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Great Mosque of Fes el-Jdid

The Great Mosque of Fes el-Jdid is the historic main Friday mosque of Fes el-Jdid, the royal city and Marinid-era citadel of Fes, Morocco. It is believed to have been founded in 1276, around the same time that the city itself was founded, making it the oldest mosque in Fes el-Jdid.[1][2][3]

Great Mosque of Fes el-Jdid
الجامع الكبير (Arabic)
ⵎⴻⵣⴳⵉⴷⴰ ⴰⵎⵇⵔⴰⵏ (Berber)
The minaret of the mosque.
Religion
Sect(Maliki) Sunni
Statusactive
Location
LocationFes, Morocco
Geographic coordinates34°03′26.94″N 4°59′29.86″W / 34.0574833°N 4.9916278°W / 34.0574833; -4.9916278Coordinates: 34°03′26.94″N 4°59′29.86″W / 34.0574833°N 4.9916278°W / 34.0574833; -4.9916278
Architecture
Typemosque
StyleMarinid, Moroccan, Moorish, Islamic
FounderAbu Yusuf Yaqub
Date established1276
Specifications
Minaret(s)1
Minaret height(approx.) 29 m
Materialsbrick, wood

History

The mosque was founded around 1276 by the Marinid sultan Abu Yusuf, at the same time as he founded the new royal city Fes el-Jdid.[3][2][4]: 310  (Fes el-Jdid was created as a fortified palace and administrative city, separate from Fes el-Bali (old Fes), from which the Marinid dynasty ruled over Morocco.[1]) Supervision of the mosque's construction was delegated to a man named Abu Abdallah ibn Abd al-Karim el-Jadudi and to the governor of Meknes, Abu Ali ibn Azraq.[5] One historical chronicle claims that the mosque's construction was funded in part by olive oil production in Meknes and that labour was provided by Christian prisoners captured in al-Andalus (Spain).[5] The mosque's construction was completed in 1278.[5] The mosque's minbar, designed by a craftsman named "Algharnati", was finished in 1279.[5] The mosque's maqsura (wooden screen shielding the sultan during prayers) and the mosque's grand chandelier were installed in 1280.[5] The mosque was only the fourth "Friday mosque" (a grand mosque where Friday sermons took place) to be founded in Fes (the others being the Qarawiyyin Mosque, the Andalusi Mosque, and the Bou Jeloud Mosque), and was meant to serve the new city.[6]: 358 

In 1320 Sultan Abu Sa'id built a madrasa near the mosque, known as the Madrasa Fes Jdid or Madrasa Dar al-Makhzen, however it was never able to compete with the prestige of the madrasas in Fes el-Bali and was later absorbed by the expanding Royal Palace.[1]: 69 [7]: 114  Sultan Abu Inan is widely believed to have been buried in a tomb adjoining the mosque upon his death in 1358, although this is not fully confirmed.[3][2] Abu Inan's burial here marked a shift in the choice of burial sites of the Marinid sultans. Up to that point they had been buried in the necropolis of Chellah but after this they were buried instead on the al-Qula Hill north of Fes (whose ruins are now known as the Marinid Tombs).[8]

An inscription on the mosque also records that it was "completed" by Sultan Abu Faris Abd al-Aziz II in 1395.[3][2][8] Scholars believe it is much more likely that this refers to an embellishment or restoration of the mosque, as the mosque's layout does not suggest it was significantly altered or that construction was interrupted and then completed at a later date.[2][3] The most likely interpretation is that some of the decoration was added or redone at this time. The decoration of the mihrab, for example, is consistent with a late 14th-century style.[2]

There is evidence that the mosque was also significantly restored in the later Alaouite period (late 17th century and after). The anaza of the mosque's courtyard, for example, is dated to 1678–1679 CE (1089 AH) during the reign of Moulay Isma'il, and some of the mosque's decoration might also date from around this period.[9]

Architecture

 
Floor plan of the mosque, with notable elements indicated.

The mosque's overall layout reflects the "T-plan" that became standard in western (Maghrebi) mosques in the Almohad period.[3][4] The building has a rectangular floor plan, measuring about 54 by 34 meters and covering about 2000 square meters.[3][4] The layout includes a vast hypostyle interior prayer space and a large rectangular courtyard (sahn) occupying most of the northern part of the building.

