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Mecca:
The holiest Islamic city in Arabia and the birthplace of the Prophet
Muhammad, where the Ka`ba is located (date of building
unknown). |
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Interior
view of the prayer hall of the Mosque of `Amru
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The Elements
of a Mosque:
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The
Hypostyle Mosque:
Mosque in which the prayer hall is formed of rows of vertical supports
that can multiply indefinitely. It was the dominant type in the early
Islamic period and may have started with the Mosque of the Prophet
in Medina (begun in 622) whose prayer hall was a hypostyle supported
on palm tree trunks. |
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Qibla:
The direction of Mecca toward which Muslims are required to face when
they pray |
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Mihrab:
A recess, mostly in the form of arched niche, in the qibla wall, facing
the direction toward Mecca. |
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Minbar:
A pulpit near the mihrab, from which the prayer leader gives the sermon
on Fridays. |
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Minaret:
A tower, circular, octagonal, or square in section, built next to
or in a mosque, from which the Muslims are called to prayer. |
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Nilometr
at Rawda Island:
A water intake built 716, and rebuilt 861, was used to measure the
annual flood level in order to assess the taxes to be levied on crops.
It consists of a graded marble column in the middle of a well connected
to the Nile through tunnels dug on three levels topped by a light
conical dome. The walls of the well are decorated with beautifully
carved Kufic Qur'anic inscriptions referring to water, prosperity,
and vegetation, and therefore playing an iconographic role in this
crucial structure for the understanding of the economic and social
history of Egypt. |
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Quraysh:
The tribe of the Prophet and inhabitants of Mecca
who controlled the Ka`ba and the lucrative north-south trade between
Yemen and the Byzantine empire. |
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`Ali:
Cousin of the Prophet and second Muslim. He later became Muhammad's
son-in-law and fourth successor (caliph). |
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Medina:
Formerly Yathrib, the capital of the Prophet where
the prototypical mosque, the Mosque of the Prophet, was founded in
the year 1 Hegire (or Immigration)/ 622 A.D. |
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`Amru
ibn al-`As:
The Muslim general and statesman who conquered Egypt in 640-41. |
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Babylon:
The Roman fortress
which stood on the eastern bank of the Nile and guarded the head of
the delta. |
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Fustat:
The first capital of Islamic Egypt established in 642 by `Amru to
the south, east, and north of Babylon and probably named after the
Roman military term fossatum, or encampment. |
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Khitta:
A parcel of land in a Misr given to a
group from the various tribes that constituted the Islamic army to
build their dwellings on. |
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