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Al-Atassi Mosque

Al-Atassi Mosque
مَسْجِد ٱلْأَتَاسِيّ
The mosque in 2010
Religion
AffiliationIslam
Ecclesiastical or organisational statusMosque
StatusActive
Location
LocationHoms
CountrySyria
Al-Atassi Mosque is located in Syria
Al-Atassi Mosque
Location of the mosque in Syria
Map
Geographic coordinates34°43′24″N 36°42′43″E / 34.7232°N 36.7119°E / 34.7232; 36.7119
Architecture
TypeIslamic architecture
StyleOttoman
FounderAbdul Latif Pasha al-Atassi
Funded byAl-Atassi family
Completed1913 CE
Construction cost
  • LS 50,000,000
  • (US$1,000,000)
Specifications
Capacity3,000 worshippers
Interior area3,000 m2 (32,000 sq ft)
Dome(s)18 total;
  • 1 large
  • 4 medium
  • 13 small
Minaret(s)1
MaterialsAleppo marble; ivory
[1]

The Al-Atassi Mosque (Arabic: مَسْجِد ٱلْأَتَاسِيّ, romanizedMasjid al-ʾAtāsīy), also known as the Great Al-Atassi Mosque, is a mosque in Homs, Syria. It is situated in a public park on the site of a former graveyard at the foot of the mound on which the remains of the citadel stand.

Completed in 1913 CE, the mosque is named after Hashim al-Atassi, three-time Syrian President from the Al-Atassi family, a prominent landowning and politically active family from Homs. The mosque features a late Ottoman style that combines lead domes and slender hexagonal minarets. It is notable for the colors of the Aleppo marble in the mihrab and the ivory pulpit.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ مسجد الصحابي الجليل دحية الكلبي المعروف بمسجد آل الأطاسي أو آل الأتاسي. public.websites.umich.edu (in Arabic). Archived from the original on 11 December 2024. Retrieved 10 May 2025.
  2. ^ "Great Al-Atassi Mosque". Syrian Treasures. 8 August 2025. Retrieved 26 August 2025.

 Media related to Al-Atassi Mosque at Wikimedia Commons

  • "The Passing of a Syrian General Famed for Brutality". New Lines Magazine. 9 August 2022. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
  • Parker, Joel (13 December 2016). "The Atassis of Homs: The rise and decline of one of Syria's founding families". The Journal of the Middle East and Africa. 7 (4). Tel-Aviv, Israel: Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel-Aviv University: 369–385.
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