The entrances

The mosque's main entrance is to the north, aligned with the mihrab (see below) at the opposite end of the building and leading into the courtyard.[3] The entrance is doubled: to the left (east) of the main gate is another gate. This resembles the arrangement of the double northern gate of the Qarawiyyin Mosque (named Bab al-Ward and Bab al-Hafa), whereby one gate featured a water channel which allowed visitors to wash their feet as they entered, while the other gate was a regular entrance.[3][2][10] However, it seems likely that in this case the second gate was designed to give direct access to a walled-in gallery section in the northeastern corner of the courtyard which was reserved for women coming to pray.[2][4]

The mosque also had two gates on its eastern side and two more on its western side; on both sides, one gate led into the courtyard and another directly into the prayer hall to the south. On the eastern side of the mosque, the courtyard gate was at some point blocked off by the later construction of houses next to the mosque. Perhaps because of this, the remaining gate was also turned into a double gate with two doorways side by side.[3]

The southern wall of the mihrab also has several doorways that lead to an annex space used by the imam. From here, there was also originally a direct access to one of the courtyards of the Dar al-Makhzen (royal palace and government offices).[3]

The courtyard (sahn)

The main courtyard (sahn) occupied roughly the northern half of the mosque, measuring 24 by 18.6 meters.[3]: 39  Like in other mosques, it has a central water bassin (formerly linked to two other fountains on either side) and is surrounded by arched galleries.[3] The floor is paved with mosaic tiles (zellij).[3] The central arch on the south side of the courtyard, which leads into the central "nave" of the prayer hall on the axis of the mihrab, is framed and surmounted by a tall and ornate portal. The spaces around the arch are decorated with carved stucco and crowned by a carved and painted wooden canopy, which likely date from the 16th or 17th century during the later Alaouite period.[3][9] The arch itself is occupied by an ornate wooden screen known as an anaza; an outdoor or "summer" mihrab for those prayers taking place in the courtyard.[10][3] The anaza has two doors, between which, in the middle, is a decorative composition with a mihrab shape containing a carved inscription in Arabic calligraphy.[3] This feature is reminiscent of an equivalent creation added by the Marinids to the courtyard of the Qarawiyyin Mosque.[10] The current anaza here, however, dates from 1678–1679 CE (1089 AH), during the reign of Sultan Moulay Isma'il. Art historian Xavier Salmon suggests that Moulay Isma'il likely donated the anaza at the same time as he restored or added some of the mosque's decoration, although the later may also date from his brother and predecessor, Moulay Rashid (ruled 1666–1672).[9] By comparison, the inner archway of the central northern gate into the courtyard (directly opposite the anaza), has stucco decoration which seems to preserve more of a Marinid style.[9]

The prayer hall

Like other standard Moroccan mosques, the prayer hall is a vast interior hypostyle space split only by rows of arches running perpendicular to the southern wall, except for an extra row of arches running close to the southern wall and parallel to it.[3] The southern wall is also the qibla wall (the direction of prayer), and is marked by a mihrab (niche symbolizing the qibla) in the middle. Of the aisles between the rows of arches, the center one, aligned with the mihrab, is slightly wider than the others and is emphasized with added stucco decoration on the walls between the arches.[3][2]

The mihrab itself is an alcove in the wall, inside of which is a small cupola of muqarnas (stalactite-like carving). The wall around the mihrab is decorated with stucco carving and topped by windows with intricate stucco screens.[3] The stucco decoration around the arch of the mihrab itself is likely dates from the original Marinid design, but the decoration further above and around this is more likely from the later Alaouite period, in the late 17th or 18th century.[9] The square space formed by the rows of arches intersecting in front of the mihrab is distinguished by more elaborate arches with lobed or lambrequin outlines (a type seen elsewhere in Moroccan and Nasrid architecture) and decorated spandrels.[3] The arch directly in front of the mihrab and across from it has muqarnas-carved intrados. This square space is covered by an ornate wooden cupola carved with geometric patterns and outlined with more muqarnas.[3] The wooden cupola also dates from the late 17th or 18th century, probably at the same time as the Alaouite-period decoration elsewhere in the mosque.[9] This square space is also further marked off from the rest of the mosque by another wooden screen with painted panels and a central door to give access, a feature not typical to most other mosques.[3]

