Makkah Masjid, Hyderabad
Mecca Masjid (Arabic: and Urdu: مکہ مسجد,
Telugu: మక్కా మసీదు), also Makkah
Masjid, is one of the oldest mosques in Hyderabad, Telangana
in India, And it is one of the largest masajids in India. Makkah Masjid is a listed
heritage building in the old city of Hyderabad,
close to the historic landmarks of Chowmahalla Palace,
Laad Bazaar, and Charminar.
Muhammad Quli Qutb
Shah, the fifth ruler of the Qutb Shahi dynasty,
commissioned bricks to be made from the soil brought from Mecca,
the holiest site of Islam, and used them in the construction of the
central arch of the mosque, thus giving the mosque its name. It formed the
centerpiece around which the city was planned by Muhammad Quli Qutub
Shah.[2]
History
and construction
Makkah Masjid was built during the
reign of Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah, the 5th Qutb Shahi Sultan of Golconda (now Hyderabad). The three arched
facades have been carved from a single piece of granite, which took five years
to quarry. More than 8,000 workers were employed to build the mosque. Muhammad
Quli Qutb Shah personally laid the foundation stone. The construction was later
completed by Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb after conquering Hyderabad.
Jean-Baptiste
Tavernier, the French explorer, in his travelogue observed;
"It is about 50 years since
they began to build a splendid pagoda in the town which will be the grandest in
all India when it is completed. The size of the stone is the subject of special
accomplishment, and that of a niche, which is its place for prayer, is an
entire rock of such enormous size that they spent five years in quarrying it,
and 500 to 600 men were employed continually on its work. It required still
more time to roll it up on to conveyance by which they brought it to the
pagoda; and they took 1400 oxen to draw it."[3]
Mecca Masjid frontage
Makkah Masjid minaret
Graves in the Makkah Masjid
Architecture
and design
The main hall of the mosque is 75 feet high, 220 feet wide and 180 feet long,
enough to accommodate 10,000 worshipers at a time. Fifteen arches support the
roof of the main hall, five on each of the three sides. A wall rises on the
fourth side to provide Mihrab.
At the peak of the minarets flanking
the mosque is an arched gallery, and above that a smallish dome and a spire.
Inscriptions from the Qur'an adorn many of the
arches and doors. The main structure of the mosque is sandwiched between two
massive octagonal columns made out of a single piece of granite. The cornices
running around the entire mosque structure and the floral motifs and friezes
over the arches remind the tourist of the great attention paid to detail in
Qutub Shahi architecture. They have a close resemblance to the arches at Charminar and Golkonda Fort.
On the four sides of the roof on the
main mosque, the ramparts are made of granite planks in the shape of inverted
conches perched on pedestals. From the cornice of the mosque, its minarets are
not as high as the minarets on the mazaar (Nizams tombs) haven from their cornice. The octagonal columns
have arched balconies on level with the roof of the mosque with an awning for a
canopy, above which the column continues upwards till it is crowned by a dome
and spire.
Mecca Masjid street view from
Charminar
Tombs
The entrance courtyard it is best of
the mosque, a rectangular, arched and canopied building houses the marble
graves of Asaf Jahi rulers. This structure came up during the rule of the Asaf
Jah rulers. It contains the tombs of the Nizams and their family.
At both ends of this resting place
for the Asaf Jahs and very much a part of it, are two rectangular blocks with
four minarets each. These minarets have elegant and circular balconies with low
ornamental walls and arches. Above them is an octagonal inverted platter from
which the rest of the minaret soars till it is arrested by a dome and a spire.
Maintenance
issue
The Makkah Masjid is a listed
heritage building, however, lack of maintenance and growing pollution has
withered and cracked the structure. It received a chemical wash in 1995. To
prevent further damage, the Andhra Pradesh government made Charminar a
traffic-free zone in August 2001.
Legends
On the edge of the pond are two
stone and slab benches, whoever sits on them, according to legend, returns to
sit on them again.
A room in the courtyard is believed
to house a hair of the Islamic prophet Muhammed.
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