Masjid Mahabat Khan I Peshawar I Muslims Were Hanged Here I Emblem Of Mughal Era I English Subtitles

Описание к видео Masjid Mahabat Khan I Peshawar I Muslims Were Hanged Here I Emblem Of Mughal Era I English Subtitles

#peshawar #mosquesofworld #mughalarchitecture
Masjid Mahabat Khan I Peshawar I Muslims Were Hanged Here I Emblem Of Mughal Era I English Subtitles I Peshawar # 5

Special Thanks: Directorate of Archaeology and Museums
Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Videography: Nematullah
Music: Binu Kumar, Kerala, India
@SoundSFX

The Mahabat Khan Mosque, sometimes spelt Mohabbat Khan Mosque, is a 17th-century Mughal-era mosque in Peshawar, Pakistan. The mosque was built in 1630, and named after the Mughal governor of Peshawar, Nawab Mohabat Khan Kamboh, father of Nawab Khairandesh Khan Kamboh. The mosque's white marble façade is considered to be one of Peshawar's most iconic sights.

The mosque was built by the Mughals, on what was the highest point in the old city.

The minarets of the Mohabbat Khan Mosque were frequently used in Sikh times for hanging prisoners. Five people per day were hanged from the minarets, `as a substitute for the gallows’. Following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, refugee tribal elders would congregate in the mosque in order to forge unity amongst Afghans against the Soviets.

The mosque is 30,155 square feet in size. Its open courtyard has a centrally-located ablution pool and a single row of rooms lining the exterior walls.

The prayer hall occupies the west side. The hall is flanked by two tall minarets, which are divided into three sections. The façade of the prayer hall is also capped by 6 smaller decorative minarets that flank the mosque's 5 arched entryways, with an additional 2 minarets flanking the set of 6. The prayer hall is capped by 3 fluted domes. The roofline rises from the outer edges, towards the center by a series of four small incremental height increases. The roofline is embellished with numerous merlons. The top of the mosque's white marble façade is capped by cavettos, or concave molding.

5 arched portals offer entry into the main prayer hall. The central arch is the tallest, and features cusped arches typical of the Mughal style. The central arch is flanked by two slightly shorter un-cusped arches, that are designed in the Persian and Central Asian style. These arches are flanked by a smaller arch decorated in a similar style, and row of 7 small arched portals are found above the tip of each arch. The three central arched portals are embellished with muqarnas above the row of 7 mini-arched portals, while the outermost arches are instead decorated with ghalib kari, or a network of ribs made of stucco and plaster that are applied to curved surfaces in the archways for decorative purposes. Archways into the mosque are also flanked by vegetal motifs along their upper curves, which unlike the green motifs at Badshahi Mosque, are multi-coloured.

Both the interior and exterior feature panels are embellished with floral motifs and Quranic calligraphy. The interior of the prayer hall is sheltered beneath the three low fluted domes and is eloquently painted with floral and geometric designs.

Many parts of the mosque are very dilapidated and in some places it is badly affected. Earlier it was with the Awqaf Department but now its repair, restoration and renovation work has been entrusted to the Department of Archaeology, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which has been engaged in it for two years.

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