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Qibla

The qibla (Arabic: قِبْلَة; lit.'direction') is the direction towards the Kaaba in the Sacred Mosque in Mecca, which is used by Muslims in various religious contexts, particularly the direction of prayer for the salah. In Islam, the Kaaba is believed to be a sacred site built by prophets Ibrahim and Ismail, and that its use as the qibla was ordained by Allah in several verses of the Quran revealed to Muhammad in the second Hijri year. Prior to this revelation, Muhammad and his followers in Medina faced Jerusalem for prayers. Most mosques contain a mihrab (a wall niche) that indicates the direction of the qibla.

Muslims surrounding and facing the Kaaba for prayer

The qibla is also the direction for entering the ihram (sacred state for the hajj pilgrimage); the direction to which animals are turned during dhabihah (Islamic slaughter); the recommended direction to make dua (supplications); the direction to avoid when relieving oneself or spitting; and the direction to which the deceased are aligned when buried. The qibla may be observed facing the Kaaba accurately (ayn al-ka'bah) or facing in the general direction (jihat al-ka'bah). Most Islamic scholars consider that jihat al-ka'bah is acceptable if the more precise ayn al-ka'bah cannot be ascertained.

The most common technical definition used by Muslim astronomers for a location is the direction on the great circle—in the Earth's Sphere—passing through the location and the Kaaba. This is the direction of the shortest possible path from a place to the Kaaba, and allows the exact calculation (hisab) of the qibla using a spherical trigonometric formula that takes the coordinates of a location and of the Kaaba as inputs (see formula below). The method is applied to develop mobile applications and websites for Muslims, and to compile qibla tables used in instruments such as the qibla compass. The qibla can also be determined at a location by observing the shadow of a vertical rod on the twice-yearly occasions when the Sun is directly overhead in Mecca—on 27 and 28 May at 12:18 Saudi Arabia Standard Time (09:18 UTC), and on 15 and 16 July at 12:27 SAST (09:27 UTC).

Before the development of astronomy in the Islamic world, Muslims used traditional methods to determine the qibla. These methods included facing the direction that the companions of Muhammad had used when in the same place; using the setting and rising points of celestial objects; using the direction of the wind; or using due south, which was Muhammad's qibla in Medina. Early Islamic astronomy was built on its Indian and Greek counterparts, especially the works of Ptolemy, and soon Muslim astronomers developed methods to calculate the approximate directions of the qibla, starting from the mid-9th century. In the late 9th and 10th centuries, Muslim astronomers developed methods to find the exact direction of the qibla which are equivalent to the modern formula. Initially, this "qibla of the astronomers" was used alongside various traditionally determined qiblas, resulting in much diversity in medieval Muslim cities. In addition, the accurate geographic data necessary for the astronomical methods to yield an accurate result was not available before the 18th and 19th centuries, resulting in further diversity of the qibla. Historical mosques with differing qiblas still stand today throughout the Islamic world. The spaceflight of a devout Muslim, Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor, to the International Space Station (ISS) in 2007 generated a discussion with regard to the qibla direction from low Earth orbit, prompting the Islamic authority of his home country, Malaysia, to recommend determining the qibla "based on what is possible" for the astronaut.

Location edit

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Muhammad and the early Muslims in Medina initially prayed towards Jerusalem, and changed the qibla to face the Kaaba in Mecca in 623 CE.

The qibla is the direction of the Kaaba, a cube-like building at the centre of the Sacred Mosque (al-Masjid al-Haram) in Mecca, in the Hejaz region of Saudi Arabia. Other than its role as qibla, it is also the holiest site for Muslims, also known as the House of God (Bait Allah) and where the tawaf (the circumambulation ritual) is performed during the Hajj and umrah pilgrimages. The Kaaba has an approximately rectangular ground plan with its four corners pointing close to the four cardinal directions.[1] According to the Quran, it was built by Abraham and Ishmael, both of whom are prophets in Islam.[2] Few historical records remain detailing the history of the Kaaba before the rise of Islam, but in the generations prior to Muhammad, the Kaaba had been used as a shrine of the pre-Islamic Arabic religion.[2]

The qibla status of the Kaaba (or the Sacred Mosque in which it is located) is based on the verses 144, 149, and 150 of the al-Baqarah chapter of the Quran, each of which contains a command to "turn your face toward the Sacred Mosque" (fawalli wajhaka shatr al-Masjid il-Haram).[3] According to Islamic traditions, these verses were revealed in the month of Rajab or Shaban in the second Hijri year (623 CE), or about 15 or 16 months after Muhammad's migration to Medina.[4][5] Prior to these revelations, Muhammad and the Muslims in Medina had prayed towards Jerusalem as the qibla, the same direction as the prayer direction—the mizrah—used by the Jews of Medina. Islamic tradition says that these verses were revealed during a prayer congregation; Muhammad and his followers immediately changed their direction from Jerusalem to Mecca in the middle of the prayer ritual. The location of this event became the Masjid al-Qiblatayn ("The Mosque of the Two Qiblas").[5]

There are different reports of the qibla direction when Muhammad was in Mecca (before his migration to Medina). According to a report cited by historian al-Tabari and exegete (textual interpreter) al-Baydawi, Muhammad prayed towards the Kaaba. Another report, cited by al-Baladhuri and also by al-Tabari, says that Muhammad prayed towards Jerusalem while in Mecca. Another report, mentioned in Ibn Hisham's biography of Muhammad, says that Muhammad prayed in such a way as to face the Kaaba and Jerusalem simultaneously.[5] Today Muslims of all branches, including the Sunni and the Shia, all pray towards the Kaaba. Historically, one major exception was the Qarmatians, a now-defunct syncretic Shia sect which rejected the Kaaba as the qibla; in 930, they sacked Mecca and for a time took the Kaaba's Black Stone to their centre of power in Al-Ahsa, with the intention of starting a new era in Islam.[6][7]

Religious significance edit

 
The Mihrab in one of the walls of a mosque indicates the qibla direction to be used for prayers. Picture from the Shah-i-Zinda, Samarkand, Uzbekistan.

Etymologically, the Arabic word qibla (قبلة) means "direction". In Islamic ritual and law, it refers to a special direction faced by Muslims during prayers and other religious contexts.[5] Islamic religious scholars agree that facing the qibla is a necessary condition for the validity of salah—the Islamic ritual prayer—in normal conditions;[8] exceptions include prayers during a state of fear or war, as well as non-obligatory prayers during travel.[9] The hadith (Muhammad's tradition) also prescribes that Muslims face the qibla when entering the ihram (sacred state for hajj), after the middle jamrah (stone-throwing ritual) during the pilgrimage.[5] Islamic etiquette (adab) calls for Muslims to turn the head of an animal when it is slaughtered, and the faces of the dead when they are buried, toward the qibla.[5] The qibla is the preferred direction when making a supplication and is to be avoided when defecating, urinating, and spitting.[5]

Inside a mosque, the qibla is usually indicated by a mihrab, a niche in its qibla-facing wall. In a congregational prayer, the imam stands in it or close to it, in front of the rest of the congregation.[10] The mihrab became a part of the mosque during the Umayyad period and its form was standardised during the Abbasid period; before that, the qibla of a mosque was known from the orientation of one of its walls, called the qibla wall. The term mihrab itself is attested only once in the Quran, but it refers to a place of prayer of the Israelites rather than a part of a mosque.[10][a] The Mosque of Amr ibn al-As in Fustat, Egypt, one of the oldest mosques, is known to have been built originally without a mihrab, though one has since been added.[11]

Ayn al-ka'bah and jihat al-ka'bah edit

Ayn al-ka'bah ("standing so as to face the Kaaba head-on") is a position facing the qibla so that an imaginary line extending from the person's line of sight would pass through the Kaaba.[12] This manner of observing the qibla is easily done inside the Great Mosque of Mecca and its surroundings, but given that the Kaaba is less than 20 metres (66 ft) wide, this is virtually impossible from distant locations.[13] For example, from Medina, with a 338-kilometre (210 mi) straight-line distance from the Kaaba, a one-degree deviation from the precise imaginary line—an error hardly noticeable when setting one's prayer mat or assuming one's posture—results in a 5.9-kilometre (3.7 mi) shift from the site of the Kaaba.[14] This effect is amplified when further than Mecca:[15] from Jakarta, Indonesia—some 7,900 km (4,900 mi) away, a one-degree deviation causes more than a 100-kilometre (62 mi) shift, and even an arc second's deviation—(13600 of a degree)—causes a more than 100-metre (330 ft) shift from the location of the Kaaba.[16] In comparison, the construction process of a mosque can easily introduce an error of up to five degrees from the calculated qibla, and the installation of prayer rugs inside the mosque as indicators for worshipers can add another deviation of five degrees from the mosque's orientation.[16]

A minority of Islamic religious scholars—for example Ibn Arabi (d. 1240)—consider ayn al-ka'bah to be obligatory during the ritual prayer, while others consider it obligatory only when one is able. For locations further than Mecca, scholars such as Abu Hanifa (d. 699) and Al-Qurtubi (d. 1214) argue that it is permissible to assume jihat al-ka'bah, facing only the general direction of the Kaaba.[17] Others argue that the ritual condition of facing the qibla is already fulfilled when the imaginary line to the Kaaba is within one's field of vision.[12] For instance, there are legal opinions that accept the entire southeastern quadrant in Al-Andalus (Islamic Iberian Peninsula), and the southwestern quadrant in Central Asia, to be valid qibla.[18] Arguments for the validity of jihat al-ka'bah include the wording of the Quran, which commands Muslims only to "turn [one's] face" toward the Great Mosque, and to avoid imposing requirements that would be impossible to fulfill if ayn al-ka'bah were to be obligatory in all places.[19] The Shafi'i school of Islamic law, as codified in Abu Ishaq al-Shirazi's 11th-century Kitab al-Tanbih fi'l-Fiqh, argues that one must follow the qibla indicated by the local mosque when one is not near Mecca or, when not near a mosque, to ask a trustworthy person. When this is not possible, one is to make one's own determination—to exercise ijtihad—by the means at one's disposal.[20][21]

Determination edit

Theoretical basis: the great circle edit

 
The great circle passing through two points (A and B) indicates the shortest path (bold) between them.

