- Al-Nuqtah Mosque
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al-Nuqtah Mosque
مسجد النقطةMosque with the blood of Husayn ibn ‘Alī
Basic information Location Aleppo, Syria Geographic coordinates 36°11′43″N 37°07′58″E / 36.19528°N 37.13278°ECoordinates: 36°11′43″N 37°07′58″E / 36.19528°N 37.13278°E Affiliation Shia Islam Architectural description Architectural type Mosque The Masjid al-Nuqtah (Arabic: مسجد النقطة - Mosque of the Drop [of the blood of Husayn]) is a mosque located on Mount Jawshan in Aleppo, Syria. The main feature of the mosque is a stone believed to be stained with the blood of Husayn ibn ‘Alī by Shī‘ah Muslims.[1]
Also located near this mosque on Mount Jawshan, is a shrine known as Mashad al-Siqt[2][3] (Arabic: مشهد السقط - Place of miscarriage). As the prisoners of Karbalā were passing through Aleppo, one of wives of Husayn had a miscarriage.[2] The still-born child was named Muhsin,[3] and buried at this place.
Contents
Historical Accounts
The prisoners of Karbalā were taken through many cities on their way to Damascus on orders from Yazīd.[4] As they were nearing Aleppo, a Christian monk who lived there could see light emanating from the head of Husayn, upwards to the sky.[5] When the caravan stopped for rest, the monk approached them and asked if he could take the head for the night in exchange for 10,000 dirhams that he had with him.[5] When they agreed, the monk took the head and placed it on a stone, whereon blood from the head fell onto it. In the morning he returned the head and professed Islam.[5] This version of events can be found written on a plaque within the mosque itself.
Beliefs and practices Succession of Ali
Imamate of the Family
Mourning of Muharram
Intercession · Ismah
The Occultation · ClergyViews The Qur'an · Sahaba
Mu'awiya I · Abu Bakr
Umar · GhulatHoly days Ashura · Arba'een · Mawlid
Eid ul-Fitr · Eid al-Adha
Eid al-Ghadeer
Eid al-MubahilaHistory Twelver · Ismāʿīlī · Zaidi
The verse of purification
Mubahala · Two things
Khumm · Fatimah's house
First Fitna · Second Fitna
The Battle of Karbala
PersecutionAhl al-Kisa Muhammad · Ali · Fatimah
Hasan · HusseinSome companions Salman the Persian
Miqdad ibn Aswad
Abu Dharr al-Ghifari
Ammar ibn Yasir
Bilal ibn RabahOther versions of the story
- Other Shia narrations relate that when the prisoners of Karbalā were passing through Aleppo, the head of Husayn was placed upon a rock. When blood from the head fell onto the rock, more blood began gushing forth from the rock.[1]
- Sunni sources narrate that a shepherd had a dream wherein he was instructed to build a mosque in honour of Husayn, at the place where one of his goats had its foot sunken into rock. When the shepherd awoke and pulled the goat free from the rock, a river of water began to gush forth.[6]
Artifacts of the mosque
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A plaque within the mosque suggests that the site was converted from a monastery in 944 C.E.
Recent history
The mosque suffered an explosion in 1920 when King Faisal ordered his men to store gun-powder in the mosque.[7] Restorations to the mosque began forty years later, and were completed by the 1970s.[8] The current roof of the mosque was built in 1991.[9]
See also
- Holiest sites in Islam (Shia)
- ‘Āshūrā'
- Battle of Karbalā
- Husayn ibn ‘Alī
- ‘Alī Zaynul ‘Ābidīn
- Zaynab
- Umm Kulthūm
- ‘Abbās
- ‘Alī al-Akbar
- ‘Alī al-Asghar
- Qāsim
- Sukayna
References
- ^ a b Qummi, Shaykh Abbas (2005). "3". Nafasul Mahmoom. Ansariyan Publications. p. 362.
- ^ a b Sachedina, Abdulaziz Abdulhussein (1998). The Just Ruler in Shi'ite Islam. Oxford University Press US. p. 13.
- ^ a b Qummi, Shaykh Abbas (2005). "3". Nafasul Mahmoom. Ansariyan Publications. p. 364.
- ^ Jalali, Ali Hussain (2002). "7". Karbala and Ashura. Ansariyan Publications. p. 125.
- ^ a b c Qummi, Shaykh Abbas (2005). "3". Nafasul Mahmoom. Ansariyan Publications. pp. 359–360.
- ^ Tabbaa, Yasser (1997). Constructions of power and piety in medieval Aleppo. Penn State Press. p. 111. "story narrated from Ibn Shaddād"
- ^ Watenpaugh, Heghnar Zeitlian (2004). The image of an Ottoman city. BRILL. p. 128.
- ^ Constructions of power and piety in medieval Aleppo. pp. 110–111.
- ^ Constructions of power and piety in medieval Aleppo. p. 111.
Mosques in Syria Adiliyah Mosque • Aqsab Mosque • Darwish Pasha Mosque • Great Mosque of Aleppo • Great Mosque of Hama • Great Mosque of Maarrat al-Numan • Great Mosque of al-Nuri • Great Mosque of Raqqah • Hanabila Mosque • Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque • Khusruwiyah Mosque • Murad Pasha Mosque • Al-Nuqtah Mosque • Nabi Habeel Mosque • Naissa Mosque • Nur al-Din Mosque • Al-Omari Mosque • Saffahiyah Mosque • Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque • Sayyidah Zaynab Mosque • Sinan Pasha Mosque • Tekkiye Mosque • Umayyad Mosque • Yalbugha MosqueCategories:- Ziyarat
- Arabic architecture
- Shi'a mosques
- Shi'a Islam in Syria
- Shrines
- Twelvers
- Islamic architecture
- Islamic holy places
- Mosques in Aleppo
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