Mosque Architecture
Mosque Architecture
Mosque Architecture
Mosque Architecture (1205-1765) was introduced by the Muslims for the ritual needs of their
religion, Islam after the establishment of Muslim rule in Bengal. Mosque architecture was different
from those of the Buddhists and Hindus. Differences were due to the different nature of participation
that was required. In temples, a Brahmin priest performed the rituals before the image of a deity; he
alone entered the sanctum while the rest of the devotees waited outside.
The Muslims needed a large space for congregational prayer, especially on Fridays, when all men
were required to perform the prayer collectively. There was no sanctum with a sacred image, and all
worshipers had to stand in rows behind the imam who led the prayer. The only indispensable
architectural feature was the mihrab, the niche in the qibla wall (western in South Asia) that directed
the worshippers towards the Kaba in Mecca, their holiest shrine; the orientation prescribed for ritual
prayer. During the Sultanate the Friday (jami) mosque became very important as an official building
because the khutba (sermon delivered before the mandatory collective prayer) gave official
recognition to the ruler, and also worked as a declaration of sovereignty. It expressed piety, and was
a potent visual symbol of the power, ideology, and affiliation of the sponsor.
Numerous mosques were built during the five and a half centuries of Muslim rule before the British
colonial period, but a few landmark monuments have been chosen to illustrate how mosque styles
developed in Bengal (both the Indian state of West Bengal as well as Bangladesh). BAKHTIYAR
KHALJI (1205-06), the founder of Muslim rule in Bengal, had constructed several mosques, madrasas
and khanqas, all centred on the capital, LAKHNAUTI. But unfortunately, extant monuments are few
from the 13th and early 14th centuries, the only firmly dated mosque of the period being Zafar Khan
Ghazi's Mosque (1298 AD), now in ruins, in Tribeni (Hughli district; West Bengal, India).
It is a large multi-domed rectangular, hypostyle building of brick with stone veneer (fig.1). Brick,
easily manufactured from the abundantly available clay of the delta, has been the traditional building
material of Bengal from ancient times, as seen in the ruined, but
monumental MAINAMATI and PAHARPUR monasteries in Bangladesh (7th to12th centuries).
Stone was not available locally, and during the early part of Muslim rule it was often quarried from
pre-existing temples, as seen in Zafar Khan Ghazi's mosque. Stone columns divide the interior into
two aisles, each with five square bays, covered by small domes. Each one of the five bays in front
has an entrance, opposite which is a mihrab in the qibla wall. Such a line-up of multiple mihrabs is
absent from mosques in the central Islamic lands as only one is sufficient to signify direction. The
alternative interpretation, that the mihrab symbolized the place where the Prophet stood in the first
mosque of Madina, also dictates a single mihrab. This convention of multiple mihrabs axially aligned
to entrances seems to have local roots, and may be traced to temple architecture, where an image
niche is opposite every entrance into the sanctuary. This mihrab-entrance organisation and the
rectangular shape remained popular in Bengal mosques throughout the Sultanate period. The
building appears squat because the front row of arches springs directly from huge piers. The
ornamentation is both in stone and terracotta, and some in a 15th century style suggestive of
remodeling in later times. The inscription tablet on the central mihrab refers to Zafar Khan as a
warrior and to the building as a madrasa, indicating that the mosque served a dual purpose.
The ADINA MOSQUE in HAZRAT PANDUA of Maldah district; WEST BENGAL, dated to 770 AH (1369 AD) is
the only dated mosque of the 14th century which corresponds roughly to the rule of the independent
Iliyas Shahi rulers (1338-1413). It is unique not only because it is the largest mosque in South Asia,
but because it is the only one in Bengal with an enclosed courtyard (fig. 2), an important feature in
the traditional mosque plan of the central Islamic lands of West Asia.Built in the new capital by
Sultan SIKANDAR SHAH (1358-89) who had successfully repelled the attack of Sultan FIRUZ SHAH
TUGHLAQ of Delhi, it is clearly conceived as an expression of the glory and authority of the new
dynasty.