A great circle, also called the orthodrome, is any circle on a sphere whose centre is identical to the centre of the sphere. For example, all lines of longitude are great circles of the Earth, while the equator is the only line of latitude that is also a great circle (other lines of latitude are centered north or south of the centre of the Earth).[22] The great circle is the theoretical basis in most models that seek to mathematically determine the direction of the qibla from a locality. In such models, the qibla is defined as the direction of the great circle passing through the locality and the Kaaba.[23][24] One of the properties of a great circle is that it indicates the shortest path connecting any pair of points along the circle—this is the basis of its use to determine the qibla. The great circle is similarly used to find the shortest flight path connecting the two locations—therefore the qibla calculated using the great circle method is generally close to the direction of the locality to Mecca.[25] As the ellipsoid is a more accurate figure of the Earth than a perfect sphere, modern researchers have looked into using ellipsoidal models to calculate the qibla, replacing the great circle by the geodesics on an ellipsoid. This results in more complicated calculations, while the improvement in accuracy falls well within the typical precision of the setting out of a mosque or the placement of a mat.[26] For example, calculations using the GRS 80 ellipsoidal model yields the qibla of 18°47′06″ for a location in San Francisco, while the great circle method yields 18°51′05″.[27]

Calculations with spherical trigonometry edit

The great circle model is applied to calculate the qibla using spherical trigonometry—a branch of geometry that deals with the mathematical relations between the sides and angles of triangles formed by three great circles of a sphere (as opposed to the conventional trigonometry which deals with those of a two-dimensional triangle).

 
For example, the qibla from the city of Yogyakarta, Indonesia, can be calculated as follows. The city's coordinates,  , are 7.801389°S, 110.364444°E, while the Kaaba's coordinates,  , are 21.422478°N, 39.825183°E. The longitude difference   is (110.364444 minus 39.825183) 70.539261. Substituting the values into the formula obtains an answer of approximately 295°, or 25° north of west.[28]

If a location  , the Kaaba  , and the north pole   form a triangle on the sphere of the Earth, then the qibla is indicated by  , which is the direction of the great circle passing through both   and  . The qibla can also be expressed as an angle,   (or  ), of the qibla with respect to the north, also called the inhiraf al-qibla. This angle can be calculated as a mathematical function of the local latitude  , the latitude of the Kaaba  , and the longitude difference between the locality and the Kaaba  .[29] This function is derived from the cotangent rule which applies to any spherical triangle with angles  ,  ,   and sides  ,  ,  :

 [30]

Applying this formula in the spherical triangle   (substituting  )[31] and applying trigonometric identities obtain:

 , or
 [29]

This formula was derived by modern scholars, but equivalent methods have been known to Muslim astronomers since the 9th century (3rd century AH), developed by various scholars, including Habash al-Hasib (active in Damascus and Baghdad c. 850), Al-Nayrizi (Baghdad, c. 900),[32] Ibn Yunus (10th–11th century),[33] Ibn al-Haytham (11th century),[33] and Al-Biruni (11th century).[34] Today spherical trigonometry also underlies nearly all applications or websites which calculate the qibla.[23]

When the qibla angle with respect to the north,  , is known, true north needs to be known to find the qibla in practice. Common practical methods to find it include the observation of the shadow at the culmination of the sun—when the sun crosses exactly the local meridian. At this point, any vertical object would cast a shadow oriented in the north–south direction. The result of this observation is very accurate, but it requires an accurate determination of the local time of culmination as well as making the correct observation at that exact moment.[35] Another common method is using the compass, which is more practical because it can be done at any time; the disadvantage is that the north indicated by a magnetic compass differs from true north.[16][36] This magnetic declination can measure up to 20°, which can vary in different places on Earth and changes over time.[16]

Shadow observation edit

 
Twice a year, the Sun passes directly above the Kaaba, allowing the observation of its direction from the shadow of a vertical object.

As observed from Earth, the Sun appears to "shift" between the Northern and Southern Tropics seasonally; additionally, it appears to move from east to west daily as a consequence of the Earth's rotation. The combination of these two apparent motions means that every day the Sun crosses the meridian once, usually not precisely overhead but to the north or to the south of the observer. In locations between the two tropics—latitudes lower than 23.5° north or south—at certain moments of the year (usually twice a year) the Sun passes almost directly overhead. This happens when the Sun crosses the meridian while being at the local latitude at the same time.[37]

The city of Mecca is among the places where this occurs, due to its location at 21°25′ N. It occurs twice a year, firstly on 27/28 May at about 12:18 Saudi Arabia Standard Time (SAST) or 09:18 UTC, and secondly on 15/16 July at 12:27 SAST (09:27 UTC).[37][38][b] As the sun reaches the zenith of the Kaaba, any vertical object on earth that receives sunlight cast a shadow that indicates the qibla (see picture).[37] This method of finding the qibla is called rasd al-qiblat ("observing the qibla").[39][28] Since night falls on the hemisphere opposite of the Kaaba, half the locations on Earth (including Australia as well as most of the Americas and the Pacific Ocean) cannot observe this directly.[40] Instead, such places observe the opposite phenomenon when the Sun passes above the antipodal point of the Kaaba (in other words, the Sun passes directly underneath the Kaaba), causing shadows in the opposite direction from those observed during rasd al-qiblat.[37][41] This occurs twice a year, on 14 January 00:30 SAST (21:30 UTC the previous day) and 29 November 00:09 SAST (21:09 UTC the previous day).[42] Observations made within five minutes of the rasd al-qiblat moments or its antipodal counterparts, or at the same time of the day two days before or after each event, still show accurate directions with negligible difference.[37][38]

On the world map edit

 
A map generated using the Craig retroazimuthal projection centered on Mecca. Unlike most map projections, it preserves the direction from any other point on the map to the center.

Spherical trigonometry provides the shortest path from any point on Earth to the Kaaba, even though the indicated direction might seem counterintuitive when imagined on a flat world map. For example, the qibla from Alaska obtained through spherical trigonometry is almost due north.[23] This apparent counter-intuitiveness is caused by projections used by world maps, which by necessity distort the surface of the Earth. A straight line shown by the world map in using the Mercator projection is called the rhumb line or the loxodrome, which is used to indicate the qibla by a minority of Muslims.[43][c] It can result in a dramatic difference in some places; for example, in some parts of North America the flat map shows Mecca in the southeast while the great circle calculation shows it to the northeast.[23] In Japan the map shows it to the southwest, while the great circle shows it to the northwest.[44] The majority of Muslims, however, follow the great circle method.[23]

A retroazimuthal projection is any map projection which preserves the angular direction (the azimuth) of the great circle path from any point of the map to a point selected as the center of the map. The initial purpose of its development was to help finding the qibla, by choosing the Kaaba as the center point.[45] The earliest surviving works using this projection were two astrolabe-shaped brass instruments created in 18th-century Iran.[46] They contain grids covering locations between Spain and China, label the locations of major cities along with their names, but do not show any coastline.[46][47] The first of the two was discovered in 1989; its diameter is 22.5 centimetres (8.9 in) and it has a ruler with which one can read the direction of Mecca from the markings on the instrument's circumference, and the distance to Mecca from the markings on the ruler.[47][d] Only the second one is signed by its creator, Muhammad Husayn.[48] The first formal design of a retroazimuthal projection in the Western literature is the Craig projection or the Mecca projection, created by the Scottish mathematician James Ireland Craig, who worked at the Survey Department of Egypt, in 1910.[49] His map is centered in Mecca and its range is limited to show the predominantly Muslim lands.[49] Extending the map further than 90° in longitude from the center will result in crowding and overlaps.[50][51]

Traditional methods edit

Historical records and surviving old mosques show that throughout history the qibla was often determined by simple methods based on tradition or "folk science" not based on mathematical astronomy. Some early Muslims used due south everywhere as the qibla, literally following Muhammad's instruction to face south while he was in Medina (Mecca is due south of Medina). Some mosques as far away as al-Andalus to the west and Central Asia to the east face south, even though Mecca is nowhere near that direction.[52] In various places, there are also the "qiblas of the companions" (qiblat al-sahaba), those which were used there by the Companions of the Prophet—the first generation of Muslims, who are considered role models in Islam. Such directions were used by some Muslims in the following centuries, side by side with other directions, even after Muslim astronomers used calculations to find more accurate directions to Mecca. Among the directions described as the qiblas of the companions are due south in Syria and Palestine,[53] the direction of the winter sunrise in Egypt, and the direction of the winter sunset in Iraq.[54] The direction of the winter sunrise and sunset are also traditionally favoured because they are parallel to the walls of the Kaaba.[55]

Development of methods edit

Pre-astronomy edit

The determination of qibla has been an important problem for Muslim communities throughout history. Muslims are required to know the qibla to perform their daily prayers, and it is also needed to determine the orientation of mosques.[56] When Muhammad lived among the Muslims in Medina (which, like Mecca, is also in the Hejaz region), he prayed due south, according to the known direction of Mecca. Within the few generations after Muhammad's death in 632, Muslims had reached places far away from Mecca, presenting the problem of determining the qibla in new locations.[57] Mathematical methods based on astronomy would develop only at the end of the 8th century or the beginning of the 9th, and even then they were not initially popular. Therefore, early Muslims relied on non-astronomical methods.[58]

There was a wide range of traditional methods in determining the qibla during the early Islamic period, resulting in different directions even from the same place. In addition to due south and the qiblas of the companions, the Arabs also knew a form of "folk" astronomy—called so by the historian of astronomy David A. King to distinguish it from conventional astronomy, which is an exact science—originating from pre-Islamic traditions.[54] It used natural phenomenon, including the observation of the Sun, the Moon, the stars, and wind, without any basis in mathematics. These methods yield specific directions in individual localities, often using the fixed setting and rising points of a specific star, the sunrise or sunset at the equinoxes, or at the summer or the winter solstices.[59] Historical sources record several such qiblas, for example: sunrise at the equinoxes (due east) in the Maghreb, sunset at the equinoxes (due west) in India, the origin of the north wind or the fixed location of the North Star in Yemen, the rising point of the star Suhayl (Canopus) in Syria, and the midwinter sunset in Iraq.[59] Such directions appear in texts of fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) and texts of folk astronomy. Astronomers (aside from folk astronomers) typically do not comment on these methods, but they were not opposed by Islamic legal scholars.[60] The traditional directions were still in use when methods were developed to calculate the qibla more accurately, and they still appear in some surviving medieval mosques today.[53]

With astronomy edit

 
A portion of the qibla table compiled by astronomer and muwaqqit Shams al-Din al-Khalili of Damascus in the 14th century. The qibla directions are listed in the Arabic sexagesimal notation.

