The Mansouri Great Mosque, a mosque in …
Years: 1294 - 1294
The Mansouri Great Mosque, a mosque in Tripoli, Lebanon, also known simply as the Great Mosque of Tripoli, will be built from 1294 to 1314 around the remains of a Crusader Church of St. Mary.
The mosque is named after Mamluk sultan al-Mansur Qalawun, who had conquered Tripoli from the Crusaders in 1289.
The mosque itself is erected by his two sons, al-Ashraf Khalil, who had ordered its construction in 1293, and al-Nasir Muhammad, who will have the arcade built around the courtyard in 1314.
Located on the site of what was once a Crusaders' suburb at the foot of the Citadel of Tripoli, the mosque will often be mistaken for a remodeled Christian church by medieval travelers and modern historians alike.
Two elements, the door and the minaret, probably do belong to an earlier, Christian structure that is incorporated into the mosque when it is built, but the building—comprising its court, arcades, fountain, and prayer hall—is essentially a Muslim creation.
In any case, the two Christian elements in no way detract from the traditional Muslim nature of this great royal mosque, the first building erected in Mamluk Tripoli.