Its main prayer chamber had a great vaulted central nave (fig. 3), now collapsed, that divided it into
two wings and related it closely to the Great Mosque of Damascus, the earliest extant mosque in
Islam built by the Umayyad caliph al-Walid in 87 AH (706 AD). The early mosques of Delhi and
Ajmer have enclosed courtyards, but no naves. Perhaps Sikandar Shah, seeking additional sources
of legitimacy, had both nave and courtyard to reinforce his affiliation to Islamic lands beyond India;
accordingly, in the foundation inscription he declares himself to be 'the most liberal and the most
perfect of the kings of Arabia and Persia'.
Mosques with huge enclosed courtyards were never built again, because they did not suit the soil,
climate, and needs of the community; large, open courtyards were not very useful in a monsoonic
region like Bengal. The nave, later used rarely, was built cautiously with adaptations, perhaps
because local craftsmen were not experienced in executing vaults of such massive proportions.
Another unusual feature in the Adina, repeated again in a number of mosques sponsored by sultans
or high officials, is the takht or raised platform in the northwestern corner, which functioned as a
maqsura (royal enclosure). This was screened off from the rest of the mosque; had a separate
entrance in the northwest approached by a ramp from the outside, and could be used by the king
and his entourage.
Each wing of the prayer chamber was organised along the same principles as the mosque in Tribeni;
columns form numerous square bays, each one covered by a dome, and the qibla wall has a mihrab
opposite every entrance in front, so that there is a staggering number of three hundred and six
domes and forty one mihrab niches. The stone veneer has been re-used with a much better
understanding than the helter-skelter manner in which plundered material was used in earlier
mosques; mihrab interiors with hanging lamp motifs were carved specifically for the mosque. The
terracotta motifs of the mihrab tympanums are noteworthy for their excellent craftsmanship. The
tradition of carving had pre-Islamic precedents; the Buddhist/Hindu sculptor who made religious
images of imported stone had enjoyed a higher status than makers of terracotta. With the advent of
Islam, which did not make use of stone images, mosques were lavishly decorated in terracotta. By
supporting terracotta, the Muslim rulers elevated the status of the terracotta artist. Some traces of
coloured tiles and painted plaster remain. In the nave, to the north of the central mihrab, is a carved
stone mimbar (pulpit from where the imam delivers his Friday sermon) approached by a staircase.
A typical Bengal style of architecture with salient features derived from the rural hut evolved in the
15th century; the EKLAKHI MAUSOLEUM in Hazrat Pandua, Maldah district, West Bengal, (fig. 4) being
most significant in this development. It is believed to be the tomb of Sultan JALALUDDIN MUHAMMAD
SHAH, the converted son of RAJA GANESHA, and his family.
The first Muslim sultan of Bengali origin, he favored a style with indigenous roots. The tomb re-
established brick alone as the primary building material, and its form, a single-domed square
building with curved cornice and roof, squat hemispherical drumless dome, engaged corner towers,
and terracotta ornamentation, influenced all subsequent buildings, particularly mosques, the only
building type that has survived in large numbers.
The hut was the model for a type of pre-Islamic Buddhist/Hindu temple (bhadra), examples of which
are found in Myanmar. Antecedents of these must have existed in Bengal, because from here ideas
of religion and religious buildings spread further east. References to temples in manuscript paintings
and stone sculpture also prove that ancient Buddhist /Hindu temples were small square structures
ultimately based on the village hut. They had straight cornices, and roofs crowned with xikhara or
stupa, the signifiers of function and denominational affiliation.
Fig. 4: Eklakhi Mausoleum, Maldah
The Eklakhi and subsequent buildings differed in elevation because they always had curved
cornices and roofs crowned with domes. They did not replicate the entire thatched roof because
domes had the symbolic function to broadcast the presence of Islam in a largely non-Islamic
environment. They imitate the curvature of thatched roofs of the rural chala huts of Bengal. These
are generally single-roomed structures with a roof sloping down in two segments (do- chala) or four
(chau- chala), away from the centre of the room. The top ridge where the segments meet, as well as
the eaves on the lower edge, are curved because of the flexible nature of the bamboo frame that
supports the thatch. The stocky, octagonal corner towers which emphasize the solidity of the Eklakhi
may have been inspired by the corner posts of a hut, which bear its fabric but are usually hidden
from view. Jalaluddin's seventeen-year reign heralded the beginning of an era when the sultanate
firmly grounded itself in the culture of the land, and the style of the Eklakhi reflects the new outlook.