The study of astronomy—known as ilm al-falak (lit.'science of the celestial orbs') in the Islamic intellectual tradition—began to appear in the Islamic World in the second half of the 8th century, centred in Baghdad, the principal city of the Abbasid Caliphate. Initially, the science was introduced through the works of Indian authors, but after the 9th century the works of Greek astronomers such as Ptolemy were translated into Arabic and became the main references in the field.[61] Muslim astronomers preferred Greek astronomy because they considered it to be better supported by theoretical explanations and therefore it could be developed as an exact science; however, the influence of Indian astronomy survives especially in the compilation of astronomical tables.[62] This new science was applied to develop new methods of determining the qibla, making use of the concept of latitude and longitude taken from Ptolemy's Geography as well as trigonometric formulae developed by Muslim scholars.[63] Most textbooks of astronomy written in the medieval Islamic World contain a chapter on the determination of the qibla, considered one of the many things connecting astronomy with Islamic law (sharia).[29][64] According to David A. King, various medieval solutions for the determination of the qibla "bear witness to the development of mathematical methods from the 3rd/9th to the 8th/14th centuries and to the level of sophistication in trigonometry and computational techniques attained by these scholars".[29]

The first mathematical methods developed in the early 9th century were approximate solutions to the mathematical problem, usually using a flat map or two-dimensional geometry. Since in reality the Earth is spherical, the directions found were inexact, but they were sufficient for locations relatively close to Mecca (including as far away as Egypt and Iran) because the errors were less than 2°.[65]

Exact solutions, based on three-dimensional geometry and spherical trigonometry, began to appear in the mid-9th century. Habash al-Hasib wrote an early example, using an orthographic projection.[66][e] Another group of solutions uses trigonometric formulas, for example Al-Nayrizi's four-step application of Menelaus's theorem.[67][f] Subsequent scholars, including Ibn Yunus, Abu al-Wafa, Ibn al-Haitham and Al-Biruni, proposed other methods which are confirmed to be accurate from the viewpoint of modern astronomy.[68]

Muslim astronomers subsequently used these methods to compile tables showing the qibla from a list of locations, grouped by their latitude and longitude differences from Mecca. The oldest known example, from c. 9th-century Baghdad, contained entries for each degree and arc minute up to 20°.[69] In the 14th century, Shams al-Din al-Khalili, an astronomer who served as a muwaqqit (timekeeper) in the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus, compiled a qibla table for 2,880 coordinates with longitude differences of up to 60° from Mecca, and with latitudes ranging from 10° to 50°.[68][69] King opines that among the medieval qibla tables, al-Khalili's work is "the most impressive from the view of its scope and its accuracy".[69]

The accuracy of applying these methods to actual locations depend on the accuracy of its input parameters—the local latitude and the latitude of Mecca, and the longitude difference. At the time of the development of these methods, the latitude of a location could be determined to several arc minutes' accuracy, but there was no accurate method to determine a location's longitude.[70] Common methods used to estimate the longitude difference included comparing the local timing of a lunar eclipse versus the timing in Mecca, or measuring the distance of caravan routes;[68][34] the Central Asian scholar Al-Biruni made his estimate by averaging various approximate methods.[68] Because of longitudinal inaccuracy, medieval qibla calculations (including those using mathematically accurate methods) differ from the modern values. For example, while the Al-Azhar Mosque in Cairo was built using the "qibla of the astronomers", but the mosque's qibla (127°) differs somewhat from the results of modern calculations (135°) because the longitude difference used was off by three degrees.[71]

Accurate longitude values in the Islamic world were available only after the application of cartographic surveys in the 18th and 19th centuries. Modern coordinates, along with new technologies such as GPS satellites and electronic instruments, resulted in the development of practical instruments to calculate the qibla.[72] The qibla found using modern instruments might differ from the direction of mosques, because a mosque might be built before the advent of modern data, and orientation inaccuracies might have been introduced during the building process of modern mosques.[72][20] When this is known, sometimes the direction of the mosque's mihrab is still observed, and sometimes a marker is added (such as lines drawn in the mosque) that can be followed instead of the mihrab.[20]

Instruments edit

 
 
A prayer mat with a modern qibla compass (left); an Ottoman-era qibla compass dated 1738 (right)

Muslims use various instruments to find the qibla direction when not near a mosque. The qibla compass is a magnetic compass which includes a table or a list of qibla angles from major settlements. Some electronic versions use satellite coordinates to calculate and indicate the qibla automatically.[72] Qibla compasses have existed since around 1300, supplemented by the list of qibla angles often written on the instruments themselves.[73] Hotel rooms with Muslim guests may use a sticker showing the qibla on the ceiling or a drawer.[16] With the advent of computing, various mobile apps and websites use formulae to calculate the qibla for their users.[23][74]

Diversity edit

Early Islamic world edit

 
A map of an area in modern Cairo. Note that the mosques have slightly different orientations.

Because varying methods have been used to determine the qibla, mosques were built throughout history in different directions, including some that still stand today.[75] Methods based on astronomy and mathematics were not always used,[76] and the same determination method could yield different qiblas due to differences in the accuracy of data and calculations.[77] Egyptian historian Al-Maqrizi (d. 1442) recorded various qibla angles used in Cairo at the time: 90° (due east), 117° (winter sunrise, the "qibla of the sahaba"), 127° (calculated by astronomers, such as Ibn Yunus), 141° (Mosque of Ibn Tulun), 156° (the rising point of Suhayl/Canopus), 180° (due south, emulating the qibla of Muhammad in Medina), and 204° (the setting point of Canopus). The modern qibla for Cairo is 135°, which was not known at the time.[78] This diversity also results in the non-uniform layout in Cairo's districts, because the streets are often oriented according to the varying orientation of the mosques. Historical records also indicate the diversity of qiblas in other major cities, including Córdoba (113°, 120°, 135°, 150°, and 180° were recorded in the 12th century) and Samarkand (180°, 225°, 230°, 240°, and 270° were recorded in the 11th century).[78] According to the doctrine of jihat al-ka'bah, the diverse directions of qiblas are still valid as long as they are still in the same broad direction.[18] In Mecca itself, many early mosques were constructed that were not directly facing the Kaaba.[79]

In 1990, the scholar of geography Michael E. Bonine conducted a survey of the main mosques of all major cities in present-day Morocco—constructed from the Idrisid period (8th–10th centuries) up to the Alaouite period (17th century to present). While modern calculations yield the qiblas of between 91° (almost due east) in Marrakesh and 97° in Tangier,[80] only mosques constructed in the Alaouite period are constructed with qiblas relatively close to this range.[81] The qibla of older mosques vary considerably, with concentrations occurring between 155°–160° (slightly east of south) as well as 120°–130° (almost southeast).[82] In 2008, Bonine also published a survey of the main city mosques of Tunisia, in which he found that most were aligned close to 147°.[83] This is the direction of the Great Mosque of Kairouan, originally built in 670 and last rebuilt by the Aghlabids in 862, which is often credited as the model used by the other mosques.[84] Among the mosques surveyed, the Great Mosque of Sousse was the only one with a significant difference, facing further south at 163°.[83] The actual direction to Mecca as calculated using the great circle method ranges from 110° to 113° throughout the country.[85]

Indonesia edit

Variations of the qibla also occur in Indonesia, the country with the world's largest Muslim population. The astronomically calculated qibla ranges from 291°—295° (21°—25° north of west) depending on the exact location in the archipelago.[86] However, the qibla is often known traditionally simply as "the west", resulting in mosques built oriented due west or to the direction of sunset—which varies slightly throughout the year. Different opinions exist among Indonesian Islamic astronomers: Tono Saksono et al. argues in 2018 that facing the qibla during prayers is more of a "spiritual prerequisite" than a precise physical one, and that an exact direction to the Kaaba itself from thousands of kilometres away requires an extreme precision impossible to achieve when building a mosque or when standing for prayers.[16] On the other hand, Muhammad Hadi Bashori in 2014 opines that "correcting the qibla is indeed a very urgent thing", and can be guided by simple methods such as observing the shadow.[87]

In the history of the region, disputes about the qibla had also occurred in the then-Dutch East Indies in the 1890s. When the Indonesian scholar and future founder of Muhammadiyah, Ahmad Dahlan, returned from his Islamic and astronomy studies in Mecca, he found that mosques in the royal capital of Yogyakarta had inaccurate qiblas, including the Kauman Great Mosque, which faced due west. His efforts in adjusting the qibla were opposed by the traditional ulama of the Yogyakarta Sultanate, and a new mosque built by Dahlan using his calculations was demolished by a mob. Dahlan rebuilt his mosque in the 1900s, and later the Kauman Great Mosque would also be reoriented using the astronomically calculated qibla.[88][89]

North America edit

 
The Islamic Center of Washington (founded 1953), one of the early mosques in the United States. Its qibla faces the northeast in line with astronomical calculations.[90]