At the northern end of the central aisle, just behind the anaza, is an elaborately ornate ribbed dome, similar to the slightly earlier examples of this type found in front of the mihrabs of the Great Mosque of Taza and the Great Mosque of Tlemcen, ultimately deriving from the domes of the Great Mosque of Cordoba.[3][2][4] The ribs of the dome form a star pattern, at the middle of which is a mini-cupola of muqarnas. Between the ribs are rich arabesques carved in stucco which also form a screen allowing some light in from the outside.[3] The corners of the dome transition into the square space of the walls with the help of muqarnas-carved squinches.[3] Although Georges Marçais assumed it dated to the Marinid period, Xavier Salmon has questioned this, based on inconsistencies in the cupola's decoration, and suggests that it was either created or restored during the Alaouite period, possibly by Moulay Rashid or Moulay Isma'il (who also commissioned the nearby anaza).[9]

The mosque's main chandelier, according to one source, was installed in 1280, weighs 715 pounds, and has 287 candlesticks.[5] It hangs in the central aisle in front of the mihrab, and is considered by some to be one of the best Marinid-era examples of its kind.[3][5]

The library and mausoleum

On the mosque's western side, near its southwestern corner, is a rectangular chamber which is raised above the rest of the mosque and reached via a short staircase from the prayer hall. The chamber has a large arched window looking back into the prayer hall.[3] According to Xavier Salmon, the chamber was originally a bayt al-'itikaf (Arabic: بيت الاعتكاف), a room for spiritual retreat; a feature which became more common in later Saadian mosques in Marrakesh (e.g. the Mouassine Mosque and Bab Doukkala Mosque). In later centuries it was converted into a library, probably on the initiative of Moulay Rashid (in the late 17th century), who may have also redecorated parts of the mosque at the same time.[9]

On the south side of this library, at the far southwestern corner of the mosque, is another annex composed of a rectangular chamber which leads to a square chamber with a dome.[3][2] This domed chamber in turn once led to what appears to have been a tomb chamber located under the library, but which was later walled-up and was only reopened during renovations in 1950.[3][11] The domed chamber is richly decorated with carved stucco and with zellij tile mosaic along its lower walls, and the dome has muqarnas squinches. The small rectangular room preceding it holds four tombs and contains only fragments of its original decoration.[3] This room is also open to the outside of the mosque via an archway window or door.[3]

The tombs in this area unfortunately are carved with Qur'anic verses but some of them do not have any other identifying inscriptions, which has made it difficult to confirm the individuals buried here. In particular, one of the tombs (possibly in the walled-up chamber under the library) is assumed to belong to Sultan Abu Inan, the Marinid ruler who also built the Bou Inania Madrasa in Fes el-Bali (among other works) and died in 1358, but no inscription confirms this.[2][3][8][11] Another unidentified tombstone may belong to an earlier sultan, Abu Sa'id Uthman II, who died in 1331 and was the father of Sultan Abu al-Hassan (and grandfather of Abu Inan).[11] Among the other individuals buried here is a princess named Aisha, daughter of Sultan Abu Faris Abd al-Aziz II, whose tombstone is now held at the Batha Museum.[11]

The minaret

 
The minaret, eastern façade
 
The minaret, northern façade

The minaret rises from the mosque's northwestern corner. Like most Moroccan minarets, it has a square shaft with two sections: a main section rising most of the way, and then a second, much smaller square tower at its summit. The main shaft measures 5.7 meters per side and is 22.8 meters tall (the shaft is about exactly four times as tall as it is wide).[3]: 50  The smaller tower at the top measures 2.9 meters per side and 6.4 meters tall.[3]: 50  Inside the minaret is a staircase that wraps around the central core of the tower and leads to the platform at the top of the main shaft, historically allowing the muezzin to ascend to the top for the call to prayer.[3]

The four facades of the minaret are decorated similarly with darj wa ktaf motifs (Moroccan rhombus-like decorative forms) carved into the brick.[3] Only the eastern side of the minaret has windows (providing light into the staircase). The motif on the northern and southern facades is slightly different from that on the eastern and western facades, in that the top of each rhombus is split by the start of the one above.[3] Except for the southern facade, the bottom of each facade has blind arches that blend into the rest of the motif above.[3] At the top of the main shaft is a wide band of mosaic tilework (zellij) with geometric patterns of radiating, almost circular, stars. Above this, crowning the top of the main shaft, are saw-toothed merlons (also typical of Moroccan architecture) whose surfaces are also covered in mosaic tilework.[3] The small secondary shaft at the top of the minaret has similar decoration as the main shaft. It is topped by a small cupola which in turn is topped by a metal pole holding four bronze spheres of decreasing size.[3]