Incorporation of hut forms into a brick medium became so popular that the style persisted even after
the restoration of the old Iliyas Shahi house in 1435.
The Bengal style is well reflected in the architecture of the restored Iliyas Shahi (1433-1486)
and HUSAIN SHAH (1494-1538) periods, much of which is located in Lakhnauti, later called GAUR, the
capital. The international border between India and Bangladesh runs through this ancient walled city,
both parts are still known as Gaur. The buildings reflect the absence of any need for monumental
symbols and fit in well with local culture, which even in pre-Islamic times lacked structures on a
monumental scale, the Mainamati and Paharpur monasteries being rare exceptions. The sultans no
longer had the air of foreign rulers whose buildings must symbolize political power or the majesty of
religion. Mosques of modest size suggest that the Muslims had begun to feel accepted in Bengal.
Fig.5: Baba Adam Mosque, Rampal, Munshiganj
Instead of trying to impress people with imposing architecture, they concentrated on their own ritual
needs by building small, practical mosques that fitted in with the local building tradition. Numerous
small, square, single-domed mosques inspired by the Eklakhi tomb, and some medium sized,
rectangular, hypostyle mosques with multiple bays and domes are extant from this time onwards.
A good example of the 15th century style is the mosque in Rampal (Munshiganj district,
Bangladesh), dated 888 AH (1483). It is named after Baba Adam Shahid, traditionally known to be
an early martyr of Islam, whose tomb is nearby. It is a medium-sized, rectangular, hypostyle mosque
with three bays and two aisles covered by six domes (fig.5). Decoration during this century was
subordinated to the building design, so that there is no excess of ornamentation. Large decorated
panels stand out in high relief against plain walls, as in the Eklakhi Mausoleum. A thin layer of lime
wash, once probably painted, is sometimes still visible on the surface of the terracotta plaques.
Sometimes a verandah would be added to the front, just as in a residential hut, with additional
engaged towers in the exterior where the verandah joined the prayer chamber. Examples of small
and large mosques with verandahs are the GOPALGANJ MOSQUE in Dinajpur dated 865 AH (1460),
where the prayer chamber is only 4 metre square; and the DARASBARI MOSQUE in Gaur dated 884 AH
(1479) with a 30.32 metre ' 11.8l metre rectangular prayer chamber, both in Bangladesh (fig.6
and7). The verandahs used a variety of roofing devices: cross-vaults, as in the Gopalganj Mosque;
or domes; or combinations, as in the Darasbari Mosque. Built by Sultan Yusuf Shah in 884 AH the
latter once had a maqsura in the northwest corner approached by a flight of steps outside the north
wall. The terracotta decoration that fills the tympana of the mihrabs in the interior is remarkable for
its liveliness and deep relief.
Fig. 6: Gopalganj Mosque plan
Deviations within the style prove the dynamism of 15th century architecture. From the middle of this
century there is a homogenous group of monuments in southern Bengal known after KHAN JAHAN.
His title Ulugh Khan-I-Azam suggests that he was an ethnic Turk and a high ranking officer in the
Bengal Sultanate. He is popularly credited with Islamising and clearing forests in the area that now
comprises the Bagerhat, Khulna, Jhenaidah, Jessore, and Patuakhali districts of Bangladesh. He is
said to have founded KHALIFATABAD, with its administrative centre of Haveli Khalifatabad, presently
identified with Bagerhat. The majority of the Khan Jahan style mosques are located in this area.
They range from very large to small in size, and include an unusual square, nine-domed type.
Although rooted in the 15th century architectural tradition of Bengal, their stark, unadorned exteriors,
circular engaged corner towers, and massive appearance show considerable influence from Tughluq
architecture of Delhi. The most important example of this group is the SHATGUMBAD MOSQUE in
Bagerhat, the largest mosque in Bangladesh (fig. 8). The mosque has eleven bays and seven
aisles, with the largest bay in the centre. This central bay is divided into seven independent,
rectangular bays that are covered by the chau'-chalas; this being the earliest use of the form in
Bengal. It connects the largest entrance in the east to the largest mihrab, and divides the mosque
into northern and southern wings.