Places long settled by Muslim populations tend to have resolved the question of the direction of the qibla over time. Other countries, like the United States and Canada, have had large Muslim communities only in the past several decades, and the determination of the qibla can be a matter of debate.[91] The Islamic Center of Washington, D.C. was built in 1953 facing slightly north of east and initially puzzled some observers, including Muslims, because Washington, D.C.'s latitude is 17°30′ north of Mecca. Even though a line drawn on world maps—such as those using the Mercator projection—would suggest a southeastern direction to Mecca, the astronomical calculation using the great circle method does yield a north-of-east direction (56°33′).[90] Nevertheless, most early mosques in the United States face east or southeast, following the apparent direction on world maps.[91] As the Muslim community grew and the number of mosques increased, in 1978, an American Muslim scientist, S. Kamal Abdali, wrote a book arguing that the correct qibla from North America was north or northeast as calculated by the great circle method which identifies the shortest path to Mecca.[g][92][23] Abdali's conclusion was widely circulated and then accepted by the Muslim community, and mosques were subsequently reoriented as a result.[91] In 1993, two religious scholars, Riad Nachef and Samir Kadi, published a book arguing for a southeastern qibla, writing that the north/northeast qibla was invalid and resulted from a lack of religious knowledge.[h][93][25] In reaction, Abdali published a response to their arguments and criticism in an article entitled "The Correct Qibla" online in 1997.[i] The two opinions resulted in a period of debate about the correct qibla.[93] Eventually most North American Muslims accepted the north/northeast qibla with a minority following the east/southeast qibla.[23][94]

Outer space edit

 
The issue of the qibla in outer space arose publicly in 2007, with Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor's spaceflight to the International Space Station.[95]

The International Space Station (ISS) orbits the Earth at high speed—the direction from it to Mecca changes significantly within a few seconds.[23] Before his flight to the ISS, Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor requested, and the Malaysian National Fatwa Council provided, guidelines which have been translated into multiple languages.[95] The council wrote that the qibla determination should be "based on what is possible" and recommended four options, saying that one should pray toward the first option if possible and, if not, fall back successively on the later ones:[23]

  1. the Kaaba itself
  2. the position directly above the Kaaba at the altitude of the astronaut's orbit
  3. the Earth in general
  4. "wherever"

In line with the fatwa council, other Muslim scholars argue for the importance of flexibility and adapting the qibla requirement to what an astronaut is capable of fulfilling. Khaleel Muhammad of San Diego State University opined "God does not take a person to task for that which is beyond his/her ability to work with." Kamal Abdali argued that concentration during a prayer is more important than the exact orientation, and he suggested keeping the qibla direction at the start of a prayer instead of "worrying about possible changes in position".[23] Before Sheikh Muszaphar's mission, at least eight Muslims had flown to space, but none of them publicly discussed issues relating to worship in space.[96]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This reference occurs in Quran 19:11
  2. ^ The dates slightly vary from year-to-year because the calendar year is not synchronized with the astronomical year (see leap year).[38]
  3. ^ For an example of the loxodrome used to find qibla, see #North America.
  4. ^ King 1996, p. 150 has a picture of one of the instruments
  5. ^ The details of this method and its proof are provided in King 1996, pp. 144–145
  6. ^ The details of this method and its proof are provided in King 1996, pp. 145–146
  7. ^ This book is Abdali, S. Kamal (1978). Prayers schedule for North America. Indianapolis: American Trust Publications. OCLC 27738892.
  8. ^ This book is Nachef, Riad; Kadi, Samir (1993). The Substantiation of the People of Truth that the Direction of al-Qibla in the United States and Canada is to the Southeast. Philadelphia: Association of Islamic Charitable Projects.
  9. ^ This article is Abdali, S. Kamal (17 September 1997). "The Correct Qibla" (PDF). geomete.com. (PDF) from the original on 18 December 2019.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Wensinck 1978, p. 317.
  2. ^ a b Wensinck 1978, p. 318.
  3. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, pp. 97–98.
  4. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 104.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Wensinck 1986, p. 82.
  6. ^ Wensinck 1978, p. 321.
  7. ^ Daftary 2007, p. 149.
  8. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 103.
  9. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 91.
  10. ^ a b Kuban 1974, p. 3.
  11. ^ Kuban 1974, p. 4.
  12. ^ a b King 1996, p. 134.
  13. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, pp. 104–105.
  14. ^ Saksono, Fulazzaky & Sari 2018, p. 137.
  15. ^ Saksono, Fulazzaky & Sari 2018, p. 134.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Saksono, Fulazzaky & Sari 2018, p. 136.
  17. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, pp. 92, 95.
  18. ^ a b King 1996, pp. 134–135.
  19. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 95.
  20. ^ a b c Wensinck 1986, p. 83.
  21. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 94.
  22. ^ Waltham 2013, p. 98.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Di Justo 2007.
  24. ^ King 2004, p. 166.
  25. ^ a b Almakky & Snyder 1996, p. 31.
  26. ^ Saksono, Fulazzaky & Sari 2018, pp. 132–134.
  27. ^ Almakky & Snyder 1996, p. 35.
  28. ^ a b Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 123.
  29. ^ a b c d King 1986, p. 83.
  30. ^ An equivalent formula in Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 119
  31. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 119.
  32. ^ King 1986, pp. 85–86.
  33. ^ a b King 1986, p. 85.
  34. ^ a b King 1986, p. 86.
  35. ^ Ilyas 1984, pp. 171–172.
  36. ^ Ilyas 1984, p. 172.
  37. ^ a b c d e Raharto & Surya 2011, p. 25.
  38. ^ a b c Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 125.
  39. ^ Raharto & Surya 2011, p. 24.
  40. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, pp. 125–126.
  41. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, pp. 126–127.
  42. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 127.
  43. ^ Almakky & Snyder 1996, pp. 31–32.
  44. ^ Hadi Bashori 2015, p. 110.
  45. ^ Tobler 2002, pp. 17–18.
  46. ^ a b Tobler 2002, p. 18.
  47. ^ a b King 1996, p. 150.
  48. ^ King 1996, p. 151.
  49. ^ a b Snyder 1997, pp. 227–228.
  50. ^ Snyder 1997, p. 228.
  51. ^ Tobler 2002, p. 19.
  52. ^ King 1996, p. 130.
  53. ^ a b King 1996, pp. 130–131.
  54. ^ a b King 1996, p. 132.
  55. ^ King 1996, p. 132, also figure 4.2 in p. 131.
  56. ^ King 1996, p. 128.
  57. ^ King 1996, pp. 130–132.
  58. ^ King 1996, pp. 128–129.
  59. ^ a b King 1996, p. 133.
  60. ^ King 1996, pp. 132–133.
  61. ^ Morelon 1996b, pp. 20–21.
  62. ^ Morelon 1996b, p. 21.
  63. ^ King 1996, p. 141.
  64. ^ Morelon 1996a, p. 15.
  65. ^ King 1996, pp. 142–143.
  66. ^ King 1996, pp. 144–145.
  67. ^ King 1996, pp. 145–146.
  68. ^ a b c d King 1996, p. 147.
  69. ^ a b c King 2004, p. 170.
  70. ^ King 1996, p. 153.
  71. ^ King 1996, pp. 153–154.
  72. ^ a b c King 2004, p. 177.
  73. ^ King 2004, p. 171.
  74. ^ MacGregor 2018, p. 130.
  75. ^ Almakky & Snyder 1996, p. 29.
  76. ^ King 2004, p. 175.
  77. ^ Almakky & Snyder 1996, p. 32.
  78. ^ a b King 2004, pp. 175–176.
  79. ^ "Mecca mosques 'wrongly aligned'". BBC News. 5 April 2009. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
  80. ^ Bonine 2008, p. 151.
  81. ^ Bonine 1990, p. 52.
  82. ^ Bonine 2008, pp. 151–152.
  83. ^ a b Bonine 2008, p. 154.
  84. ^ Bonine 2008, pp. 153–155.
  85. ^ Bonine 2008, p. 156.
  86. ^ Hadi Bashori 2014, pp. 59–60.
  87. ^ Hadi Bashori 2014, pp. 60–61.
  88. ^ Kersten 2017, p. 130.
  89. ^ Nashir 2015, p. 77.
  90. ^ a b May 1953, p. 367.
  91. ^ a b c Bilici 2012, p. 54.
  92. ^ Bilici 2012, pp. 54–55.
  93. ^ a b Bilici 2012, pp. 55–56.
  94. ^ Bilici 2012, p. 57.
  95. ^ a b Lewis 2013, p. 114.
  96. ^ Lewis 2013, p. 109.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Abdali, S. Kamal (1997). The Correct Qibla (PDF).
  • King, David A. (2018). "Bibliography of books, articles and websites on historical qibla determinations".
  • van Gent, Robert Harry (2017). "Determining the Sacred Direction of Islam". Webpages on the History of Astronomy.

