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Showing posts with label Bangladesh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bangladesh. Show all posts

Historic Mosque City of Bagerhat Bangladesh

The historic city of Khalifatabad is an outstanding example of an architectural ensemble which illustrates a significant stage in human history. Situated in the suburbs of Bagerhat, at the meeting point of the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers, this ancient city was founded by the Turkish general Ulugh Khan Jahan in the 15th century. In this local capital of 50 km2 along the Bhairab River, 360 mosques, public buildings, mausoleums, bridges, roads, water tanks and other public buildings were built from baked brick. Shait Gumbad Mosque and Khan Jahan's Mausoleum are just two examples of these historic buildings.

Historic Mosque City of Bagerhat
Continent: Asia
Country: Bangladesh
Category: Cultural
Criterion: (IV)
Date of Inscription: 1985

The Old City of Bagerhat

Today this old city, created within a few years and swallowed up by the jungle after the death of its founder in 1459, is striking because of certain uncommon features. The density of Islamic religious monuments is explained by the piety of Khan Jahan, which is evidenced by the engraved inscription on his tomb. The lack of fortifications is attributable to the possibilities of retreat into the impenetrable swamps of the Sunderbans. The quality of the infrastructures - the supply and evacuation of water, the cisterns and reservoirs, the roads and bridges - all reveal a perfect mastery of the techniques of planning and a will towards spatial organization.

Today, the monuments, which have been partially disengaged from the vegetation, may be divided in two principal zones: to the west around the Mosque of Shait Gumbad and to the east around the Mausoleum of Khan Jahan.

Historic Mosque City of Bagerhat Bangladesh
Historic Mosque City of Bagerhat Bangladesh

Browse Gallery Plus UNESCO Storyline

More than 50 monuments have been catalogued. These include the Mosque of Shait Gumbad renowned for its large prayer room, divided into seven longitudinal naves; the mosques of Singar, Bibi Begni and Chunakkola; the mosques of Reza Khoda, Zindavir and Ranvijoypur. All these monuments are threatened, owing to the extreme salinity of the soil and the atmosphere, made especially vulnerable because brick architecture predominates.

Slideshow for this Heritage Site


Browse All UNESCO World Heritage Sites in . The original UNESCO inscription Here!!!

Baitul Mukarram Mosque

Baitul Mukarram Mosque is the National Mosque of Bangladesh. Located in the heart of Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh.
The mosque was founded in the 1960s. Has a capacity of 30,000 people, and being 10. The biggest mosque in the world, but still get too full of mosques every Muslim worship. Because of this, the government of Bangladesh has decided to add an extension (dilation) of the mosque.