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Grand Mosque Sltan Allmaʾ Alz Bn Bd Alslam
جامع سلطان العلماء العز بن عبد السلام
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Raised in the ancient city of Homs in western Syria, Jami Sultan al Ulama al Izz ibn Abd al Salam honours the great twelfth and thirteenth century Damascene jurist known affectionately as the Sultan of the Scholars. Al Izz ibn Abd al Salam was born in Damascus around 1181 and passed away in Cairo in 1262, a lifetime during which he stood fearlessly before Ayyubid and Mamluk rulers alike, refusing every unjust decree and famously ruling that Mamluk emirs who had been slaves at the time of their conversion could not legally command Muslim armies unless formally emancipated according to Islamic law, a judgment that even the Sultan Baybars himself accepted with humility.
Homs itself carries deep Islamic heritage. It became the final resting place of Khalid ibn al Walid, may God be pleased with him, whose magnificent mosque with its green dome and twin minarets remains among the most beloved landmarks of Syria. The city, known in Roman times as Emesa, produced the empress Julia Domna in antiquity and later gave the Muslim world many scholars including the great jurist Ibn Abd al Salam al Sulami, namesake of the present mosque. Centuries of patient scholarship have shaped a community that holds classical learning, generous hospitality, and gentle manners in equal reverence.
Architecturally, the mosque reflects the Levantine Syrian style. Walls of warm honey coloured limestone quarried from nearby hills, a central dome rising above the prayer hall, calligraphic bands of Thuluth and Naskhi script citing verses from Surah al Nur, a slender minaret of the classical Syrian form, and a courtyard paved with basalt shelter worshippers from the summer heat. Inside, wool carpets woven in Aleppo cover the floor, and the mihrab is faced with marble and mother of pearl in patterns inspired by the craftsmen of the great Umayyad Mosque of Damascus.
The present page lists accurate prayer times for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the mosque, together with the Homs address and helpful notes for visitors arriving from the blessed Khalid ibn al Walid Mosque that crowns the old city, from the crusader castle of Krak des Chevaliers that rises in the nearby hills, or from the orchards of the Orontes valley. Despite recent hardships the congregation continues to gather for Friday prayers and tarawih, drawing comfort from the patient example of the noble jurist whose name the mosque carries. Travellers reaching Homs are urged to remember the faithful residents in their supplications, to send salawat upon the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, and to ask the Most Merciful to grant Syria lasting peace, gentle rain, and the swift relief that every believing heart continues to implore day and night with boundless hope.
Homs itself carries deep Islamic heritage. It became the final resting place of Khalid ibn al Walid, may God be pleased with him, whose magnificent mosque with its green dome and twin minarets remains among the most beloved landmarks of Syria. The city, known in Roman times as Emesa, produced the empress Julia Domna in antiquity and later gave the Muslim world many scholars including the great jurist Ibn Abd al Salam al Sulami, namesake of the present mosque. Centuries of patient scholarship have shaped a community that holds classical learning, generous hospitality, and gentle manners in equal reverence.
Architecturally, the mosque reflects the Levantine Syrian style. Walls of warm honey coloured limestone quarried from nearby hills, a central dome rising above the prayer hall, calligraphic bands of Thuluth and Naskhi script citing verses from Surah al Nur, a slender minaret of the classical Syrian form, and a courtyard paved with basalt shelter worshippers from the summer heat. Inside, wool carpets woven in Aleppo cover the floor, and the mihrab is faced with marble and mother of pearl in patterns inspired by the craftsmen of the great Umayyad Mosque of Damascus.
The present page lists accurate prayer times for Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha at the mosque, together with the Homs address and helpful notes for visitors arriving from the blessed Khalid ibn al Walid Mosque that crowns the old city, from the crusader castle of Krak des Chevaliers that rises in the nearby hills, or from the orchards of the Orontes valley. Despite recent hardships the congregation continues to gather for Friday prayers and tarawih, drawing comfort from the patient example of the noble jurist whose name the mosque carries. Travellers reaching Homs are urged to remember the faithful residents in their supplications, to send salawat upon the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him and his family, and to ask the Most Merciful to grant Syria lasting peace, gentle rain, and the swift relief that every believing heart continues to implore day and night with boundless hope.
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Grand Mosque Sltan Allmaʾ Alz Bn Bd Alslam