Hukuru Miskiy
Address: Fareedhee Magu, Henveiru, Malé, Kaafu Atoll, Maldives.
Geographic coordinates: 4º 10' 40.77" N, 73º 30' 44.57" E
Mosque capacity: 300 persons.
Mosque area: 240 sqm. approx.
Malé Old Friday mosque and its compound comprise the most important heritage site in the country. It is also the biggest and one of the finest coral stone buildings in the world. The present mosque was built in 1658 during the reign of Sultan Ibrahim Iskandhar I, replacing the original mosque built in 1153 by the first Muslim sultan of Maldives. It continues to serve as one of the most important places of worship. The mosque is in its original condition except for the corrugated metal sheet roof covering and floor covering. The mosque compound is also in reasonably good condition except for the missing original gateway and part of the old cemetery. New landscaping in parts of the compound compromises the original ambience.
The mosque compound consists of the mosque building, a large minaret, three coral stone wells, a sundial and a cemetery surrounded by a boundary wall. The large unique drum-like minaret is made from plastered coral stone and tied with metal bands. It is painted in white with decorative calligraphy and metal bands. The cemetery has many coral stone mausoleums and grave markers of past sultans, princes and other dignitaries of the country; the mausoleum of Sultan Ibrahim Iskandhar I is located here. The coral stone work within the cemetery comprises the finest collection in the country. The mosque compound also has high quality coral stone wells with stepping stones leading to the entrances and a sundial. The compound does not have old traditional trees anymore.
The mosque building has a hypostyle layout with the two prayer halls, six fenda or antechambers and two chambers for the sultan and his guards. There is a large mihrab chamber and the mimbar is located in the corner of the mihrab chamber. The mosque is entered through three entrances with rising steps and dhaala. It is built on a highly decorated coral stone plinth using a combined coral stone wall, columns, beams, doors and roof structure with an interlocking dry joinery system. The roof is three-tiered with a modern metal roofing finish and has a highly decorated coffered ceiling, a central recessed laagé and ten smaller recessed laagé’s, all raised from the main beams by turned lacquered thona. There are twenty-four columns in the mosque and out of which twelve are made from coral stone. The Qibla board fixed to the mihrab wall is an exquisite piece of design and calligraphy. It displays quotations from Quran and information about the sultan and how the mosque was built.
1153 | Construction of the first mosque by the first Muslim Sultan, Sultan Mohamed Bin Abdullah. Detail of this mosque is not known. |
1338 | Renovation of the mosque by Sultan Ahmed Shihabuddin. |
1658 | Construction of the present mosque by Sultan Ibrahim Iskandhar I. The master carpenters were Ali Maavadikaleyge’ and Mahmud Maavadikaleyge’ from Kondey, Gaafu Alifu Atoll and the principle calligrapher was Chief Justice Al Faqih Al Qazi Jamaludeen. The building took about 2 years for construction. |
1676 | Construction of the minaret and the main gateway by Sultan Ibrahim Iskandhar I after his return from Hajj in 1668. The gateway was the first place of formal education in the country. |
1912 | Restoration of the mosque and minaret by Sultan Mohamed Shamsuddin III. Roofing was changed from thatch to corrugated iron sheets. |
1921 | Construction of the boundary wall. |
1940s | Repair of roof and addition of a new structure, a harugé, to accommodate the increasing demand for space. |
1964 | Restoration of roof and removal of the main entrance gateway. The original roofing was replaced with aluminium sheets and the roof structure was changed to teak wood. Loudspeakers were added to the minaret. |
1980s | Removal of the harugé and part of cemetery, adjustment of the mosque boundary and addition of landscaping. |
1988 | Scientific restoration work of the mosque with the assistance of UNESCO and Indian Government. The first restoration project in Maldives. |
2016 | Timber work of mosque treated for termites and temporary props installed for safety. |
2020 | Restoration work ongoing with the assistance of Indian Government. |
މާލޭ ހުކުރު މިސްކިތަކީ ދިވެހީންގެ އިސްލާމީ ވަހުދަތު އަދި ޖީލުތަކަށް ދެމިގެން އައިސްފައިވާ ދީނީ ތާރީހަށް ހެކިދޭ އެހާމެ މުހިންމު އަދި ހާއްސަ ބިނާއެކެވެ. މިސްކިތުން ފެންނަ ގަލުވަޑާމާއި ލިޔެ ލާފެންކޮށްފައިވާ ލަކުޑީގެ މަސައްކަތަކީ އެ މަސައްކަތުގައި ދިވެހިންނަން ލިބިފައިވާ ހުނަރާއި ކުޅަދާނަކަމަށް މިސާލު ދައްކުވައިދޭ ދިވެހި އާދަކާދައިގެ ފުރިހަމަ ނަމޫނާއެކެވެ. މިއީ ދެބަސް ވެވެން ނެތް ހަގީގަތަކެވެ.
1066 ހ. އައްސުލްތާން އިބްރާހިމް އިސްކަންދަރު 1 ގެ އަމުރުފުޅަށް މާލޭ ހުކުރު މިސްކިތް ބިނާކުރަން ފެށުނީ އޭރު ހުރި މިސްކިތް ޖާގައިގެ ގޮތުން ކުޑަވުމުގެ ސަބަބުން މީސްތަކުންނަށް ނަމާދުގެ އަޅުކަން އަދާކުރުމަށް ދަތިވުމުންނެވެ. އެގޮތުން އިހުގެ ހުކުރު މިސްކިތް ތަޅާލައި، ރާއްޖޭގެ އެކި ކަންކޮޅުތަކުން ހިރިގާ ނަގައިގެން ގެނެސް މިސްކިތް ބިނާކުރުމުގެ މަސައްކަތް ފެށުނެވެ. 15 ޖޫން 1656 މ. ގައި އައްސުލްތާން އިބްރާހިމް އިސްކަންދަރު 1 މިސްކިތުގެ ބިންގާ އަޅުއްވައި ދެއްވުމަށް ފަހު މިސްކިތް ބިނާކުރެވިފައި ވަނީ ވެސް ރަދުންގެ ބެއްލެވުމާއި އިރުޝާދުގެ ދަށުންނެވެ. ހުކުރު މިސްކިތް މިހާރު އެހުރީ ސަރަހައްދަކީ 1153 މ. ގައި ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގެ ފުރަތަމަ ސުލްތާން މުހައްމަދު އިބްނި އަބްދުﷲ ރާއްޖެއަށް އިސްލާމްދީން ގެނެސްދިނުމަށް ފަހު އެޅި ބިނާ ހުރި ތަނުގައެވެ.
Mosque Gallery
ފޮޓޯ މައުރަޒު