The interiors of the miniature chau-chalas have thin, raised bands of brick that imitate the rafters and
purlins of bamboo hut frames. The rest of the bays also terminate in mihrabs except the one
immediately north of the central mihrab, which has an entrance doorway reserved for the imam so
that he can enter directly from behind the mosque.
Fig. 7: Darasbari Mosque plan
There are seven entrances each on the north and south sides. It seems that the stone pillars once
had brick casings, because there are traces of brickwork around some of their bases. The bare
exterior walls are articulated by recesses. The curved cornice comes to a point over the central
arched doorway in the east, resulting in a triangular shaped pediment, which is probably derived
from the gable ends of do-chala huts. The four circular tapering corner towers are domed, and the
two in front have staircases inside, making these the only ascendable towers attached to a mosque
in this period. The monumental gateway in the east indicates that there was probably once an
enclosing wall around the mosque.
Besides the tomb in Bagerhat the only other dated monument in the Khan Jahan group is
the MASJIDBARI MOSQUE of 876 AH (1471-72 AD) in Mirzaganj, Patuakhali district. This mosque not
only indicates the extent of influence of the Khan Jahan Style, but also helps us map the southern
limits of Sultan Barbak Shahs kingdom to whose reign it is dated. It is also the only extant mosque
with a large chau -chala vault covering the entire verandah. The interior of the vault shows how
meticulously the terracotta decoration was used to simulate the patterns of woven bamboo
strips (fig. 9)
Four pillars in the centre divide the interior into nine equal square bays, each one covered by a
dome. There are three entrances on each of the east, north and south sides. According to
convention, the three mihrabs in the west wall are on axis with the front entrances. The only earlier
building of this plan is the chamber attached to the west wall of the Adina Mosque in Hazrat Pandua,
popularly believed to be the tomb of Sultan Sikandar Shah, the patron of the Adina.
There are no pre-Islamic examples of nine-bayed buildings in Bengal, but such mosques are known,
though not common, throughout the Islamic world; they are rare in other parts of India. In Bengal
they were discontinued after the Sultanate period, but there are nine-bayed tombs in later Mughal
times throughout the subcontinent. The building type, perhaps imported from the central Islamic
lands, became popular because it was entirely covered, and thus met the need for sheltered space
for assembly in Bengal. In usage it became thoroughly Bengalised, and gives the impression of a
large square building where the single-domed square unit has been multiplied. A nine-domed
building was the only solution if a symmetrical enlargement of the popular square, single-domed
mosque was desired, while still retaining the emphasised central mihrab. Compared to the smallness
of the single-domed mosques, these were large and most certainly built for the Friday congregation.
Fig. 10: Masjidkur Mosque plan
Sultanate architecture of the 16th century includes buildings of the Husain Shahi (1494-1538), Suri
(1538-63) and Karrani periods (1563-1575), before the takeover by the Mughals in 1576. The
general peace and prosperity brought about by the Husain Shahi rulers resulted in a large number of
buildings of a rather uniform style. Although the Bengal style spread as far as Bihar and Assam at
this time, there was nothing outstanding or innovative in design. Craftsmen seemed to occupy
themselves with refining decoration and details.
There are several mosques both in West Bengal and Bangladesh that represent this late Sultanate
style. Tiles, which had appeared in a restrained manner in the 14th (Adina Mosque) and 15th (Khan
Jahan's Tomb) centuries, are now in profusion as in the LATTAN MOSQUE in Gaur, West Bengal.
Stone is also sometimes used to encase brick, as in the Bara Sona and Chhota Sona mosques in
Gaur, (West Bengal, and Bangladesh), Sura and the Kusumba mosques in Dinajpur and Raishahi,
Bangladesh.
The Chhota Sona Mosque in Gaur (fig. 11) dates by inscription to the reign of Sultan Alauddin
Husain Shah (1494-1519), and was built by one Wali Muhammad, a high official in the royal court.
