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Bagha Mosque - A Magnificent Medieval Period Mosque in Bangladesh

Bagha Mosque was Built by Sultan Nusrat Shah in 1523 A.D.  Bagha Mosque is a richly decorated monument originally roofed over with 10 domes which collapsed long ago. But recently this Mosque rebuilt carefully to their original form. From Rajshahi you can go there easily by any motorized vehicle.Bagha mosqueBagha mosque

Variant Names : Jami Mosque, Bagha Mosque, Shahi mosque
Location : Bagha, Rajshahi, Bangladesh
Date : 1523
Style/Period : Husain Shahi
Building Type : Religious
Building Usage : Mosque

Built during the Husain Shahi period by Sultan Nusrat Shah in the district of Rajshahi, this mosque has an oblong prayer chamber measuring 76' x 42', which was originally spanned by ten small, inverted-cup shaped domes. The domes were recently repaired and restored. Four corner turrets with copulas extend beyond the gently sloped cornice. The eastern faade has five arched entrances each bordered by a rectangular frame.
Stone pillars divide the prayer hall into two aisles and five bays. And there seems to have been a women's gallery in the northwestern corner of the mosque.
The monument boasts some of the most impressive examples of terracotta wall carvings and relief in rich fluoridate patterns, combined with grapes and rosettes.
Ahmed, Nazimuddin. 1980. Islamic Heritage of Bangladesh. Dacca: Padma Printers, p.47.

Bagha Mosque 
Bagha Mosque, an exquisite structure built in 1523-24, is situated near Bagha upazila headquarters, about 35 kilometers southeast of Rajshahi city. According to an inscription on the mosque’s central entrance, it was built by Sultan Nusrat Shah, son of Husayn Shah. The inscription is now preserved in Karachi, Pakistan.
The mosque was built on the western bank of a fairly large tank within a brick-walled compound. It could be accessed through two arched gateways from the north and the south.
The boundary wall with two entrances and the evidence of the ruler gallery shows that the brick-built mosque, now a protected monument of the Department of Archaeology, is an oblong structure measuring externally about 26.35m by 12.86m.
The prayer hall is divided into five aisles and two longitudinal bays by a row of four freestanding black basalt pillars. The shafts of those pillars are monolithic like the conventional stone pillars in Gaur whereas the capital and the base are also from two different pieces of stones. The external brick wall is 2.23-meter thick and has two stone layers. One stone layer is placed at the plinth level and the other at the lintel level.
The prayer hall can be accessed from the east by five identical arched openings, and the side walls contain two openings sealed at present.
A stone lintel proves the existence of perforated bricks in the side openings for ventilation and lighting. The kibla wall contains four richly ornate mihrab (niches) and three southern aisles have one mihrab each. The fourth aisle has no mihrab. It is believed to be used as a mimbar. The fifth or the northernmost aisle has a small mihrab placed at the upper level. This small mihrab proves that there was a raised gallery covering the northwestern part of the prayer hall.
Similar to the gallery of Kusumba Mosque in Rajshahi, this raised gallery was probably accessed from the interior of the hall, while the adjacent side in the northern wall has no entrance at the gallery level.

The four-corner octagonal turrets, one at each corner, are divided into five tiers by horizontal mouldings and are covered by a plain solid cupola. Four freestanding stone pillars and ten partly concealed pilasters support the roof of ten equal hemispherical domes. The brick pendentives at each corner of a grid transfer the square supporting area into a circular base, upon which the hemispherical domes rest.

Bagha mosque in Rajshahi is worth mentioning for its profound terracotta ornamentation, although much of the original terracotta panels have been replaced. The wall surfaces and the octagonal corner turrets are decorated with various terracotta motifs. The wall surface is vertically divided by a string course, with a lozenge on its face, run all around the four walls and breaking only at the position of all openings.

Above and below the string course are friezes of upright and inverted merlons respectively. All the openings and the mihrabs are set within ornate rectangular frames that are surmounted by ornamental merlons. Spaces between these rectangular frames for the opening are adorned with two large rectangular terracotta panels, placed one above the other. Each panel is encircled by a frame of tendrils, and a chain and bell motif inside. The upper part or cornice on all four sides is gently curved. There are four mouldings in this cornice impressed with ornaments. The interspaces between the mouldings are also ornate with continuous floral frieze motifs.

An earthquake in 1897 damaged all the domes and the eastern wall of the mosque.

In 1978, the Department of Archaeology, Bangladesh took up the initiative and restored the mosque.

 

Here some picture of Bagha Mosque.

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Md Polash Hossien

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Bagha Shahi Masjid, Bagha, Bangladesh
1 comment
Level 1

Re: Bagha Mosque - A Magnificent Medieval Period Mosque in Bangladesh

always you right  most beautiful article