Adjoining the southern base of the minaret, above the gallery of the courtyard, is a chamber for the muezzin which was likely added after the minaret's original construction.[3] Seen from the courtyard, this chamber is marked by a double-arched window, with an alabaster column between the arches, overshadowed by a carved wooden awning.[3] It was similar in form and purpose to a Dar al-Muwaqqit (such as the one also added to the Qarawiyyin Mosque shortly after[12]: 62 ).[10]

Madrasa of Fes el-Jdid

In 1320 Sultan Abu Sa'id built a madrasa in Fes el-Jdid just south of the Grand Mosque which became known as the Madrasa Fes Jdid or Madrasa Dar al-Makhzen.[1]: 69  This was only the second madrasa built by the Marinids in Fes, the first one having been the Seffarine Madrasa founded in 1271 near the Qarawiyyin Mosque. Shortly after, in 1321, also under Abu Sa'id's reign, the Sahrij Madrasa was built near the al-Andalus Mosque. Accordingly, it is likely that Abu Sa'id desired to create centers of learning around each of Fes's great mosques. However, it does not appear that the Fes el-Jdid madrasa developed into a major center of learning, and instead the most prestigious madrasas remained the al-Qarawiyyin and the other Marinid madrasas later built in Fes el-Bali.[7]: 114  It was later absorbed by the Royal Palace complex when Sultan Moulay Hassan (ruled 1873-1894) expanded the mechouar area of the palace to the northeast, which resulted in the madrasa being cut off from the mosque and integrated into the inner mechouar.[1] The madrasa, likely derelict before then, was renovated and given a minaret, before being renovated again under the French Protectorate some time after 1924.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Le Tourneau, Roger (1949). Fès avant le protectorat: étude économique et sociale d'une ville de l'occident musulman. Casablanca: Société Marocaine de Librairie et d'Édition.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Marçais, Georges (1954). L'architecture musulmane d'Occident. Paris: Arts et métiers graphiques. pp. 268–271, 286–287.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Maslow, Boris (1937). Les mosquées de Fès et du nord du Maroc. Paris: Éditions d'art et d'histoire. pp. 38–53.
  4. ^ a b c d e Kubisch, Natascha (2011). "Maghreb - Architecture" in Hattstein, Markus and Delius, Peter (eds.) Islam: Art and Architecture. h.f.ullmann.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Bressolette, Henri; Delaroziere, Jean (1983). "Fès-Jdid de sa fondation en 1276 au milieu du XXe siècle". Hespéris-Tamuda: 245–318.
  6. ^ Terrasse, Henri (1964). "La mosquée almohade de Bou Jeloud à Fès". Al-Andalus. 29 (2): 355–363.
  7. ^ a b Gaudio, Attilio (1982). Fès: Joyau de la civilisation islamique. Paris: Les Presse de l'UNESCO: Nouvelles Éditions Latines. ISBN 2723301591.
  8. ^ a b c Lintz, Yannick; Déléry, Claire; Tuil Leonetti, Bulle (2014). Maroc médiéval: Un empire de l'Afrique à l'Espagne. Paris: Louvre éditions. pp. 502, 514, 584. ISBN 9782350314907.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h Salmon, Xavier (2021). Fès mérinide: Une capitale pour les arts, 1276-1465. Lienart. pp. 72–91. ISBN 9782359063356.
  10. ^ a b c d Terrasse, Henri (1968). La Mosquée al-Qaraouiyin à Fès; avec une étude de Gaston Deverdun sur les inscriptions historiques de la mosquée. Paris: Librairie C. Klincksieck.
  11. ^ a b c d Bressolette, Henri (2016). "6. Nécropoles mérinides". A la découverte de Fès. L'Harmattan. ISBN 978-2343090221.
  12. ^ Terrasse, Henri (1968). La Mosquée al-Qaraouiyin à Fès; avec une étude de Gaston Deverdun sur les inscriptions historiques de la mosquée. Paris: Librairie C. Klincksieck.
  13. ^ Terrasse, Henri (1962). "La médersa mérinide de Fès Jdid". Al-Andalus. 29: 246–253.