This rectangular mosque is completely faced with stone in the exterior, while inside there is stone up
to the springing of the arches. Pillars, pilasters, and the maqsura platform in the northwest corner
are of stone. CUNNINGHAM also reports seeing screens of trelliswork, now disappeared, which used
to partition off the platform, entrance to which was from the exterior northwest side. In this five-bayed
mosque the central bay is wider than the others and has chau-chala vaults instead of domes, as in
the earlier Shatgumbad and Darasbari mosques.
There is abundant stone carving in low relief in the exterior, and ornamental niches within
rectangular panels, rosette and kalasa (pot) motifs that are used repeatedly. There are similar motifs
in the mihrabs inside, but the central mihrab is bare and the stone structure is now believed to be in
the Royal Scottish Museum in Edinburgh.
The BAGHA MOSQUE in Rajshahi (fig. 12) was built by Sultan NUSRAT SHAH (1519-32), son of Husain
Shah in 930 AH (1523-24). This rectangular mosque is within an enclosed courtyard, to be entered
by a gate. Four pillars in the north-south direction divide the interior space into two aisles and five
bays, each of the resulting ten bays being covered by a dome. The presence of a mihrab on an
upper level in the northwestern bay indicates there was a maqsura platform in that corner that must
have been approached by a flight of stairs in the east, although no trace of platform or staircase
exists.
Fig. 13: Terracotta Ornamentation, Bagha Mosque
It is also possible that a platform was planned but never built. The mosque is profusely decorated
with terracotta, and the style is so distinctive that several monuments are dated stylistically to the
early 16th century on the basis of similarity to the 'Bagha style'. Rectangular panels with cusped
arches and hanging motifs are predominant in the decorative scheme (fig. 13).
The hanging ornament has lost its earlier vegetal quality and become highly ornamental,
approximating jewelry design. The rectangular frames of the three large mihrabs in the interior have
panels with niches holding flowering rose, fruiting pomegranate and mango trees.
The Mosque at Kusumba, Rajshahi, dated by inscription to 966 AH (1558-59), is a rectangular six-
domed mosque of two aisles and three bays whose exterior is entirely faced with stone (fig. 14). It is
one of the last major monuments of the Sultanate period, and recalls plans of the earlier mosque of
Muazzampur of 1435-36 and Baba Adams Mosque at Rampal of 1483 in Bangladesh. It also
anticipates the single-aisled, three-bayed plans of the end of the 16th century.
The stone-faced interior and exterior, curved cornice, engaged corner turrets, and the maqsura
platform in the northwest corner belong to the tradition of the Chhoto Sona Mosque.
Fig.15: Kusumba Mosque Central Mihrab, Rajshahi
The platforms of these two non-imperial mosques prove that they were used not only by the king, but
others of high position to separate themselves from the masses during prayer. All the decoration is
on carved stone, and on the exterior a prominent moulding divides the wall into upper and lower
sections. The outside stone facing is coarse and the carving is in shallow relief. Inside, the mihrabs
and the platform supports are very elaborately carved. There are bunches of grapes, serpentine
vines, and kalasas; tendrils and rosettes are reduced to dots (fig. 15). Although AKBAR conquered
Bengal in 1576, it was many decades before the resistance of powerful local landlords could be
crushed, and it was only in 1613 that the whole of Bengal was firmly integrated into the Mughal
empire. Two mosques in Bangladesh built by the Qaqshals, one of the rebel Afghan clans, occupy
key positions in the transformation of the Sultanate style to Mughal.
In contrast to the buildings of the Sultanate period, which have a marked regional character, Mughal
buildings are constructed within the imperial tradition of Delhi and Agra, but are more subdued than
contemporary architecture elsewhere in the subcontinent. As in Sultanate times, Mughal mosques
consist of only a prayer hall, which is now single-aisled with three or five bays. The exterior surfaces
are plastered and paneled, the cornices are straight, and the buildings look less ponderous than
Sultanate ones because of the higher domes.
Fig.17: Lalbagh Fort Mosque, Dhaka
A refined Mughal provincial style was developed in the capital city of Dhaka in the 17th century. The
Lalbagh Fort Mosque in Dhaka dated 1059 AH (1649) and 1194 AH (1780) conforms to the typical
Mughal mosque plan. Located inside the fort, closest to the river, it was probably the earliest building
on the site (fig. 17).
