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The Mosque of Ibrahim Pasha was a mosque built by Ibrahim Pasha of Parga in Razgrad in 1533, and it is believed to be the first-ever congregational mosque in Razgrad. The 1533 Deed of Trust of Ibrahim Pasha testifies on the existence of such a temple and provides information on its appearance, architecture, and staff: the mosque was built upon a firm foundation and had one-of-a-kind columns.
Lala Mustafa Pasha Mosque. Following the Ottoman conquest of Cyprus, a number of churches (especially the Catholic ones) were converted into mosques. A relatively significant surge in church-to-mosque conversion followed the 1974 Turkish Invasion of Cyprus.
Highest number of people following Islam live in Zagreb (18,044), however highest rate of Muslims is in Istria County, where 9,965 people (4,79 % of county's population) have faith in Islam. Lowest number of people following Islam is in Krapina-Zagorje County , where are only 200 Muslims, making 0,15 % of the county's population.
In the 1920s the mosque was converted into a church for Christian worship, dedicated to Saint Nicholas; the bell-tower was built upon the base of the destroyed minaret. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] On the eastern side of the church there is a mural depicting the arrival of Apostle Paul in the port.
Mosque of Pasha Qasim: Pécs: Hungary: 16th Century 1702 The current building, a hundred steps in length and in width, was built by Pasha Qasim the Victorious between 1543 and 1546. The mosque was converted to a church in 1702, after Habsburg-Hungarian troops reconquered the city. The minaret was destroyed by the Jesuits in 1766. One of the ...
Ibrahim Pasha Mosque Kavala: 1530 1920s Once the largest mosque in the town of Kavala, in the early 1920s it was converted into a church and now serves the Christian population. [26] Muhammad Ali Pasha Mosque: Kavala: 1813 1923 Mosque part of the Imaret complex in Kavala built by and named in honour of Muhammad Ali Pasha, a Kavala native. The ...
Ibrahim Pasha Mosque (Greek: Ιμπραήμ Πασά Τζαμί, from Turkish: İbrahim Paşa Camii) is an Ottoman-era mosque on the Aegean island of Rhodes, Greece.It is the oldest out of the seven mosques inside the old walled city of Rhodes, and the only one open to worship today, serving the Turkish-Muslim community of Rhodes.
The mosque was built by the governor Ibrahim Pasha Vlora at the end of the 18th century and rebuilt in 1852. During the communist dictatorship of Enver Hoxha, the minaret of the Ibrahim Pasha Vlora mosque got destroyed in 1967 and the building turned into a wood factory. [1] It is located exactly between the Lead Mosque and the King Mosque.