Asia. This prized wood was shipped from Thailand to
Baghdad where it was carved, then carried on camel back from Iraq to Tunisia,
in a remarkable display of medieval global commerce.
The hypostyle plan was used widely in Islamic lands prior to
the introduction of the four-iwan plan in the twelfth century (see next
section). The hypostyle plan’s characteristic forest of columns was used in
different mosques to great effect. One of the most famous examples is the Great
Mosque of Cordoba, which uses bi-color, two-tier arches that emphasize the
almost dizzying optical effect of the hypostyle hall.
II. The four-iwan mosque:
Just as the hypostyle hall defined much of mosque
architecture of the early Islamic period; the 11th century shows the emergence
of new form: the four-iwan mosque. An iwan is a vaulted space that opens on one
side to a courtyard. The iwan developed in pre-Islamic Iran where it was used
in monumental and imperial architecture. Strongly associated with Persian
architecture, the iwan continued to be used in monumental architecture in the
Islamic era.
In 11th century Iran, hypostyle mosques started to be
converted into four-iwan mosques, which, as the name indicates, incorporate
four iwans in their architectural plan.
The Great Mosque of Isfahan reflects this broader
development. The mosque began its life as a hypostyle mosque, but was modified
by the Seljuqs of Iran after their conquest of the city of Isfahan in the 11th
century.
Like a hypostyle mosque, the layout is arranged around a
large open courtyard. However, in the four-iwan mosque, each wall of the
courtyard is punctuated with a monumental vaulted hall, the iwan. This mosque
type, which became widespread in the 12th century, has maintained its
popularity to the present.
Though it originated in Iran, the four-iwan plan would
become the new plan for mosques all over the Islamic word, used widely from
India to Cairo and replacing the hypostyle mosque in many places.
III. The centrally-planned mosque:
While the four-iwan plan was used for mosques across the
Islamic world, the Ottoman Empire was one of the few places in the central
Islamic lands where the four-iwan mosque plan did not dominate. The Ottoman
Empire was founded in 1299. However, it did not become a major force until the
15th century, when Mehmed II conquered Constantinople, the capital of the late
Roman (Byzantine) Empire since the 4th century. Renamed Istanbul, the city
straddles the European and Asian continents, and, having been a Christian
capital for over a thousand years, had a wholly different cultural and
architectural heritage than Iran. The Ottoman architects were strongly
influenced by Hagia Sophia in Istanbul, the greatest of all Byzantine churches
and one that features a monumental central dome high over its large nave.
Many Ottoman mosques in the late 15th and early 16th
centuries referenced Hagia Sophia’s dome; however, it was not until the
masterful work of Mimar Sinan, the greatest Ottoman, if not Islamic, architect,
that the domes of Ottoman mosques competed with and arguably surpassed that of
Hagia Sophia. Sinan experimented with the central plan in a series of mosques
in Istanbul, achieving what he considered his masterpiece in the Mosque of
Selim II, in Edirne, Turkey. Built for Selim II, son of Suleyman during the
golden age of the Ottoman Empire, it is considered the greatest masterpiece of
Ottoman architecture. It represents a culmination of years of experimentation
with the centrally-planned Ottoman mosque.
Sinan himself boasted that his dome was higher and wider
than that of the Hagia Sophia, highlighting the sense of competition with the
earlier Byzantine building. In the Selim Mosque, Sinan distilled previous ideas
about the central plan into a simple and perfect design. The interior octagonal
space was made more spacious by 8 massive piers that pushed back into the
walls, and a rhythmic harmony was created through apertures of small and large
arches framed by joggled voussoirs, filling the large space with light and
color.
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| Hagia Sophia |
Mosque architecture around the world:
The three mosque types described above are the most common,
and most historically significant, in the Islamic world. Despite their common
features, such as mihrabs and minarets, one can see that diverse regional
styles account for dramatic differences in the colors, materials, and the overall
decoration of mosques. The bright blue and white tiled mihrabs of
fourteenth-century Iran are a world apart from the muted colors and stone inlay
of an Egyptian mihrab of the same century.
Even more regional differences appear when one looks beyond
the central Islamic lands to the architecture of Muslims living in places like
China, Africa, and Indonesia, where local materials and regional traditions,
sometimes with little influence from the architectural heritage of the central
Islamic lands, influenced mosque architecture.
The minaret at Kudus, Indonesia, for instance, reflects the
influence of Hindu architecture. The Djingarey Berre Mosque of Timbuktu, in
Mali, similarly responds to the pre-Islamic traditions of its own region,
utilizing a unique West African style and using earth as the primary building
material.
Contemporary mosque architecture:
Contemporary mosque architecture often represents a
remarkable blending of styles, drawing from diverse architectural traditions to
create something recognizably “Islamic,” that fulfills all the architectural
requirements of a communal mosque and is contemporary in style. In Pakistan,
the King Faisal Mosque, 1986 blends contemporary architecture with visual
references to traditional forms. The building is strikingly modern, yet plays
with the form of the tent structures of Bedouin nomads. This large mosque also
incorporates Ottoman-influenced pencil-thin minarets into its modern design.
https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/art-islam/beginners-guide-islamic/a/common-types-of-mosque-architecture
https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/art-islam/beginners-guide-islamic/a/common-types-of-mosque-architecture

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