External links

  • Manar al-Athar Digital Photo Archive (includes some pictures inside the mosque)
  • Jami al-Djedid at ArchNet (includes a couple of historic pictures of the mosque, including of the courtyard)

great, mosque, jdid, historic, main, friday, mosque, jdid, royal, city, marinid, citadel, morocco, believed, have, been, founded, 1276, around, same, time, that, city, itself, founded, making, oldest, mosque, jdid, الجامع, الكبير, arabic, ⵎⴻⵣⴳⵉⴷⴰ, ⴰⵎⵇⵔⴰⵏ, berb. The Great Mosque of Fes el Jdid is the historic main Friday mosque of Fes el Jdid the royal city and Marinid era citadel of Fes Morocco It is believed to have been founded in 1276 around the same time that the city itself was founded making it the oldest mosque in Fes el Jdid 1 2 3 Great Mosque of Fes el Jdidالجامع الكبير Arabic ⵎⴻⵣⴳⵉⴷⴰ ⴰⵎⵇⵔⴰⵏ Berber The minaret of the mosque ReligionSect Maliki SunniStatusactiveLocationLocationFes MoroccoGeographic coordinates34 03 26 94 N 4 59 29 86 W 34 0574833 N 4 9916278 W 34 0574833 4 9916278 Coordinates 34 03 26 94 N 4 59 29 86 W 34 0574833 N 4 9916278 W 34 0574833 4 9916278ArchitectureTypemosqueStyleMarinid Moroccan Moorish IslamicFounderAbu Yusuf YaqubDate established1276SpecificationsMinaret s 1Minaret height approx 29 mMaterialsbrick wood Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 2 1 The entrances 2 2 The courtyard sahn 2 3 The prayer hall 2 4 The library and mausoleum 2 5 The minaret 3 Madrasa of Fes el Jdid 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditThe mosque was founded around 1276 by the Marinid sultan Abu Yusuf at the same time as he founded the new royal city Fes el Jdid 3 2 4 310 Fes el Jdid was created as a fortified palace and administrative city separate from Fes el Bali old Fes from which the Marinid dynasty ruled over Morocco 1 Supervision of the mosque s construction was delegated to a man named Abu Abdallah ibn Abd al Karim el Jadudi and to the governor of Meknes Abu Ali ibn Azraq 5 One historical chronicle claims that the mosque s construction was funded in part by olive oil production in Meknes and that labour was provided by Christian prisoners captured in al Andalus Spain 5 The mosque s construction was completed in 1278 5 The mosque s minbar designed by a craftsman named Algharnati was finished in 1279 5 The mosque s maqsura wooden screen shielding the sultan during prayers and the mosque s grand chandelier were installed in 1280 5 The mosque was only the fourth Friday mosque a grand mosque where Friday sermons took place to be founded in Fes the others being the Qarawiyyin Mosque the Andalusi Mosque and the Bou Jeloud Mosque and was meant to serve the new city 6 358 In 1320 Sultan Abu Sa id built a madrasa near the mosque known as the Madrasa Fes Jdid or Madrasa Dar al Makhzen however it was never able to compete with the prestige of the madrasas in Fes el Bali and was later absorbed by the expanding Royal Palace 1 69 7 114 Sultan Abu Inan is widely believed to have been buried in a tomb adjoining the mosque upon his death in 1358 although this is not fully confirmed 3 2 Abu Inan s burial here marked a shift in the choice of burial sites of the Marinid sultans Up to that point they had been buried in the necropolis of Chellah but after this they were buried instead on the al Qula Hill north of Fes whose ruins are now known as the Marinid Tombs 8 An inscription on the mosque also records that it was completed by Sultan Abu Faris Abd al Aziz II in 1395 3 2 8 Scholars believe it is much more likely that this refers to an embellishment or restoration of the mosque as the mosque s layout does not suggest it was significantly altered or that construction was interrupted and then completed at a later date 2 3 The most likely interpretation is that some of the decoration was added or redone at this time The decoration of the mihrab for example is consistent with a late 14th century style 2 There is evidence that the mosque was also significantly restored in the later Alaouite period late 17th century and after The anaza of the mosque s courtyard for example is dated to 1678 1679 CE 1089 AH during the reign of Moulay Isma il and some of the mosque s decoration might also date from around this period 9 Architecture Edit Floor plan of the mosque with notable elements indicated The mosque s overall layout reflects the T plan that became standard in western Maghrebi mosques in the Almohad period 3 4 The building has a rectangular floor plan measuring about 54 by 34 meters and covering about 2000 square meters 3 4 The layout includes a vast hypostyle interior prayer space and a large rectangular courtyard sahn occupying most of the northern part of the building The entrances Edit The