Great Mosque of Kilwa

Great Mosque of Kilwa
Msikiti Mkuu wa Kilwa
Ruins of the Great Mosque of Kilwa.
Religion
AffiliationSunni Islam
DistrictKilwa District
RegionLindi Region
Location
MunicipalityKilwa Masoko
Great Mosque of Kilwa is located in Tanzania
Great Mosque of Kilwa
Shown within Tanzania
Geographic coordinates8°58′00.0″S 39°32′00.0″E / 8.966667°S 39.533333°E / -8.966667; 39.533333
Architecture
StyleSwahili architecture

The Great Mosque of Kilwa is a congregational mosque on the island of Kilwa Kisiwani, in Kilwa Masoko in Kilwa District in Lindi Region of Tanzania. It was likely founded in the tenth century, but the two major stages of construction date to the eleventh or twelfth and thirteenth century, respectively. It is one of the earliest surviving mosques on the Swahili coast and is one of the first mosques built without a courtyard.

The smaller northern prayer hall dates to the first phase of construction and was built in the 11th or 12th century. It contained a total of 16 bays, supported by nine pillars, originally carved from coral but later replaced by timber. The structure, which was entirely roofed, was perhaps one of the first mosques to have been originally built without a courtyard.

It was modified in the 13th century adding side pilasters, timber, transverse beams.

In the early fourteenth century, Sultan al-Hasan ibn Sulaiman, who also built the nearby Palace of Husuni Kubwa, added a southern extension which included a great dome. This dome was described by Ibn Battuta after he visited Kilwa in 1331. Ibn Battuta's descriptions were not entirely accurate though, claiming that the mosque was completely made of wood, while stone walls were found to predate the fourteenth century.[1]

  1. ^ Chittick, Neville (1963). "Kilwa and the Arab Settlement of the East African Coast". The Journal of African History. 4 (2): 179–190. doi:10.1017/S0021853700004011. JSTOR 179533.