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Al-Anouar Mosque

Coordinates: 34°03′51.6″N 4°58′3.2″W / 34.064333°N 4.967556°W / 34.064333; -4.967556
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Al-Anouar Mosque
جامع الأنوار (Arabic)
ⵎⴻⵣⴳⵉⴷⴰ ⵍⴰⵏⵡⴰⵔ (Berber)
Religion
AffiliationSunni Islam
Location
LocationFez, Fès-Meknès, Morocco
Al-Anouar Mosque is located in Morocco
Al-Anouar Mosque
Morocco
Geographic coordinates34°03′51.6″N 4°58′3.2″W / 34.064333°N 4.967556°W / 34.064333; -4.967556
Architecture
TypeMosque
FounderIdris I
Date established808

The Al-Anouar Mosque (Arabic: جامع الأنوار, romanizedjama' al-anwar, lit.'Mosque of the Lights'; Berber languages: ⵎⴻⵣⴳⵉⴷⴰ ⵍⴰⵏⵡⴰⵔ, romanized: mezgida el anwart, lit.'Mosque of the Lights'), formerly also known as the Mosque of the Sheikhs (Arabic: جامع الأشياخ, romanizedjama' al-ashiakh, "Mosque of the Chiefs"), was the oldest mosque in Fes, Morocco. It was founded by Idris I at the same time as he founded the city itself, in the early 9th century. It was located slightly northeast of the current Mosque of the Andalusians, which surpassed it as the main mosque of the area. Today only remnants of the mosque have survived.

History

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The mosque was the first mosque founded by Idris I, in 808 CE,[Note 1] when he founded Madinat Fas, the first city of what became Fes, centered on what is now the Andalous or 'Adoua quarter (on the eastern shore of the Bou Khrareb River). The mosque was built next to a well where the sheikhs (chiefs) of the Berber tribes allied to Idris held their meetings (hence the name "Mosque of the Sheikhs").[1][2] It had no minaret and did not have a particularly monumental appearance.[1]: 40  The name "Al-Anouar" or "Al-Anwar" was an epithet sometimes given to Idris I, which is why the mosque also took on this name.[3]

The mosque was eventually overshadowed and eclipsed by the Mosque of the Andalusians, founded nearby in 859-860, which quickly grew larger than the relatively primitive early Idrisid mosque. In 933, on the order of Hamid ibn Hamdan al-Hamdani the governor of Fes on behalf of the Fatimids, the khutba (Friday sermon) was transferred from the Mosque of the Sheikhs to the Andalusian Mosque, thus denoting the later as the main mosque of the district.[4] (At the same time, on the opposite shore of the river, the khutba was transferred from the Mosque of the Sharifs, the later Zawiya of Idris II, to the Qarawiyyin Mosque.[4])

In the centuries since then, the Mosque of the Sheikhs has survived only as a small prayer space which has been significantly changed by subsequent repairs.[2] A minor structure still stands on the site today, but only vestiges and archaeological remains of the original mosque have survived.[1]: 137 

Notes

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  1. ^ This is the date of Fes's founding according to some accounts; others put it a little earlier, to 789, meaning the mosque could have been founded at this time too.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Le Tourneau, Roger (1949). Fès avant le protectorat: étude économique et sociale d'une ville de l'occident musulman. Casablanca: Société Marocaine de Librairie et d'Édition.
  2. ^ a b Gaillard, Henri (1905). Une ville de l'Islam: Fès. Paris: J. André. pp. 122, 115.
  3. ^ Vimercati Sanseverino, Ruggero (2014). "Idrīs al-Azhar : fondateur et saint patron de Fès". Fès et sainteté, de la fondation à l'avènement du Protectorat (808-1912): Hagiographie, tradition spirituelle et héritage prophétique dans la ville de Mawlāy Idrīs. Centre Jacques-Berque.
  4. ^ a b Terrasse, Henri (1942). La mosquée des Andalous à Fès. Paris: Les Éditions d'art et d'histoire. p. 8.