qibla, qibla, arabic, direction, direction, towards, kaaba, sacred, mosque, mecca, which, used, muslims, various, religious, contexts, particularly, direction, prayer, salah, islam, kaaba, believed, sacred, site, built, prophets, ibrahim, ismail, that, qibla, . The qibla Arabic ق ب ل ة lit direction is the direction towards the Kaaba in the Sacred Mosque in Mecca which is used by Muslims in various religious contexts particularly the direction of prayer for the salah In Islam the Kaaba is believed to be a sacred site built by prophets Ibrahim and Ismail and that its use as the qibla was ordained by Allah in several verses of the Quran revealed to Muhammad in the second Hijri year Prior to this revelation Muhammad and his followers in Medina faced Jerusalem for prayers Most mosques contain a mihrab a wall niche that indicates the direction of the qibla Muslims surrounding and facing the Kaaba for prayerThe qibla is also the direction for entering the ihram sacred state for the hajj pilgrimage the direction to which animals are turned during dhabihah Islamic slaughter the recommended direction to make dua supplications the direction to avoid when relieving oneself or spitting and the direction to which the deceased are aligned when buried The qibla may be observed facing the Kaaba accurately ayn al ka bah or facing in the general direction jihat al ka bah Most Islamic scholars consider that jihat al ka bah is acceptable if the more precise ayn al ka bah cannot be ascertained The most common technical definition used by Muslim astronomers for a location is the direction on the great circle in the Earth s Sphere passing through the location and the Kaaba This is the direction of the shortest possible path from a place to the Kaaba and allows the exact calculation hisab of the qibla using a spherical trigonometric formula that takes the coordinates of a location and of the Kaaba as inputs see formula below The method is applied to develop mobile applications and websites for Muslims and to compile qibla tables used in instruments such as the qibla compass The qibla can also be determined at a location by observing the shadow of a vertical rod on the twice yearly occasions when the Sun is directly overhead in Mecca on 27 and 28 May at 12 18 Saudi Arabia Standard Time 09 18 UTC and on 15 and 16 July at 12 27 SAST 09 27 UTC Before the development of astronomy in the Islamic world Muslims used traditional methods to determine the qibla These methods included facing the direction that the companions of Muhammad had used when in the same place using the setting and rising points of celestial objects using the direction of the wind or using due south which was Muhammad s qibla in Medina Early Islamic astronomy was built on its Indian and Greek counterparts especially the works of Ptolemy and soon Muslim astronomers developed methods to calculate the approximate directions of the qibla starting from the mid 9th century In the late 9th and 10th centuries Muslim astronomers developed methods to find the exact direction of the qibla which are equivalent to the modern formula Initially this qibla of the astronomers was used alongside various traditionally determined qiblas resulting in much diversity in medieval Muslim cities In addition the accurate geographic data necessary for the astronomical methods to yield an accurate result was not available before the 18th and 19th centuries resulting in further diversity of the qibla Historical mosques with differing qiblas still stand today throughout the Islamic world The spaceflight of a devout Muslim Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor to the International Space Station ISS in 2007 generated a discussion with regard to the qibla direction from low Earth orbit prompting the Islamic authority of his home country Malaysia to recommend determining the qibla based on what is possible for the astronaut Contents 1 Location 2 Religious significance 2 1 Ayn al ka bah and jihat al ka bah 3 Determination 3 1 Theoretical basis the great circle 3 2 Calculations with spherical trigonometry 3 3 Shadow observation 3 4 On the world map 3 5 Traditional methods 4 Development of methods 4 1 Pre astronomy 4 2 With astronomy 5 Instruments 6 Diversity 6 1 Early Islamic world 6 2 Indonesia 6 3 North America 6 4 Outer space 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksLocation editMain articles Kaaba and al Masjid al Haram nbsp nbsp Mecca nbsp Medina nbsp Jerusalemclass notpageimage Muhammad and the early Muslims in Medina initially prayed towards Jerusalem and changed the qibla to face the Kaaba in Mecca in 623 CE The qibla is the direction of the Kaaba a cube like building at the centre of the Sacred Mosque al Masjid al Haram in Mecca in the Hejaz region of Saudi Arabia Other than its role as qibla it is also the holiest site for Muslims also known as the House of God Bait Allah and where the tawaf the circumambulation ritual is performed during the Hajj and umrah pilgrimages The Kaaba has an approximately rectangular ground plan with its four corners pointing close to the four cardinal directions 1 According to the Quran it was built by Abraham and Ishmael both of whom are prophets in Islam 2 Few historical records remain detailing the history of the Kaaba before the rise of Islam but in the generations prior to Muhammad the Kaaba had been used as a shrine of the pre Islamic Arabic religion 2 The qibla status of the Kaaba or the Sacred Mosque in which it is located is based on the verses 144 149 and 150 of the al Baqarah chapter of the Quran each of which contains a command to turn your face toward the Sacred Mosque fawalli wajhaka shatr al Masjid il Haram 3 According to Islamic traditions these verses were revealed in the month of Rajab or Shaban in the second Hijri year 623 CE or about 15 or 16 months after Muhammad s migration to Medina 4 5 Prior to these revelations Muhammad and the Muslims in Medina had prayed towards Jerusalem as the qibla the same direction as the prayer direction the mizrah used by the Jews of Medina Islamic tradition says that these verses were revealed during a prayer congregation Muhammad and his followers immediately changed their direction from Jerusalem to Mecca in the middle of the prayer ritual The location of this event became the Masjid al Qiblatayn The Mosque of the Two Qiblas 5 There are different reports of the qibla direction when Muhammad was in Mecca before his migration to Medina According to a report cited by historian al Tabari and exegete textual interpreter al Baydawi Muhammad prayed towards the Kaaba Another report cited by al Baladhuri and also by al Tabari says that Muhammad prayed towards Jerusalem while in Mecca Another report mentioned in Ibn Hisham s biography of Muhammad says that Muhammad prayed in such a way as to face the Kaaba and Jerusalem simultaneously 5 Today Muslims of all branches including the Sunni and the Shia all pray towards the Kaaba Historically one major exception was the Qarmatians a now defunct syncretic Shia sect which rejected the Kaaba as the qibla in 930 they sacked Mecca and for a time took the Kaaba s Black Stone to their centre of power in Al Ahsa with the intention of starting a new era in Islam 6 7 Religious significance edit nbsp The Mihrab in one of the walls of a mosque indicates the qibla direction to be used for prayers Picture from the Shah i Zinda Samarkand Uzbekistan Etymologically the Arabic word qibla قبلة means direction In Islamic ritual and law it refers to a special direction faced by Muslims during prayers and other religious contexts 5 Islamic religious scholars agree that facing the qibla is a necessary condition for the validity of salah the Islamic ritual prayer in normal conditions 8 exceptions include prayers during a state of fear or war as well as non obligatory prayers during travel 9 The hadith Muhammad s tradition also prescribes that Muslims face the qibla when entering the ihram sacred state for hajj after the middle jamrah stone throwing ritual during the pilgrimage 5 Islamic etiquette adab calls for Muslims to turn the head of an animal when it is slaughtered and the faces of the dead when they are buried toward the qibla 5 The qibla is the preferred direction when making a supplication and is to be avoided when defecating urinating and spitting 5 Inside a mosque the qibla is usually indicated by a mihrab a niche in its qibla facing wall In a congregational prayer the imam stands in it or close to it in front of the rest of the congregation 10 The mihrab became a part of the mosque during the Umayyad period and its form was standardised during the Abbasid period before that the qibla of a mosque was known from the orientation of one of its walls called the qibla wall The term mihrab itself is attested only once in the Quran but it refers to a place of prayer of the Israelites rather than a part of a mosque 10 a The Mosque of Amr ibn al As in Fustat Egypt one of the oldest mosques is known to have been built originally without a mihrab though one has since been added 11 Ayn al ka bah and jihat al ka bah edit Ayn al ka bah standing so as to face the Kaaba head on is a position facing the qibla so that an imaginary line extending from the person s line of sight would pass through the Kaaba 12 This manner of observing the qibla is easily done inside the Great Mosque of Mecca and its surroundings but given that the Kaaba is less than 20 metres 66 ft wide this is virtually impossible from distant locations 13 For example from Medina with a 338 kilometre 210 mi straight line distance from the Kaaba a one degree deviation from the precise imaginary line an error hardly noticeable when setting one s prayer mat or assuming one s posture results in a 5 9 kilometre 3 7 mi shift from the site of the Kaaba 14 This effect is amplified when further than Mecca 15 from Jakarta Indonesia some 7 900 km 4 900 mi away a one degree deviation causes more than a 100 kilometre 62 mi shift and even an arc second s deviation 1 3600 of a degree causes a more than 100 metre 330 ft shift from the location of the Kaaba 16 In comparison the construction process of a mosque can easily introduce an error of up to five degrees from the calculated qibla and the installation of prayer rugs inside the mosque as indicators for worshipers can add another deviation of five degrees from the mosque s orientation 16 A minority of Islamic religious scholars for example Ibn Arabi d 1240 consider ayn al ka bah to be obligatory during the ritual prayer while others consider it obligatory only when one is able For locations further than Mecca scholars such as Abu Hanifa d 699 and Al Qurtubi d 1214 argue that it is permissible to assume jihat al ka bah facing only the general direction of the Kaaba 17 Others argue that the ritual condition of facing the qibla is already fulfilled when the imaginary line to the Kaaba is within one s field of vision 12 For instance there are legal opinions that accept the entire southeastern quadrant in Al Andalus Islamic Iberian Peninsula and the southwestern quadrant in Central Asia to be valid qibla 18 Arguments for the validity of jihat al ka bah include the wording of the Quran which commands Muslims only to turn one s face toward the Great Mosque and to avoid imposing requirements that would be impossible to fulfill if ayn al ka bah were to be obligatory in all places 19 The Shafi i school of Islamic law as codified in Abu Ishaq al Shirazi s 11th century Kitab al Tanbih fi l Fiqh argues that one must follow the qibla indicated by the local mosque when one is not near Mecca or when not near a mosque to ask a trustworthy person When this is not possible one is to make one s own determination to exercise ijtihad by the means at one s disposal 20 21 Determination editTheoretical basis the great circle edit nbsp The great circle passing through two points A and B indicates the shortest path bold between them A great circle also called the orthodrome is any circle on a sphere whose centre is identical to the centre of the sphere For example all lines of