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Near the port city of Aqaba at the head of the Gulf of Aqaba, where the Red Sea meets the fabled deserts of southern Jordan, the Mosque of Qutayba ibn Muslim al Bahili honours one of the most consequential generals of the early Umayyad period. Qutayba ibn Muslim, may God have mercy on him, served as governor of Khurasan under the caliph al Walid ibn Abd al Malik and led the Muslim armies across the Oxus into Transoxiana, establishing the presence of Islam in the cities of Bukhara, Samarkand, and Khwarezm during the early eighth century. His legacy in Central Asia shaped the faith of millions of people whose descendants continue to live across the Silk Road lands.
Aqaba itself carries an ancient history that reaches from the biblical era through the Nabatean, Roman, and Byzantine periods, and the city's rise under Islamic rule connected Jordan to the maritime trade routes of the Red Sea. Today it is a modern port and leisure destination, drawing visitors to its coral reefs, its dive sites, and the surrounding deserts of Wadi Rum.
The mosque named for Qutayba follows a familiar modern Jordanian idiom. Pale limestone cladding wraps the outer walls, a central dome of cream rises above the square prayer hall, and a single slender minaret in square plan carries a stepped crown bearing loudspeakers that call the faithful across the residential quarter. Horseshoe arched windows filter the Red Sea sunlight into patterned shade, and a small courtyard planted with date palms welcomes worshippers through carved wooden doors.
Inside, the hall is bright and serene. Long rows of deep green Turkish carpet lead the eye towards a mihrab of polished cream marble, flanked by slender columns bearing calligraphic bands. A carved walnut mimbar of moderate scale stands beside the niche, and pendant chandeliers hang from a coffered ceiling painted in pale gypsum tones. A curtained women's prayer area behind a partition offers comfortable access for sisters.
Aqaba's mosque gathers fishermen, dockworkers, and civil servants for the daily prayers, and the Friday gathering fills the hall with families from across the southern district. Ramadan iftars of fish, rice, and fresh Jordanian bread shared in the courtyard continue the old port hospitality of the Red Sea coast.
Aqaba itself carries an ancient history that reaches from the biblical era through the Nabatean, Roman, and Byzantine periods, and the city's rise under Islamic rule connected Jordan to the maritime trade routes of the Red Sea. Today it is a modern port and leisure destination, drawing visitors to its coral reefs, its dive sites, and the surrounding deserts of Wadi Rum.
The mosque named for Qutayba follows a familiar modern Jordanian idiom. Pale limestone cladding wraps the outer walls, a central dome of cream rises above the square prayer hall, and a single slender minaret in square plan carries a stepped crown bearing loudspeakers that call the faithful across the residential quarter. Horseshoe arched windows filter the Red Sea sunlight into patterned shade, and a small courtyard planted with date palms welcomes worshippers through carved wooden doors.
Inside, the hall is bright and serene. Long rows of deep green Turkish carpet lead the eye towards a mihrab of polished cream marble, flanked by slender columns bearing calligraphic bands. A carved walnut mimbar of moderate scale stands beside the niche, and pendant chandeliers hang from a coffered ceiling painted in pale gypsum tones. A curtained women's prayer area behind a partition offers comfortable access for sisters.
Aqaba's mosque gathers fishermen, dockworkers, and civil servants for the daily prayers, and the Friday gathering fills the hall with families from across the southern district. Ramadan iftars of fish, rice, and fresh Jordanian bread shared in the courtyard continue the old port hospitality of the Red Sea coast.
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Mosque Qtybt Bn Mslm Albahly