mosque s main entrance is to the north aligned with the mihrab see below at the opposite end of the building and leading into the courtyard 3 The entrance is doubled to the left east of the main gate is another gate This resembles the arrangement of the double northern gate of the Qarawiyyin Mosque named Bab al Ward and Bab al Hafa whereby one gate featured a water channel which allowed visitors to wash their feet as they entered while the other gate was a regular entrance 3 2 10 However it seems likely that in this case the second gate was designed to give direct access to a walled in gallery section in the northeastern corner of the courtyard which was reserved for women coming to pray 2 4 The mosque also had two gates on its eastern side and two more on its western side on both sides one gate led into the courtyard and another directly into the prayer hall to the south On the eastern side of the mosque the courtyard gate was at some point blocked off by the later construction of houses next to the mosque Perhaps because of this the remaining gate was also turned into a double gate with two doorways side by side 3 The southern wall of the mihrab also has several doorways that lead to an annex space used by the imam From here there was also originally a direct access to one of the courtyards of the Dar al Makhzen royal palace and government offices 3 The courtyard sahn Edit The main courtyard sahn occupied roughly the northern half of the mosque measuring 24 by 18 6 meters 3 39 Like in other mosques it has a central water bassin formerly linked to two other fountains on either side and is surrounded by arched galleries 3 The floor is paved with mosaic tiles zellij 3 The central arch on the south side of the courtyard which leads into the central nave of the prayer hall on the axis of the mihrab is framed and surmounted by a tall and ornate portal The spaces around the arch are decorated with carved stucco and crowned by a carved and painted wooden canopy which likely date from the 16th or 17th century during the later Alaouite period 3 9 The arch itself is occupied by an ornate wooden screen known as an anaza an outdoor or summer mihrab for those prayers taking place in the courtyard 10 3 The anaza has two doors between which in the middle is a decorative composition with a mihrab shape containing a carved inscription in Arabic calligraphy 3 This feature is reminiscent of an equivalent creation added by the Marinids to the courtyard of the Qarawiyyin Mosque 10 The current anaza here however dates from 1678 1679 CE 1089 AH during the reign of Sultan Moulay Isma il Art historian Xavier Salmon suggests that Moulay Isma il likely donated the anaza at the same time as he restored or added some of the mosque s decoration although the later may also date from his brother and predecessor Moulay Rashid ruled 1666 1672 9 By comparison the inner archway of the central northern gate into the courtyard directly opposite the anaza has stucco decoration which seems to preserve more of a Marinid style 9 The prayer hall Edit Like other standard Moroccan mosques the prayer hall is a vast interior hypostyle space split only by rows of arches running perpendicular to the southern wall except for an extra row of arches running close to the southern wall and parallel to it 3 The southern wall is also the qibla wall the direction of prayer and is marked by a mihrab niche symbolizing the qibla in the middle Of the aisles between the rows of arches the center one aligned with the mihrab is slightly wider than the others and is emphasized with added stucco decoration on the walls between the arches 3 2 The mihrab itself is an alcove in the wall inside of which is a small cupola of muqarnas stalactite like carving The wall around the mihrab is decorated with stucco carving and topped by windows with intricate stucco screens 3 The stucco decoration around the arch of the mihrab itself is likely dates from the original Marinid design but the decoration further above and around this is more likely from the later Alaouite period in the late 17th or 18th century 9 The square space formed by the rows of arches intersecting in front of the mihrab is distinguished by more elaborate arches with lobed or lambrequin outlines a type seen elsewhere in Moroccan and Nasrid architecture and decorated spandrels 3 The arch directly in front of the mihrab and across from it has muqarnas carved intrados This square space is covered by an ornate wooden cupola carved with geometric patterns and outlined with more muqarnas 3 The wooden cupola also dates from the late 17th or 18th century probably at the same time as the Alaouite period decoration elsewhere in the mosque 9 