Explore Religious Heritage Across Europe

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Fazl Mosque

Fazl Mosque

London, GB

The Fazl Mosque, inaugurated in 1926 in the Southfields district, is London's first purpose-built mosque. It was the international headquarters of the Ahmadiyya Community from 1984 to 2019. It is recognised as a grade II listed building.

London Central Mosque

London Central Mosque

London , GB

London Central Mosque is an Islamic place of worship next to London's Regent's Park.

Jakovali Hassan Mosque

Jakovali Hassan Mosque

Pecs, HU

The Yakovali Hasan Pasa Mosque (Hungarian: Jakovali Hasszan dzsamija, Turkish: Yakovali Hasan Pasa Camii) is a late 16th-century mosque in Pecs, southern Hungary. It was constructed when the region was part of the Turkish Ottoman Empire, around the same time as the main mosque of Pecs, the Mosque of Pasha Qasim (which has since been consecrated as a cathedral). It was named after the local government official who commissioned the mosque, Yakovali Hasan Pasa (Hasan Pasa of Gjakova). It is thus one of the oldest mosques existing in Hungary today. The mosque is still active as a Muslim place of worship, and also houses a small exhibition centre for Turkish handicraft and historical artifacts documenting Hungary's Ottoman past.

Mosque of Pasha Qasim

Mosque of Pasha Qasim

Pécs, HU

The 16th-17th century Pasha Qasim Mosque was built during the Ottoman Empire and is now a cathedral. It is one of the landmarks of the city of Pécs.

Cambridge Central Mosque

Cambridge Central Mosque

, GB

The Cambridge Mosque, built between 2016 and 2019, is Europe's first eco-friendly mosque. Its structure is entirely made of timber and includes photovoltaic cells, an air heat pump, a sedum roof and a rainwater recovery system.

Ferhat Pasha Mosque

Ferhat Pasha Mosque

Banja Luka, BA

The Ferhat Pasha Mosque was built in 1579. It is considered a masterpiece of Islamic architecture and is a national monument in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Destroyed in 1993 during the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, it was rebuilt afterwards.

Dolnjačka Mosque

Dolnjačka Mosque

Derventa, BA

The Dolnjačka Mosque was built between 1570 and 1600. Instead of the original wooden minaret, in 1925, thanks to large financial contributions from citizens, a new brick minaret was built. A major renovation of the mosque was carried out around 1970 and on this occasion, the roof and the mahfili were completely renewed, the mahfili was renovated, the interior plastered surfaces were repaired, the interior decorations were painted, the facade of the mosque and the minaret was rebuilt.

Dizdar Mosque

Jajce, BA

The Dizdar Mosque, or Women's Mosque, was built by Sulejman-beg Kulenović in 1812-13. It belongs to the type of single-storey central mosques without a minaret, with a masonry dome hidden by a tin roof, which is not a common case in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was renovated in 2002 after decades of dilapidation.

Esme Sultanija Mosque

Esme Sultanija Mosque

Jajce, BA

The Esme Sultanija Mosque, or mosque Čaršija, is the only mosque in Bosnia and Herzegovina named after a woman. Esma Sultana was the wife of the Bosnian governor Mehmed Pasha Muhsinovic and built this mosque and two bridges over the Vrbas River. Mehmed Pasha Muhsinović was governor of Bosnia twice - the first time from 1760 to 1763, and the second time from 1770 to 1772.

Great Mosque of Rome

Great Mosque of Rome

Roma, IT

The Great Mosque of Rome, built between 1984 and 1995, is the largest mosque in Italy and the largest in Europe. The work of the architect Paolo Portoghesi is meant as a modern syncretism of Maghreb, Ottoman and Persian mosque architecture. The whole is designed to be integrated in the green environment.

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