longitude are great circles of the Earth while the equator is the only line of latitude that is also a great circle other lines of latitude are centered north or south of the centre of the Earth 22 The great circle is the theoretical basis in most models that seek to mathematically determine the direction of the qibla from a locality In such models the qibla is defined as the direction of the great circle passing through the locality and the Kaaba 23 24 One of the properties of a great circle is that it indicates the shortest path connecting any pair of points along the circle this is the basis of its use to determine the qibla The great circle is similarly used to find the shortest flight path connecting the two locations therefore the qibla calculated using the great circle method is generally close to the direction of the locality to Mecca 25 As the ellipsoid is a more accurate figure of the Earth than a perfect sphere modern researchers have looked into using ellipsoidal models to calculate the qibla replacing the great circle by the geodesics on an ellipsoid This results in more complicated calculations while the improvement in accuracy falls well within the typical precision of the setting out of a mosque or the placement of a mat 26 For example calculations using the GRS 80 ellipsoidal model yields the qibla of 18 47 06 for a location in San Francisco while the great circle method yields 18 51 05 27 Calculations with spherical trigonometry edit The great circle model is applied to calculate the qibla using spherical trigonometry a branch of geometry that deals with the mathematical relations between the sides and angles of triangles formed by three great circles of a sphere as opposed to the conventional trigonometry which deals with those of a two dimensional triangle nbsp For example the qibla from the city of Yogyakarta Indonesia can be calculated as follows The city s coordinates ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp are 7 801389 S 110 364444 E while the Kaaba s coordinates ϕ Q displaystyle phi Q nbsp are 21 422478 N 39 825183 E The longitude difference D L displaystyle Delta L nbsp is 110 364444 minus 39 825183 70 539261 Substituting the values into the formula obtains an answer of approximately 295 or 25 north of west 28 If a location O displaystyle O nbsp the Kaaba Q displaystyle Q nbsp and the north pole N displaystyle N nbsp form a triangle on the sphere of the Earth then the qibla is indicated by O Q displaystyle OQ nbsp which is the direction of the great circle passing through both O displaystyle O nbsp and Q displaystyle Q nbsp The qibla can also be expressed as an angle N O Q displaystyle angle NOQ nbsp or q displaystyle angle q nbsp of the qibla with respect to the north also called the inhiraf al qibla This angle can be calculated as a mathematical function of the local latitude ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp the latitude of the Kaaba ϕ Q displaystyle phi Q nbsp and the longitude difference between the locality and the Kaaba D L displaystyle Delta L nbsp 29 This function is derived from the cotangent rule which applies to any spherical triangle with angles A displaystyle A nbsp B displaystyle B nbsp C displaystyle C nbsp and sides a displaystyle a nbsp b displaystyle b nbsp c displaystyle c nbsp cos a cos C cot b sin a cot B sin C displaystyle cos a cos C cot b sin a cot B sin C nbsp 30 Applying this formula in the spherical triangle N O Q displaystyle triangle NOQ nbsp substituting B q N O Q displaystyle B angle q angle NOQ nbsp 31 and applying trigonometric identities obtain tan q sin D L sin ϕ cos D L cos ϕ tan ϕ Q displaystyle tan q frac sin Delta L sin phi cos Delta L cos phi tan phi Q nbsp orq arctan sin D L sin ϕ cos D L cos ϕ tan ϕ Q displaystyle q arctan left frac sin Delta L sin phi cos Delta L cos phi tan phi Q right nbsp 29 This formula was derived by modern scholars but equivalent methods have been known to Muslim astronomers since the 9th century 3rd century AH developed by various scholars including Habash al Hasib active in Damascus and Baghdad c 850 Al Nayrizi Baghdad c 900 32 Ibn Yunus 10th 11th century 33 Ibn al Haytham 11th century 33 and Al Biruni 11th century 34 Today spherical trigonometry also underlies nearly all applications or websites which calculate the qibla 23 When the qibla angle with respect to the north q displaystyle angle q nbsp is known true north needs to be known to find the qibla in practice Common practical methods to find it include the observation of the shadow at the culmination of the sun when the sun crosses exactly the local meridian At this point any vertical object would cast a shadow oriented in the north south direction The result of this observation is very accurate but it requires an accurate determination of the local time of culmination as well as making the correct observation at that exact moment 35 Another common method is using the compass which is more practical because it can be done at any time the disadvantage is that the north indicated by a magnetic compass differs from true north 16 36 This magnetic declination can measure up to 20 which can vary in different places on Earth and changes over time 16 Shadow observation edit Main article Qibla observation by shadows nbsp Twice a year the Sun passes directly above the Kaaba allowing the observation of its direction from the shadow of a vertical object As observed from Earth the Sun appears to shift between the Northern and Southern Tropics seasonally additionally it appears to move from east to west daily as a consequence of the Earth s rotation The combination of these two apparent motions means that every day the Sun crosses the meridian once usually not precisely overhead but to the north or to the south of the observer In locations between the two tropics latitudes lower than 23 5 north or south at certain moments of the year usually twice a year the Sun passes almost directly overhead This happens when the Sun crosses the meridian while being at the local latitude at the same time 37 The city of Mecca is among the places where this occurs due to its location at 21 25 N It occurs twice a year firstly on 27 28 May at about 12 18 Saudi Arabia Standard Time SAST or 09 18 UTC and secondly on 15 16 July at 12 27 SAST 09 27 UTC 37 38 b As the sun reaches the zenith of the Kaaba any vertical object on earth that receives sunlight cast a shadow that indicates the qibla see picture 37 This method of finding the qibla is called rasd al qiblat observing the qibla 39 28 Since night falls on the hemisphere opposite of the Kaaba half the locations on Earth including Australia as well as most of the Americas and the Pacific Ocean cannot observe this directly 40 Instead such places observe the opposite phenomenon when the Sun passes above the antipodal point of the Kaaba in other words the Sun passes directly underneath the Kaaba causing shadows in the opposite direction from those observed during rasd al qiblat 37 41 This occurs twice a year on 14 January 00 30 SAST 21 30 UTC the previous day and 29 November 00 09 SAST 21 09 UTC the previous day 42 Observations made within five minutes of the rasd al qiblat moments or its antipodal counterparts or at the same time of the day two days before or after each event still show accurate directions with negligible difference 37 38 On the world map edit nbsp A map generated using the Craig retroazimuthal projection centered on Mecca Unlike most map projections it preserves the direction from any other point on the map to the center Spherical trigonometry provides the shortest path from any point on Earth to the Kaaba even though the indicated direction might seem counterintuitive when imagined on a flat world map For example the qibla from Alaska obtained through spherical trigonometry is almost due north 23 This apparent counter intuitiveness is caused by projections used by world maps which by necessity distort the surface of the Earth A straight line shown by the world map in using the Mercator projection is called the rhumb line or the loxodrome which is used to indicate the qibla by a minority of Muslims 43 c It can result in a dramatic difference in some places for example in some parts of North America the flat map shows Mecca in the southeast while the great circle calculation shows it to the northeast 23 In Japan the map shows it to the southwest while the great circle shows it to the northwest 44 The majority of Muslims however follow the great circle method 23 A retroazimuthal projection is any map projection which preserves the angular direction the azimuth of the great circle path from any point of the map to a point selected as the center of the map The initial purpose of its development was to help finding the qibla by choosing the Kaaba as the center point 45 The earliest surviving works using this projection were two astrolabe shaped brass instruments created in 18th century Iran 46 They contain grids covering locations between Spain and China label the locations of major cities along with their names but do not show any coastline 46 47 The first of the two was discovered in 1989 its diameter is 22 5 centimetres 8 9 in and it has a ruler with which one can read the direction of Mecca from the markings on the instrument s circumference and the distance to Mecca from the markings on the ruler 47 d Only the second one is signed by its creator Muhammad Husayn 48 The first formal design of a retroazimuthal projection in the Western literature is the Craig projection or the Mecca projection created by the Scottish mathematician James Ireland Craig who worked at the Survey Department of Egypt in 1910 49 His map is centered in Mecca and its range is limited to show the predominantly Muslim lands 49 Extending the map further than 90 in longitude from the center will result in crowding and overlaps 50 51 Traditional methods edit Historical records and surviving old mosques show that throughout history the qibla was often determined by simple methods based on tradition or folk science not based on mathematical astronomy Some early Muslims used due south everywhere as the qibla literally following Muhammad s instruction to face south while he was in Medina Mecca is due south of Medina Some mosques as far away as al Andalus to the west and Central Asia to the east face south even though Mecca is nowhere near that direction 52 In various places there are also the qiblas of the companions qiblat al sahaba those which were used there by the Companions of the Prophet the first generation of Muslims who are considered role models in Islam Such directions were used by some Muslims in the following centuries side by side with other directions even after Muslim astronomers used calculations to find more accurate directions to Mecca Among the directions described as the qiblas of the companions are due south in Syria and Palestine 53 the direction of the winter sunrise in Egypt and the direction of the winter sunset in Iraq 54 The direction of the winter sunrise and sunset are also traditionally favoured because they are parallel to the walls of the Kaaba 55 Development of methods editPre astronomy edit The determination of qibla has been an important problem for Muslim communities throughout history Muslims are required to know the qibla to perform their daily prayers and it is also needed to determine the orientation of mosques 56 When Muhammad lived among the Muslims in Medina which like Mecca is also in the Hejaz region he prayed due south according to the known direction of Mecca Within the few generations after Muhammad s death in 632 Muslims had reached places far away from Mecca presenting the problem of determining the qibla in new locations 57 Mathematical methods based on astronomy would develop only at the end of the 8th century or the beginning of the 9th and even then they were not initially popular Therefore early Muslims relied on non astronomical methods 58 There was a wide range of traditional methods in determining the qibla during the early Islamic period resulting