Hamza Bey Mosque

The Hamza Bey Mosque is the largest mosque in Sanski Most and the only mosque in Bosnia and Herzegovina with four minarets. It was probably built in the 1550s, rebuilt several times in 1984. During the war, in 1992, the mosque was demolished. A new mosque was founded in July 1997 and opened on 6 August 2000.

About this building

Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Monuments

Visitors information

  • Café within 500m

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons/Zlatno krilo

Ferhat Pasha Mosque

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.

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Christ the Saviour Cathedral, Banja Luka

The first church on the site of today's Cathedral of Christ the Saviour was built during the Ottoman period. It was destroyed after the 1875 uprising against the Turks. After the First World War, a new cathedral was built on this site between 1925 and 1939, but in 1941 it was bombed and its apse was badly damaged. Left in ruins by the communist regime, it was not until 1993 that the cathedral was rebuilt and finally completed in 2009.

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St. Bonaventure's Cathedral, Banja Luka

St. Bonaventure's Cathedral is one of the four Roman Catholic cathedrals in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The first cathedral existed between 1887 and 1969, but an earthquake damaged it and its building had to be completely demolished. The new modernist cathedral built in 1972-1973 is reminiscent of a tent, recalling the Old Testament tent as a place of prayer.