Al Jum'ah Mosque

Al Jum'ah Mosque
Basic information
Location Medina, Saudi Arabia
Affiliation Islam
Country Saudi Arabia
Groundbreaking 622
Specifications
Capacity 650 pilgrims
Dome(s) 3
Minaret(s) 1

Al Jum'ah Mosque (Arabic: مسجد الجمعة), also known as Bani Salim Mosque, Al-Wadi Mosque, Al-Ghubaib Mosque, or 'Atikah Mosque is a mosque in Medina, Saudi Arabia. The place is told by the locals as where the Islamic prophet Muhammad and his companions did a Jumu'ah prayer for the first time during their route of hijrah (migration) from Mecca to Medina.

Location

It is located southwest of Medina, near Wadi Ranuna', and 900 meters north of Quba Mosque and 6km from Al-Masjid an-Nabawi.

History

During the route of hijrah from Mecca to Medina, on monday, 12, Rabi' al-awwal, year 1 of hijri calendar, the prophet and his muhajirin (companions of hijrah) stopped by Quba for four days. On the morning of friday, they resumed the route to Medina, and stopped by at Wadi Ranuna' region and fulfilled the Jumu'ah prayer there. The region is called Jum'ah today.[1]

Foundation

It was built by rocks initially, then demolished and renovated for several times. The mosque before renovation had 8 meters length, 4.5 meters width and 5.5 meters tall, and a dome made by red bricks. There was a yard with 8 meters length and 6 meters width attached to the east part. Renovation in 1988 by the Minitry of Awqaf of the Saudi government lead by the king Fahd bin Abdul Aziz was accompanied by the demolition of old part and building of new part which includes a residence for Imam and Muezzin, a library, madrasa Tahfidz al-Qur'an, a female prayer room and a bathroom.[1] In 1991, the mosque was reopened for public with capacity of 650 pilgrims, and a main dome and four small domes.[1]

Timeline of renovation

See also

References

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