in different directions even from the same place In addition to due south and the qiblas of the companions the Arabs also knew a form of folk astronomy called so by the historian of astronomy David A King to distinguish it from conventional astronomy which is an exact science originating from pre Islamic traditions 54 It used natural phenomenon including the observation of the Sun the Moon the stars and wind without any basis in mathematics These methods yield specific directions in individual localities often using the fixed setting and rising points of a specific star the sunrise or sunset at the equinoxes or at the summer or the winter solstices 59 Historical sources record several such qiblas for example sunrise at the equinoxes due east in the Maghreb sunset at the equinoxes due west in India the origin of the north wind or the fixed location of the North Star in Yemen the rising point of the star Suhayl Canopus in Syria and the midwinter sunset in Iraq 59 Such directions appear in texts of fiqh Islamic jurisprudence and texts of folk astronomy Astronomers aside from folk astronomers typically do not comment on these methods but they were not opposed by Islamic legal scholars 60 The traditional directions were still in use when methods were developed to calculate the qibla more accurately and they still appear in some surviving medieval mosques today 53 With astronomy edit nbsp A portion of the qibla table compiled by astronomer and muwaqqit Shams al Din al Khalili of Damascus in the 14th century The qibla directions are listed in the Arabic sexagesimal notation The study of astronomy known as ilm al falak lit science of the celestial orbs in the Islamic intellectual tradition began to appear in the Islamic World in the second half of the 8th century centred in Baghdad the principal city of the Abbasid Caliphate Initially the science was introduced through the works of Indian authors but after the 9th century the works of Greek astronomers such as Ptolemy were translated into Arabic and became the main references in the field 61 Muslim astronomers preferred Greek astronomy because they considered it to be better supported by theoretical explanations and therefore it could be developed as an exact science however the influence of Indian astronomy survives especially in the compilation of astronomical tables 62 This new science was applied to develop new methods of determining the qibla making use of the concept of latitude and longitude taken from Ptolemy s Geography as well as trigonometric formulae developed by Muslim scholars 63 Most textbooks of astronomy written in the medieval Islamic World contain a chapter on the determination of the qibla considered one of the many things connecting astronomy with Islamic law sharia 29 64 According to David A King various medieval solutions for the determination of the qibla bear witness to the development of mathematical methods from the 3rd 9th to the 8th 14th centuries and to the level of sophistication in trigonometry and computational techniques attained by these scholars 29 The first mathematical methods developed in the early 9th century were approximate solutions to the mathematical problem usually using a flat map or two dimensional geometry Since in reality the Earth is spherical the directions found were inexact but they were sufficient for locations relatively close to Mecca including as far away as Egypt and Iran because the errors were less than 2 65 Exact solutions based on three dimensional geometry and spherical trigonometry began to appear in the mid 9th century Habash al Hasib wrote an early example using an orthographic projection 66 e Another group of solutions uses trigonometric formulas for example Al Nayrizi s four step application of Menelaus s theorem 67 f Subsequent scholars including Ibn Yunus Abu al Wafa Ibn al Haitham and Al Biruni proposed other methods which are confirmed to be accurate from the viewpoint of modern astronomy 68 Muslim astronomers subsequently used these methods to compile tables showing the qibla from a list of locations grouped by their latitude and longitude differences from Mecca The oldest known example from c 9th century Baghdad contained entries for each degree and arc minute up to 20 69 In the 14th century Shams al Din al Khalili an astronomer who served as a muwaqqit timekeeper in the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus compiled a qibla table for 2 880 coordinates with longitude differences of up to 60 from Mecca and with latitudes ranging from 10 to 50 68 69 King opines that among the medieval qibla tables al Khalili s work is the most impressive from the view of its scope and its accuracy 69 The accuracy of applying these methods to actual locations depend on the accuracy of its input parameters the local latitude and the latitude of Mecca and the longitude difference At the time of the development of these methods the latitude of a location could be determined to several arc minutes accuracy but there was no accurate method to determine a location s longitude 70 Common methods used to estimate the longitude difference included comparing the local timing of a lunar eclipse versus the timing in Mecca or measuring the distance of caravan routes 68 34 the Central Asian scholar Al Biruni made his estimate by averaging various approximate methods 68 Because of longitudinal inaccuracy medieval qibla calculations including those using mathematically accurate methods differ from the modern values For example while the Al Azhar Mosque in Cairo was built using the qibla of the astronomers but the mosque s qibla 127 differs somewhat from the results of modern calculations 135 because the longitude difference used was off by three degrees 71 Accurate longitude values in the Islamic world were available only after the application of cartographic surveys in the 18th and 19th centuries Modern coordinates along with new technologies such as GPS satellites and electronic instruments resulted in the development of practical instruments to calculate the qibla 72 The qibla found using modern instruments might differ from the direction of mosques because a mosque might be built before the advent of modern data and orientation inaccuracies might have been introduced during the building process of modern mosques 72 20 When this is known sometimes the direction of the mosque s mihrab is still observed and sometimes a marker is added such as lines drawn in the mosque that can be followed instead of the mihrab 20 Instruments edit nbsp nbsp A prayer mat with a modern qibla compass left an Ottoman era qibla compass dated 1738 right Muslims use various instruments to find the qibla direction when not near a mosque The qibla compass is a magnetic compass which includes a table or a list of qibla angles from major settlements Some electronic versions use satellite coordinates to calculate and indicate the qibla automatically 72 Qibla compasses have existed since around 1300 supplemented by the list of qibla angles often written on the instruments themselves 73 Hotel rooms with Muslim guests may use a sticker showing the qibla on the ceiling or a drawer 16 With the advent of computing various mobile apps and websites use formulae to calculate the qibla for their users 23 74 Diversity editEarly Islamic world edit nbsp A map of an area in modern Cairo Note that the mosques have slightly different orientations Because varying methods have been used to determine the qibla mosques were built throughout history in different directions including some that still stand today 75 Methods based on astronomy and mathematics were not always used 76 and the same determination method could yield different qiblas due to differences in the accuracy of data and calculations 77 Egyptian historian Al Maqrizi d 1442 recorded various qibla angles used in Cairo at the time 90 due east 117 winter sunrise the qibla of the sahaba 127 calculated by astronomers such as Ibn Yunus 141 Mosque of Ibn Tulun 156 the rising point of Suhayl Canopus 180 due south emulating the qibla of Muhammad in Medina and 204 the setting point of Canopus The modern qibla for Cairo is 135 which was not known at the time 78 This diversity also results in the non uniform layout in Cairo s districts because the streets are often oriented according to the varying orientation of the mosques Historical records also indicate the diversity of qiblas in other major cities including Cordoba 113 120 135 150 and 180 were recorded in the 12th century and Samarkand 180 225 230 240 and 270 were recorded in the 11th century 78 According to the doctrine of jihat al ka bah the diverse directions of qiblas are still valid as long as they are still in the same broad direction 18 In Mecca itself many early mosques were constructed that were not directly facing the Kaaba 79 In 1990 the scholar of geography Michael E Bonine conducted a survey of the main mosques of all major cities in present day Morocco constructed from the Idrisid period 8th 10th centuries up to the Alaouite period 17th century to present While modern calculations yield the qiblas of between 91 almost due east in Marrakesh and 97 in Tangier 80 only mosques constructed in the Alaouite period are constructed with qiblas relatively close to this range 81 The qibla of older mosques vary considerably with concentrations occurring between 155 160 slightly east of south as well as 120 130 almost southeast 82 In 2008 Bonine also published a survey of the main city mosques of Tunisia in which he found that most were aligned close to 147 83 This is the direction of the Great Mosque of Kairouan originally built in 670 and last rebuilt by the Aghlabids in 862 which is often credited as the model used by the other mosques 84 Among the mosques surveyed the Great Mosque of Sousse was the only one with a significant difference facing further south at 163 83 The actual direction to Mecca as calculated using the great circle method ranges from 110 to 113 throughout the country 85 Indonesia edit Variations of the qibla also occur in Indonesia the country with the world s largest Muslim population The astronomically calculated qibla ranges from 291 295 21 25 north of west depending on the exact location in the archipelago 86 However the qibla is often known traditionally simply as the west resulting in mosques built oriented due west or to the direction of sunset which varies slightly throughout the year Different opinions exist among Indonesian Islamic astronomers Tono Saksono et al argues in 2018 that facing the qibla during prayers is more of a spiritual prerequisite than a precise physical one and that an exact direction to the Kaaba itself from thousands of kilometres away requires an extreme precision impossible to achieve when building a mosque or when standing for prayers 16 On the other hand Muhammad Hadi Bashori in 2014 opines that correcting the qibla is indeed a very urgent thing and can be guided by simple methods such as observing the shadow 87 In the history of the region disputes about the qibla had also occurred in the then Dutch East Indies in the 1890s When the Indonesian scholar and future founder of Muhammadiyah Ahmad Dahlan returned from his Islamic and astronomy studies in Mecca he found that mosques in the royal capital of Yogyakarta had inaccurate qiblas including the Kauman Great Mosque which faced due west His efforts in adjusting the qibla were opposed by the traditional ulama of the Yogyakarta Sultanate and a new mosque built by Dahlan using his calculations was demolished by a mob Dahlan rebuilt his mosque in the 1900s and later the Kauman Great Mosque would also be reoriented using the astronomically calculated qibla 88 89 North America edit nbsp The Islamic Center of Washington founded 1953 one of the early mosques in the United States Its qibla faces the northeast in line with astronomical calculations 90 Places long settled by Muslim populations tend to have resolved the question of the direction of the qibla over time Other countries like the United States and Canada have had large Muslim