List of mosques in Germany
This is a list of mosques in Germany by states.
Baden-Württemberg
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Schwetzingen Masjid | Schwetzingen | 1779 | - | Oldest mosque architecture in Germany. Non-functional as a mosque. | |
Mimar Sinan Masjid Mosbach | Mosbach | 1990s | DITIB | ||
Yavuz Sultan Selim Masjid | Mannheim-Jungbusch | 1995 | DITIB | Capacity: 2.500. | |
Große Moschee | Buggingen | 1998 | DITIB | ||
Alperenler Masjid | Rheinfelden (Baden) | 1996 | DITIB | ||
Fatih Masjid | Heilbronn | 1987 | IGMG | ||
Mevlana Masjid | Eppingen | 1996 | IGMG | ||
Central Masjid Offenburg | Offenburg | 2002 | DITIB |
Bavaria
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Freimann Masjid | Munich-Freimann | 1973 | IZM | Foundation stone in 6. October 1967 | |
Penzberg | 2005 | http://www.irsmm.org/content/penzberg-mosque-bavaria-germany | |||
Masjid in Sendling | Munich-Sendling | 1989 | DITIB |
Berlin
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ahmadiyya Mosque Berlin | Berlin-Wilmersdorf | 1924 | AAIIL | Wilmersdorfer Moschee The oldest standing mosque in Germany—the Wünsdorf Mosque, built in 1915 at the Halbmondlager POW camp, was Germany's first, but it was demolished in 1925–26. | |
Şehitlik Mosque | Berlin-Neukölln | 2004 | DITIB | Architect: Hilmi Senalp; Capacity: 1.550. | |
Omar Ibn Al-Khattab Mosque | Berlin-Kreuzberg | 2008 | U | ||
Khadija Mosque | Berlin-Heinersdorf | 2008 | AMJ |
Bremen
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fatih Mosque | Bremen-Gröpelingen | 1999 | IGMG | Capacity: 1.300 |
Hamburg
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fazle Omar Mosque | Hamburg-Lokstedt | 1957[1] | AMJ | First mosque built after World War II in Germany | |
Imam Ali Mosque | Hamburg-Uhlenhorst | 1965[1] | Sh | Build by Iranian business men | |
Central Mosque Hamburg | Hamburg-St. Georg | 1977 | IGMG |
Hesse
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Noor Mosque | Frankfurt am Main | 1959 | AMJ | ||
Anwar Mosque | Rodgau | 2008 | AMJ | ||
Noor ud Din Mosque | Darmstadt | 2003 | AMJ | ||
Baitus Shakur | Groß-Gerau | 1992 | AMJ | Biggest Ahmadiyya mosque in Germany. Capacity: 850. | |
Baitul Huda | Usingen | 2004 | AMJ | ||
Fatih Mosque | Stadtallendorf | 2004 | DITIB | ||
Bait-ul Aziz | Riedstadt | 2004 | AMJ | ||
Muqeet Mosque | Wabern | 2007 | AMJ | ||
Bashir Mosque | Bensheim | 2006 | AMJ | ||
Baitul Ghafur | Ginsheim-Gustavsburg | 2011 | AMJ | ||
Baitul Hadi Mosque | Seligenstadt | 2011 | AMJ | ||
Baitul Baqi | Dietzenbach | 2011 | AMJ | ||
Baitul Aman | Nidda | 2011 | AMJ |
Lower Saxony
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Baitus Sami | Hannover | 2008 | AMJ | ||
Salimya Mosque | Göttingen | 2008 | DITIB | ||
Islamisches Kulturzentrum Wolfsburg | Wolfsburg | Located at Berliner Ring 39, 38440 Wolfsburg. The Imam is Arabic. This mosque attracts all the Muslims in the city, majority of which are Turkish. Official website : http://www.islam-wolfsburg.de/ |
North Rhine-Westphalia
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alnoor Islamic Zentrum | Belecke | Maintained by Islamisches Zentrum Belecke | |||
Bilal Mosque | Aachen | 1964 | IZA | Maintained by Islamisches Zentrum Aachen
e | |
Wesseling Mosque „Mimar Sinan Camii“ |
Wesseling | 1987 | DITIB | ||
King Fahd Mosque | Bonn-Bad Godesberg | 1995 | SA | ||
Baitul Momin | Münster-Hiltrup | 2003 | AMJ | ||
Vatan Mosque | Bielefeld-Brackwede | 2004 | DITIB | ||
Merkez Mosque | Wuppertal-Elberfeld | ? | DITIB | ||
Nasir Mosque | Isselburg | 2007 | AMJ | ||
DITIB-Merkez-Moschee | Duisburg | 2008[2] | DITIB | 4th largest mosque in Germany, Capacity: 1.200. | |
Cologne Central Mosque | Cologne | – | DITIB | Construction began 2009 |
Rhineland-Palatinate
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hamd Mosque | Wittlich | 1998 | AMJ | Capacity: 600. | |
Tahir Mosque | Koblenz-Lützel | 2004 | AMJ |
Schleswig-Holstein
Name | Images | City | Year | Group | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Centrum Masjid Rendsburg | Rendsburg | 2008 | IGMG | Capacity: 300; 2 Minarets à 26 m. |
Group
AAIIL | Lahore Ahmadiyya Movement for the Propagation of Islam |
AMJ | Ahmadiyya Muslim Community |
ATIB | Union der Türkisch-Islamischen Kulturvereine in Europa |
DITIB | Diyanet İşleri Türk İslam Birliği |
IGMG | Millî Görüş |
IZA | Islamic Centre Aachen |
IZM | Islamic Centre Munich |
SA | Saudi Arabia (Wahhabism) |
Sh | Shia Islam |
TJ | Tablighi Jamaat |
U | Unknown |
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mosques in Germany. |
References
- 1 2 Ossama Hegazy (2015). "Towards a German Mosque". In Erkan Toğuşlu. Everyday Life Practices of Muslims in Europe. Leuven University Press. pp. 193–216. ISBN 978-94-6270-032-1.
- ↑ "Muslim Integration: Why No One Protested against Germany's Biggest Mosque", Der Spiegel, 27 October 2008
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