Sidi Mansour Mosque
Mosque in Tunis, Tunisia
36°47′24″N 10°10′36″E / 36.790086°N 10.176666°E / 36.790086; 10.176666Sidi Mansour Mosque (Arabic: جامع سيدي منصور) is a Tunisian mosque in El Hajjamine quarter, attached to the Bab El Jazira suburb in the south of the Medina of Tunis.
Localization
The mosque can be found in Sidi Mansour Street, near Bab El Fellah, one of the gates of the medina.
Etymology
The mosque was named after the saint Sidi Mansour Abou Daliah (Arabic: سيدي منصور أبودالية), attached to the Idrisid dynasty that ruled Morocco between 789 and 985.[1] He was born in Fes and died in Gafsa in the 15th century.[2]
History
According to Hayet El Mejri, the kouttab of the mosque existed in 1875.[2]
- Marble panel with the name of the mosque
- Entrance of the mosque
- Minaret of the mosque
- Sidi Mansour mosque in 1920
References
- ^ "Alchourouk.com".
- ^ a b Hayet El Mejri, De l'éducation traditionnelle à l'éducation primaire dans la médina de Tunis à l'époque ottomane, Tunis, Laboratoire d'études maghrébines, 2015, 284 p. (ISBN 9-93807-084-1), p. 49-50
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sidi Mansour Mosque.
- v
- t
- e
- Al-Zaytuna Mosque
- Bab Bhar Mosque
- El Fell Mosque
- El Habibi Mosque
- El Hafsia Mosque
- El Hentati Mosque
- El Ichbili Mosque
- El Jedid Mosque
- El Koubba Mosque
- El Mehrass Mosque
- Ettarraz Mosque
- Hammouda Pacha Mosque
- Harmel Mosque
- Kasbah Mosque
- Ksar Mosque
- Laz Mosque
- Little Pacha Mosque
- Melmli Mosque
- Saida Adjoula Mosque
- Sidi Amor Mosque
- Sidi Bou Hadid Mosque
- Sidi Mahrez Mosque
- Youssef Dey Mosque
- Abi Mohamed Al Morjani Mosque
- Abi Mnigel Mosque
- Ben Hmida Mosque
- El Ahmadi Mosque
- El Borj Mosque
- El Bradia Mosque
- El Kayal Mosque
- Hammam El Rmimi Mosque
- Saheb Ettabaâ Mosque
- Sidi Belhassen El Halfaoui Mosque
- Sidi Bellagh Mosque
- Sidi El Ansari Mosque
- Sidi Gouicem Mosque
- Soubhan Allah Mosque
- Tabbanine Mosque
- Tronja Mosque
- Part of
- Medina of Tunis
- Mosques in Tunisia
- WikiProject Tunisia