Lateral arches in the interior divide the rectangular structure into three bays, the central one being
the largest. The building is plastered, and the entire east facade is divided into small rectangular
panels; the engaged tapering corner turrets have regularly spaced horizontal mouldings. The three
doors in front are placed within recessed arches with half-domes ornamented with faceted stucco
motifs. The straight cornice is embellished with a row of merlons; its height varies, the central
section, which corresponds to the largest bay, being the highest. Inside, the north and south walls
have panels like the exterior, and the stucco motifs of the entrances are repeated in the three
mihrabs.
The SATGUMBAD MOSQUE in Dhaka, also of the second half of the 17th century, has a unique
character (fig. 18). Although the main prayer chamber has the regular three-bayed plan, enormous
double-storied, domed corner pavilions replace the usual engaged turrets. The three domes of the
prayer chamber together with the four corner ones add up to a total of seven, thus giving the
mosque its name.
While mosques in Dhaka reflect the imperial style of Delhi, the Sultanate style lived on in several
mosques that were built away from the capital. The ATIYA MOSQUE in Tangail district in Bangladesh
was built in 1018 AH (1609) by Sayyid Khan Panni. It is a single-domed, square mosque with a
three-domed verandah in front, engaged octagonal corner towers and curved cornice.
Its weightiness, suggested by the relatively small entrance arches as well as the ornamental style of
the exterior surface which is broken up into numerous small niches (fig. 19), recalls Sultanate
monuments, eg the KADAM RASUL (1530) and JAHANIYAN MOSQUE (1535) of Gaur, West Bengal.
But the drums of the domes, the lotus finials, and the merlon decoration are Mughal. SADI MOSQUE in
Egarasindur, Bangladesh dated 1062 AH (1652) is another mosque that harks back to Sultanate
times.
Two mosques in Dhaka dating from the early 18th century mark the termination of the high tradition
of Mughal architecture which had begun a hundred years earlier.
These are KARTALAB KHANS MOSQUE in Begumbazar, which he reportedly built during his residence
in Dhaka between 1700-1703, and Khan Muhammad Mridhas Mosque in Lalbagh dated by
inscription to 1116 AH (1704-05). Both are built on raised terraces with vaulted rooms in the plinth
that were used for shops or for madrasa students. Both are single-aisled, and while Mridhas
Mosque has three bays, Kartalab Khans has five. An unusual feature of Kartalab Khans Mosque is
the room with a pitched do-chala roof with drooping eaves that is attached to the north side of the
mosque (fig. 20)
By 1717 MURSHIDABAD became the last Mughal capital of Bengal. The earliest surviving and most
significant of the monuments that were built to embellish this capital is the Jami Mosque, also known
as the KATRA MOSQUE, built 1137 AH \1724-25 (fig. 21). The name comes from the domed chambers
that surround the mosque on all four sides, which are locally known to have served as a market but
have been described also as a madrasa. In accordance to his wishes, MURSHID QULI KHAN was
buried under the entrance to this mosque.
The largest Mughal mosque in Bengal, the Katra Mosque is now ruined. This single-aisled, five-
bayed mosque sits on a high plinth about 54 metres square. Although the plan is typically Mughal, its
massiveness, and the ornamental style of its exterior surface, like the Atiya recalls the Jahaniyan
Mosque of Gaur of Sultanate times, and contrasts with the elegant Mughal buildings in Dhaka. The
rounded shape of the cusped arches may indicate an early European influence, and the harking
back to the Sultanate style symbolizes the break with Delhi just as quarrels among the successors
of AURANGZEB was leading to the decline of Mughal power there. [Perween Hasan]
Bibliography Alexander Cunningham, Report of a Tour in Bihar and Bengal in 1879-80, The
Archaeological Survey of India Report, XV, Calcutta, 1882; A H Dani, Muslim Architecture in Bengal,
Dacca, 1961; S M Hasan, Mosque Architecture of Pre-Mughal Bengal, (2nd ed), Dacca, 1979;
George Michell (ed), The Islamic Heritage of Bengal. Unesco, Paris,1984; Perween Hasan, Art and
Architecture, in Sirajul Islam (ed), History of Bangladesh 1704-1971, 2nd ed, Dhaka, 1997.