مئذنة

Minaret (Prayer Tower)

The mosque's tower, from which the adhan (call to prayer) is traditionally recited.

Minaret (Arabic: مئذنة, mi'dhanah) is the characteristic tower that is part of mosque architecture, from which the muezzin traditionally calls to prayer (adhan). The word "mi'dhanah" is derived from "adhan" (call to prayer), and the minaret is literally "the place of adhan."

The earliest mosques in Islam did not have minarets. Bilal ibn Rabah, the first muezzin, called to prayer from the roof of a house near the Prophet's mosque in Medina. The first proper minarets were built during the Umayyad caliphate in the 7th-8th century. Since then, the minaret has become one of the most recognizable symbols of Islamic architecture.

Minarets vary enormously in style depending on region and tradition: Ottoman minarets are thin and pointed (as in Istanbul), Fatimid and Mamluk minarets are sturdier and more decorative (as in Cairo), Persian minarets are often double and richly ornamented (as in Isfahan and Mashhad), and modern minarets can be minimalist and functional.

In Shia mosques and shrines, minarets play a prominent role. The Imam Ali shrine in Najaf, the Imam Husayn shrine in Karbala, and the Imam Reza shrine in Mashhad all have characteristic golden minarets visible from a great distance. For Shia Muslims, the sight of these minarets is associated with deep devotion and spiritual longing.

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