This square space is also further marked off from the rest of the mosque by another wooden screen with painted panels and a central door to give access a feature not typical to most other mosques 3 At the northern end of the central aisle just behind the anaza is an elaborately ornate ribbed dome similar to the slightly earlier examples of this type found in front of the mihrabs of the Great Mosque of Taza and the Great Mosque of Tlemcen ultimately deriving from the domes of the Great Mosque of Cordoba 3 2 4 The ribs of the dome form a star pattern at the middle of which is a mini cupola of muqarnas Between the ribs are rich arabesques carved in stucco which also form a screen allowing some light in from the outside 3 The corners of the dome transition into the square space of the walls with the help of muqarnas carved squinches 3 Although Georges Marcais assumed it dated to the Marinid period Xavier Salmon has questioned this based on inconsistencies in the cupola s decoration and suggests that it was either created or restored during the Alaouite period possibly by Moulay Rashid or Moulay Isma il who also commissioned the nearby anaza 9 The mosque s main chandelier according to one source was installed in 1280 weighs 715 pounds and has 287 candlesticks 5 It hangs in the central aisle in front of the mihrab and is considered by some to be one of the best Marinid era examples of its kind 3 5 The library and mausoleum Edit On the mosque s western side near its southwestern corner is a rectangular chamber which is raised above the rest of the mosque and reached via a short staircase from the prayer hall The chamber has a large arched window looking back into the prayer hall 3 According to Xavier Salmon the chamber was originally a bayt al itikaf Arabic بيت الاعتكاف a room for spiritual retreat a feature which became more common in later Saadian mosques in Marrakesh e g the Mouassine Mosque and Bab Doukkala Mosque In later centuries it was converted into a library probably on the initiative of Moulay Rashid in the late 17th century who may have also redecorated parts of the mosque at the same time 9 On the south side of this library at the far southwestern corner of the mosque is another annex composed of a rectangular chamber which leads to a square chamber with a dome 3 2 This domed chamber in turn once led to what appears to have been a tomb chamber located under the library but which was later walled up and was only reopened during renovations in 1950 3 11 The domed chamber is richly decorated with carved stucco and with zellij tile mosaic along its lower walls and the dome has muqarnas squinches The small rectangular room preceding it holds four tombs and contains only fragments of its original decoration 3 This room is also open to the outside of the mosque via an archway window or door 3 The tombs in this area unfortunately are carved with Qur anic verses but some of them do not have any other identifying inscriptions which has made it difficult to confirm the individuals buried here In particular one of the tombs possibly in the walled up chamber under the library is assumed to belong to Sultan Abu Inan the Marinid ruler who also built the Bou Inania Madrasa in Fes el Bali among other works and died in 1358 but no inscription confirms this 2 3 8 11 Another unidentified tombstone may belong to an earlier sultan Abu Sa id Uthman II who died in 1331 and was the father of Sultan Abu al Hassan and grandfather of Abu Inan 11 Among the other individuals buried here is a princess named Aisha daughter of Sultan Abu Faris Abd al Aziz II whose tombstone is now held at the Batha Museum 11 The minaret Edit The minaret eastern facade The minaret northern facade The minaret rises from the mosque s northwestern corner Like most Moroccan minarets it has a square shaft with two sections a main section rising most of the way and then a second much smaller square tower at its summit The main shaft measures 5 7 meters per side and is 22 8 meters tall the shaft is about exactly four times as tall as it is wide 3 50 The smaller tower at the top measures 2 9 meters per side and 6 4 meters tall 3 50 Inside the minaret is a staircase that wraps around the central core of the tower and leads to the platform at the top of the main shaft historically allowing the muezzin to ascend to the top for the call to prayer 3 The four facades of the minaret are decorated similarly with darj wa ktaf motifs Moroccan rhombus like decorative forms carved into the brick 3 Only the eastern side of the minaret has windows providing light into the staircase The motif on the northern and southern facades is slightly different from that on the eastern and western