communities only in the past several decades and the determination of the qibla can be a matter of debate 91 The Islamic Center of Washington D C was built in 1953 facing slightly north of east and initially puzzled some observers including Muslims because Washington D C s latitude is 17 30 north of Mecca Even though a line drawn on world maps such as those using the Mercator projection would suggest a southeastern direction to Mecca the astronomical calculation using the great circle method does yield a north of east direction 56 33 90 Nevertheless most early mosques in the United States face east or southeast following the apparent direction on world maps 91 As the Muslim community grew and the number of mosques increased in 1978 an American Muslim scientist S Kamal Abdali wrote a book arguing that the correct qibla from North America was north or northeast as calculated by the great circle method which identifies the shortest path to Mecca g 92 23 Abdali s conclusion was widely circulated and then accepted by the Muslim community and mosques were subsequently reoriented as a result 91 In 1993 two religious scholars Riad Nachef and Samir Kadi published a book arguing for a southeastern qibla writing that the north northeast qibla was invalid and resulted from a lack of religious knowledge h 93 25 In reaction Abdali published a response to their arguments and criticism in an article entitled The Correct Qibla online in 1997 i The two opinions resulted in a period of debate about the correct qibla 93 Eventually most North American Muslims accepted the north northeast qibla with a minority following the east southeast qibla 23 94 Outer space edit See also List of Muslim astronauts and Religion in space Islam nbsp The issue of the qibla in outer space arose publicly in 2007 with Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor s spaceflight to the International Space Station 95 The International Space Station ISS orbits the Earth at high speed the direction from it to Mecca changes significantly within a few seconds 23 Before his flight to the ISS Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor requested and the Malaysian National Fatwa Council provided guidelines which have been translated into multiple languages 95 The council wrote that the qibla determination should be based on what is possible and recommended four options saying that one should pray toward the first option if possible and if not fall back successively on the later ones 23 the Kaaba itself the position directly above the Kaaba at the altitude of the astronaut s orbit the Earth in general wherever In line with the fatwa council other Muslim scholars argue for the importance of flexibility and adapting the qibla requirement to what an astronaut is capable of fulfilling Khaleel Muhammad of San Diego State University opined God does not take a person to task for that which is beyond his her ability to work with Kamal Abdali argued that concentration during a prayer is more important than the exact orientation and he suggested keeping the qibla direction at the start of a prayer instead of worrying about possible changes in position 23 Before Sheikh Muszaphar s mission at least eight Muslims had flown to space but none of them publicly discussed issues relating to worship in space 96 See also editDirection of prayer Mizrah the direction of prayer in the Jewish faith Ad orientem comparable concept in traditional Christianity Qiblih the Bahaʼi direction of prayer Orientation of churches Spatial deixis spatial orientation relevant to an utteranceNotes edit This reference occurs in Quran 19 11 The dates slightly vary from year to year because the calendar year is not synchronized with the astronomical year see leap year 38 For an example of the loxodrome used to find qibla see North America King 1996 p 150 has a picture of one of the instruments The details of this method and its proof are provided in King 1996 pp 144 145 The details of this method and its proof are provided in King 1996 pp 145 146 This book is Abdali S Kamal 1978 Prayers schedule for North America Indianapolis American Trust Publications OCLC 27738892 This book is Nachef Riad Kadi Samir 1993 The Substantiation of the People of Truth that the Direction of al Qibla in the United States and Canada is to the Southeast Philadelphia Association of Islamic Charitable Projects This article is Abdali S Kamal 17 September 1997 The Correct Qibla PDF geomete com Archived PDF from the original on 18 December 2019 References editCitations edit Wensinck 1978 p 317 a b Wensinck 1978 p 318 Hadi Bashori 2015 pp 97 98 Hadi Bashori 2015 p 104 a b c d e f g Wensinck 1986 p 82 Wensinck 1978 p 321 Daftary 2007 p 149 Hadi Bashori 2015 p 103 Hadi Bashori 2015 p 91 a b Kuban 1974 p 3 Kuban 1974 p 4 a b King 1996 p 134 Hadi Bashori 2015 pp 104 105 Saksono Fulazzaky amp Sari 2018 p 137 Saksono Fulazzaky amp Sari 2018 p 134 a b c d e f Saksono Fulazzaky amp Sari 2018 p 136 Hadi Bashori 2015 pp 92 95 a b King 1996 pp 134 135 Hadi Bashori 2015 p 95 a b c Wensinck 1986 p 83 Hadi Bashori 2015 p 94 Waltham 2013 p 98 a b c d e f g h i j k Di Justo 2007 King 2004 p 166 a b Almakky amp Snyder 1996 p 31 Saksono Fulazzaky amp Sari 2018 pp 132 134 Almakky amp Snyder 1996 p 35 a b Hadi Bashori 2015 p 123 a b c d King 1986 p 83 An equivalent formula in Hadi Bashori 2015 p 119 Hadi Bashori 2015 p 119 King 1986 pp 85 86 a b King 1986 p 85 a b King 1986 p 86 Ilyas 1984 pp 171 172 Ilyas 1984 p 172 a b c d e Raharto amp Surya 2011 p 25 a b c Hadi Bashori 2015 p 125 Raharto amp Surya 2011 p 24 Hadi Bashori 2015 pp 125 126 Hadi Bashori 2015 pp 126 127 Hadi Bashori 2015 p 127 Almakky amp Snyder 1996 pp 31 32 Hadi Bashori 2015 p 110 Tobler 2002 pp 17 18 a b Tobler 2002 p 18 a b King 1996 p 150 King 1996 p 151 a b Snyder 1997 pp 227 228 Snyder 1997 p 228 Tobler 2002 p 19 King 1996 p 130 a b King 1996 pp 130 131 a b King 1996 p 132 King 1996 p 132 also figure 4 2 in p 131 King 1996 p 128 King 1996 pp 130 132 King 1996 pp 128 129 a b King 1996 p 133 King 1996 pp 132 133 Morelon 1996b pp 20 21 Morelon 1996b p 21 King 1996 p 141 Morelon 1996a p 15 King 1996 pp 142 143 King 1996 pp 144 145 King 1996 pp 145 146 a b c d King 1996 p 147 a b c King 2004 p 170 King 1996 p 153 King 1996 pp 153 154 a b c King 2004 p 177 King 2004 p 171 MacGregor 2018 p 130 Almakky amp Snyder 1996 p 29 King 2004 p 175 Almakky amp Snyder 1996 p 32 a b King 2004 pp 175 176 Mecca mosques wrongly aligned BBC News 5 April 2009 Retrieved 16 August 2020 Bonine 2008 p 151 Bonine 1990 p 52 Bonine 2008 pp 151 152 a b Bonine 2008 p 154 Bonine 2008 pp 153 155 Bonine 2008 p 156 Hadi Bashori 2014 pp 59 60 Hadi Bashori 2014 pp 60 61 Kersten 2017 p 130 Nashir 2015 p 77 a b May 1953 p 367 a b c Bilici 2012 p 54 Bilici 2012 pp 54 55 a b Bilici 2012 pp 55 56 Bilici 2012 p 57 a b Lewis 2013 p 114 Lewis 2013 p 109 Bibliography edit Almakky Ghazy Snyder John 1996 Calculating an Azimuth from One Location to Another A Case Study in Determining the Qibla to Makkah Cartographica The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization 33 2 29 36 doi 10 3138 C567 3003 1225 M204 ISSN 0317 7173 Bilici Mucahit 2012 Finding Mecca in America How Islam Is Becoming an American Religion Chicago and London University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 92287 4 Bonine Michael E 1990 The Sacred Direction and City Structure A Preliminary Analysis of the Islamic Cities of Morocco Muqarnas 7 50 72 doi 10 2307 1523121 JSTOR 1523121 Bonine Michael E 2008 Romans Astronomy and the Qibla Urban Form and Orientation of Islamic Cities of Tunisia In Jarita Holbrook R Thebe Medupe Johnson O Urama eds African Cultural Astronomy Current Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy research in Africa Berlin Springer pp 145 178 ISBN 978 1 4020 6639 9 Daftary Farhad 2007 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 46578 6 Di Justo Patrick 2007 A Muslim Astronaut s Dilemma How to Face Mecca From Space Wired Hadi Bashori Muhammad 2014 Penanggalan Islam in Indonesian Jakarta Elex Media Komputindo ISBN 978 602 02 3675 9 Hadi Bashori Muhammad 2015 Pengantar Ilmu Falak in Indonesian Jakarta Pustaka Al Kautsar ISBN 978 979 592 701 3 Ilyas Mohammad 1984 A modern guide to astronomical calculations of Islamic calendar times amp qibla Kuala Lumpur Berita Publishing ISBN 978 967 969 009 5 OCLC 13512629 Kersten Carool 2017 History of Islam in Indonesia Unity in Diversity Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 8187 7 King David A 1986 Ḳibla Astronomical Aspects In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Lewis B amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume V Khe Mahi Leiden E J Brill pp 83 88 ISBN 978 90 04 07819 2 King David A 1996 Astronomy and Islamic Society In Rashed Roshdi ed Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science Vol I London Routledge pp 128 184 ISBN 978 0 415 12410 2 King David A 2004 The Sacred Geography of Islam In Koetsier Teun Bergmans Luc eds Mathematics and the Divine A Historical Study Amsterdam Elsevier pp 161 178 ISBN 978 0 08 045735 2 Kuban Dogan 1974 The Mosque and Its Early Development Leiden E J Brill ISBN 90 04 03813 2 Lewis Cathleen S 2013 Muslims in Space Observing Religious Rites in a New Environment PDF Astropolitics 11 1 2 108 115 Bibcode 2013AstPo 11 108L doi 10 1080 14777622 2013 802622 ISSN 1477 7622 S2CID 143467927 MacGregor Neil 2018 Living with the Gods On Beliefs and Peoples London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 241 30830 1 May Don 1953 You Can t Build That Mosque With a Compass Surveying and Mapping Washington D C 13 1 367 368 Morelon Regis 1996a General survey of Arabic astronomy In Rashed Roshdi ed Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science Vol I London Routledge pp 1 19 ISBN 978 0 415 12410 2 Morelon Regis 1996b Eastern Arabic astronomy between the eight and the eleventh centuries In Rashed Roshdi ed Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science Vol I London Routledge pp 20 57 ISBN 978 0 415 12410 2 Nashir Haedar 2015 Muhammadiyah a Reform Movement Surakarta Muhammadiyah University Press ISBN 978 602 361 012 9 Raharto Moedji Surya Dede Jaenal Arifin 2011 Telaah Penentuan Arah Kiblat dengan Perhitungan Trigonometri Bola dan Bayang Bayang Gnomon oleh Matahari Jurnal Fisika Himpunan Fisika Indonesia in Indonesian 11 1 23 29 ISSN 0854 3046 Saksono Tono Fulazzaky Mohamad Ali Sari Zamah 2018 Geodetic analysis of disputed accurate qibla direction Journal of Applied Geodesy 12 2 129 138 Bibcode 2018JAGeo 12 129S doi 10 1515 jag 2017 0036 ISSN 1862 9024 S2CID 126128439 Snyder John 1997 Flattening the Earth Two Thousand Years of Map Projections Chicago and London University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 76747 5 Tobler Waldo 2002 Qibla and Related Map Projections Cartography and Geographic Information Science 29 1 17 23 doi 10 1559 152304002782064574 ISSN 1523 0406 S2CID 14202789 Waltham David 2013 Mathematics a Simple Tool for Geologists Cheltenham Stanley Thornes ISBN 978 1 134 98308 7 Wensinck Arent Jan 1978 Kaʿba In van Donzel E Lewis B Pellat Ch amp Bosworth C E eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume IV Iran Kha Leiden E J Brill pp 317 322 OCLC 758278456 Wensinck Arent Jan 1986 Ḳibla Ritual and Legal Aspects In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Lewis B amp Pellat Ch eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume V Khe Mahi Leiden E J Brill pp 82 83 ISBN 978 90 04 07819 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Qibla nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Kiblah Abdali S Kamal 1997 The Correct Qibla PDF King David A 2018 Bibliography of books articles and websites on historical qibla determinations van Gent Robert Harry 2017 Determining the Sacred Direction of Islam Webpages on the History of Astronomy Portals nbsp Islam nbsp Geography nbsp Religion nbsp Society nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Qibla amp oldid 1213429600, wikipedia, wiki, 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