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Minaret

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A beautiful minaret at the Taj Mahal in Agra, India.

A minaret is a special kind of tower that is often built next to or as part of a mosque. These tall towers have many purposes. One of their main jobs is to help share the Muslim call to prayer with the community. A person called a muezzin stands in the tower and announces the time for prayer to everyone nearby.

Minaret at the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus

Besides calling people to prayer, minarets also act as important landmarks. They show that a mosque is nearby and stand as proud symbols of the Islamic faith in the area. Minarets come in many different shapes and sizes. Some are short and wide, while others rise very high and thin into the sky, each style adding its own beauty to the landscape.

Etymology

Two Arabic words describe the minaret tower: manāra and manār. The English word "minaret" comes from manāra, through the Turkish word minare.

Originally, manāra meant a "lamp stand" and is related to the Hebrew word for menorah. Both words come from the Arabic root n-w-r, which relates to "light". Manār also meant a "place of light" or a "sign" to guide people, and both words could refer to a lighthouse.

Functions

An orientalist depiction of the muezzin's call to prayer from the balcony of a minaret, 1878. Usually only one muezzin chants the azan from the balcony, back straight and not leaning on the railing.

A minaret is a tall tower often built next to mosques. Its main job is to help the person who gives the call to prayer, called a muezzin, be heard by everyone. This call happens five times a day: at dawn, noon, mid-afternoon, sunset, and night. In many modern mosques, the call is made inside and sent to speakers on the minaret.

Minarets also show that a place follows Islam and help people recognize mosques. They were also a way for leaders to show their importance.

Construction and design

Minarets come in many shapes and sizes, depending on where they are built. They can be circular, square, or octagonal. Inside, there are stairs or ramps that spiral up. Some minarets have several narrow stairways inside each other so many people can move up and down safely. At the top, there is often a balcony where the call to prayer is made. Some minarets have balconies along their height. The top of a minaret may have a lantern-like shape, a small dome, a pointed roof, or a curved stone top, finished with a decorative metal piece.

Minarets are made from whatever building materials are available in the region. In some tall, thin minarets from the Ottoman style, hot iron was poured into spaces inside the stones to help hold them together.

Origins

Early mosques did not have minarets. Instead, people called to prayer from smaller structures or rooftops. For example, in Medina, early Muslims used the doorway or roof of Muhammad's house.

Minaret of the Great Mosque of Kairouan in Tunisia, one of the oldest surviving minarets in the world

The exact start of minarets is not fully known. Some older ideas say they came from church steeples in Syria or from ancient ziggurats in Babylonian and Assyrian lands. Recent studies show that the first true minaret towers appeared around the 9th century, under the Abbasids. These early towers were more like symbols than tools for calling to prayer.

The first minaret towers were added to important mosques, like the Great Mosque of Mecca, in the late 8th century. One of the oldest surviving minarets is from the Great Mosque of Kairouan in Tunisia, built in 836. Other early minarets include those from Siraf in Iran and the Great Mosque of Damascus in Syria. These towers grew taller and more elegant over time, becoming common features of mosques by the 11th century.

Regional styles

China

Minaret of the al-Maridani Mosque (1340), the earliest example of a style repeated in later Mamluk minarets

Near the Huaisheng Mosque in Guangzhou is the Tower of Light, called the Guangta minaret. It was built in 1350. This minaret mixes Islamic and Chinese architecture. It has a round shape and inner staircases, like minarets from Iran and Central Asia.

Egypt

Kalyan Minaret (left) in Bukhara (1127)

Minarets in Egypt have changed over time. The minaret of the 9th-century Ibn Tulun Mosque was modeled after spiral minarets from Samarra. The current tower was rebuilt in 1296. During the Fatimid period, most new mosques did not have minarets, except for the Mosque of al-Hakim. It has two special minarets.

Iran, Central Asia, and South Asia

One of the minarets of the Taj Mahal in Agra (1643)

From the 11th and 12th centuries, minarets in Iran had round shafts with square or octagonal bases that narrowed toward the top. This style became common in Central Asia and South Asia. The Kalyan Minaret in Bukhara is known for its brick patterns. The Minaret of Jam in present-day Afghanistan, built around 1175, is tall and decorated. The Qutb Minar in Delhi, built in 1199, follows the same design.

Iraq

Minaret of the Kutubiyya Mosque in Marrakesh (second half of 12th century)

The oldest minarets in Iraq are from the Abbasid period. The Great Mosque of Samarra, built between 848 and 852, has one of the earliest minarets. It is a tall, round brick tower with a spiral staircase. It is the largest early minaret in the world.

Maghreb and al-Andalus

Minarets in the Maghreb and historical al-Andalus usually have square shafts. They have two sections: a tall main shaft and a smaller top section finished with copper or brass spheres. The minaret at the Great Mosque of Kairouan, built in 836, is the oldest in North Africa and has three levels.

Turkey

The Seljuks of Rum built minarets influenced by Iranian styles. Ottoman architecture continued this with tall, slim minarets often topped with a crescent moon. The Üç Şerefeli Mosque in Edirne, finished in 1447, was the first sultanic mosque to have minarets with multiple balconies. The Selimiye Mosque in Edirne, built in 1574, has the tallest Ottoman minarets.

Images

Spiral stone stairs inside a mosque minaret in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
A view of the ramp passage inside the historic Giralda tower.
Intricate stone carvings on the Qutab Minar in Delhi, India.
A tall tower of the Badshahi Mosque in Pakistan, showing beautiful Islamic architecture.
A beautiful crescent moon adorning the roof of a mosque in Istanbul.
A scenic view of Selimiye Mosque, showcasing its impressive architecture and design.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Minaret, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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