facades in that the top of each rhombus is split by the start of the one above 3 Except for the southern facade the bottom of each facade has blind arches that blend into the rest of the motif above 3 At the top of the main shaft is a wide band of mosaic tilework zellij with geometric patterns of radiating almost circular stars Above this crowning the top of the main shaft are saw toothed merlons also typical of Moroccan architecture whose surfaces are also covered in mosaic tilework 3 The small secondary shaft at the top of the minaret has similar decoration as the main shaft It is topped by a small cupola which in turn is topped by a metal pole holding four bronze spheres of decreasing size 3 Adjoining the southern base of the minaret above the gallery of the courtyard is a chamber for the muezzin which was likely added after the minaret s original construction 3 Seen from the courtyard this chamber is marked by a double arched window with an alabaster column between the arches overshadowed by a carved wooden awning 3 It was similar in form and purpose to a Dar al Muwaqqit such as the one also added to the Qarawiyyin Mosque shortly after 12 62 10 Madrasa of Fes el Jdid EditMain article Madrasa of Fes el Jdid In 1320 Sultan Abu Sa id built a madrasa in Fes el Jdid just south of the Grand Mosque which became known as the Madrasa Fes Jdid or Madrasa Dar al Makhzen 1 69 This was only the second madrasa built by the Marinids in Fes the first one having been the Seffarine Madrasa founded in 1271 near the Qarawiyyin Mosque Shortly after in 1321 also under Abu Sa id s reign the Sahrij Madrasa was built near the al Andalus Mosque Accordingly it is likely that Abu Sa id desired to create centers of learning around each of Fes s great mosques However it does not appear that the Fes el Jdid madrasa developed into a major center of learning and instead the most prestigious madrasas remained the al Qarawiyyin and the other Marinid madrasas later built in Fes el Bali 7 114 It was later absorbed by the Royal Palace complex when Sultan Moulay Hassan ruled 1873 1894 expanded the mechouar area of the palace to the northeast which resulted in the madrasa being cut off from the mosque and integrated into the inner mechouar 1 The madrasa likely derelict before then was renovated and given a minaret before being renovated again under the French Protectorate some time after 1924 13 See also EditLists of mosques List of mosques in Africa List of mosques in MoroccoReferences Edit a b c d e Le Tourneau Roger 1949 Fes avant le protectorat etude economique et sociale d une ville de l occident musulman Casablanca Societe Marocaine de Librairie et d Edition a b c d e f g h i j k l Marcais Georges 1954 L architecture musulmane d Occident Paris Arts et metiers graphiques pp 268 271 286 287 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Maslow Boris 1937 Les mosquees de Fes et du nord du Maroc Paris Editions d art et d histoire pp 38 53 a b c d e Kubisch Natascha 2011 Maghreb Architecture in Hattstein Markus and Delius Peter eds Islam Art and Architecture h f ullmann a b c d e f g Bressolette Henri Delaroziere Jean 1983 Fes Jdid de sa fondation en 1276 au milieu du XXe siecle Hesperis Tamuda 245 318 Terrasse Henri 1964 La mosquee almohade de Bou Jeloud a Fes Al Andalus 29 2 355 363 a b Gaudio Attilio 1982 Fes Joyau de la civilisation islamique Paris Les Presse de l UNESCO Nouvelles Editions Latines ISBN 2723301591 a b c Lintz Yannick Delery Claire Tuil Leonetti Bulle 2014 Maroc medieval Un empire de l Afrique a l Espagne Paris Louvre editions pp 502 514 584 ISBN 9782350314907 a b c d e f g h Salmon Xavier 2021 Fes merinide Une capitale pour les arts 1276 1465 Lienart pp 72 91 ISBN 9782359063356 a b c d Terrasse Henri 1968 La Mosquee al Qaraouiyin a Fes avec une etude de Gaston Deverdun sur les inscriptions historiques de la mosquee Paris Librairie C Klincksieck a b c d Bressolette Henri 2016 6 Necropoles merinides A la decouverte de Fes L Harmattan ISBN 978 2343090221 Terrasse Henri 1968 La Mosquee al Qaraouiyin a Fes avec une etude de Gaston Deverdun sur les inscriptions historiques de la mosquee Paris Librairie C Klincksieck Terrasse Henri 1962 La medersa merinide de Fes Jdid Al Andalus 29 246 253 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Great Mosque of Fes Jdid Manar al Athar Digital Photo Archive includes some pictures inside the mosque Jami al Djedid at ArchNet includes a couple of historic pictures of the mosque including of the courtyard Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Mosque of Fes el Jdid amp oldid 1130925425, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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