Part of a series on |
Algerian Islamic reference |
---|
This is a list of mosques in Algeria. According to the Ministry of Religious Affairs and Endowment in 2006, there are around 15,000 mosques in Algeria as a whole, of which 450 are in the capital city of Algiers. 90% of which are built after the independence of Algeria in 1962.[1]
Name | Images | Location | Year | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sidi El Haloui | Tlemcen | 1353 | Built by the Marinid Sultan Abou Inane Fares in honor of Abou Abdallah Echoudsy , a qadi of Seville accused of witchcraft and conspiring against the Zayyanid monarch under the Marinid occupation of the city. | |
Sidi Khaled Mosque | Town of Sidi Khaled in Biskra | 1912 | The current structure is a 1917 reconstruction. It is believed to contain the tomb of the pre-Islamic figure, Khalid bin Sinan, who is cited in local traditions as having moved to Algeria. It is currently in a state of disrepair but is still a popular spot for visits from locals. | |
1st November of 1954 Great Mosque | Batna | 2003 | ||
20th August of 1956 Mosque | Ouzellaguen | 2011 | ||
Abdelhamid Ben Badis Mosque | Oran | 2015 | ||
Abdellah Ben Salem Mosque | Oran | 1918 | ||
Ben Farès Mosque | Algiers | 1865 | ||
Al-Aman Mosque | Souk Ahras | 2011 | ||
Ali Bitchin Mosque | Algiers | 1622 | ||
Al-Qods Mosque | Bouira | 1652 | ||
Al-Rahma Mosque, Algiers | Algiers | 1897 | ||
El Barani Mosque | Algiers | 1653 | ||
Bey Mohamed el-Kebir Mosque | Oran | 1792 | ||
Djama’a al-Djedid | Algiers | 1660 | ||
Great Mosque of Algiers | Algiers | 1097[2] | ||
Emir Abdelkader Mosque | Constantine | 1994 | ||
Ghardaia Mosque | Ghardaia | 10th century | ||
Hassan Pasha Mosque | Oran | 1796 | ||
Imam el-Houari Mosque | Oran | 1792-1799 | ||
Jemma Al Djazair | Algiers | 2019 | ||
El Kawthar Mosque | Blida | 1533 | Renovated and expanded in 1981 | |
Ketchaoua Mosque | Algiers | 1612 | ||
Mansourah Mosque | Tlemcen | 1302-1303 | ||
El Mechouar Mosque | Tlemcen | 1310 | ||
Great Mosque of Nedroma | Nedroma | 1145 | ||
El Rahman Mosque | Cherchell | 1574 | ||
Safir Mosque | Algiers | 1534 | ||
Salah Bey Mosque | Annaba | 1791-1792 | ||
Shrine of Sidi Abder Rahman | Algiers | 1471 | Commemorates Sidi Abder Rahman El Thaelebi, a renowned Islamic scholar | |
Sidi Boumediene Mosque | Tlemcen | 1339 | Preserves the tomb of Abu Madyan, an influential Sufi | |
Sidi Ghanim Mosque | Mila | 678[3] | Probably the oldest Mosque in Algeria | |
Sidi Bellahsen Mosque | Tlemcen | 1290 | ||
Sidi Bou Merouane Mosque | Annaba | 1033 | ||
Mausoleum of Sidi M'hamed Bou Qobrine | Algiers | 1791 | Preserves the tomb of Sidi M'hamed Bou Qobrine, the founder of Rahmaniyya Sufi order and one of the seven Patron Saints of Algiers. | |
Sidi Okba Mosque | Sidi Okba | 686[4] | ||
Sidi Ramadan Mosque | Algiers | 1097 | ||
Great Mosque of Tlemcen | Tlemcen | 1136[5][6] | ||
Al-Umma Mosque | Algiers | 1951 |
See also
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mosques in Algeria.
- ↑ 15 ألف مسجد في الجزائر. Albayan. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
- ↑ "Fountain in Mosque of El Kebir, Algiers, Algeria". World Digital Library. 1899. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
- ↑ "Mois du patrimoine : La mosquée de Sidi Ghanem de Mila, une histoire à écrire". www.elmoudjahid.com. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
- ↑ "Sidi 'Uqba (mosque, minaret and tomb)". Museum With No Frontiers. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
- ↑ "Qantara - Great Mosque of Tlemcen". www.qantara-med.org. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
- ↑ Marçais, Georges (1954). L'architecture musulmane d'Occident. Paris: Arts et métiers graphiques.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.