Haydar-Khana Mosque

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Haydar-Khana_Mosque an entity of type: Thing

جامع الحيدرخانة من مساجد بغداد القديمة والتراثية ويقع في شارع الرشيد، في محلة الحيدرخانة، وبناهُ الخليفة العباسي أحمد الناصر لدين الله وجدده داود باشا (والي بغداد) العثماني. rdf:langString
The Haydar Khana Mosque (Arabic: جامع الحيدرخانة) is a historic mosque in Baghdad, Iraq, built by Al-Nasir during the Abbasid Caliphate. The mosque is situated in Al Rasheed Street, the name of the mosque was attributed to Haydar Pasha Jalabi bin Muhammad Jalabi Shahbandar, who is buried in the same place along with some members of his family. The mosque was later reconstructed and expanded during 1819-1827 by the Wazir of Baghdad Dawud Pasha, the last wali of the Mamluk dynasty in Iraq. Dawud Pasha established the madrasa in the same place, known as Madrasa al-Dawudia. There is also an attached library. rdf:langString
rdf:langString جامع الحيدرخانة
rdf:langString Haydar-Khana Mosque
rdf:langString Haydar-Khana Mosque
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xsd:integer 56210703
xsd:integer 1072397692
xsd:double 1.4
rdf:langString Location in Baghdad
xsd:integer 1
xsd:integer 240
rdf:langString Iraq Baghdad
rdf:langString
rdf:langString جامع الحيدرخانة
rdf:langString ara
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rdf:langString جامع الحيدرخانة من مساجد بغداد القديمة والتراثية ويقع في شارع الرشيد، في محلة الحيدرخانة، وبناهُ الخليفة العباسي أحمد الناصر لدين الله وجدده داود باشا (والي بغداد) العثماني.
rdf:langString The Haydar Khana Mosque (Arabic: جامع الحيدرخانة) is a historic mosque in Baghdad, Iraq, built by Al-Nasir during the Abbasid Caliphate. The mosque is situated in Al Rasheed Street, the name of the mosque was attributed to Haydar Pasha Jalabi bin Muhammad Jalabi Shahbandar, who is buried in the same place along with some members of his family. The mosque was later reconstructed and expanded during 1819-1827 by the Wazir of Baghdad Dawud Pasha, the last wali of the Mamluk dynasty in Iraq. Dawud Pasha established the madrasa in the same place, known as Madrasa al-Dawudia. There is also an attached library. Reconstruction and maintenance were carried out in 1827 during the reign of the Ottoman Sultan Mahmud Khan bin Abdul-Hamid, again in 1890 by the Ottoman emir Abdul-Hamid Al-Thani. During this time, an attached water shop which faced the nearby Souq Haydar-Khana was demolished. During the 1920s, the mosque was utilized as an assembly place for revolutionaries who carried out numbers of revolutions throughout the decade. Haydar-Khana Mosque is considered one of the finest examples of the Ottoman constructions in Baghdad. The mosque is square-shaped, and the three doors are made of marble. Inside the mosque, there are mushollas (prayer space) for summer and winter, and the winter musholla is topped by the blue dome with two smaller domes and a minaret surrounding it.
xsd:integer 3
rdf:langString Active
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rdf:langString Mosque and madrasa
rdf:langString Sunni Islam an Shia Islam
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