The Masjid-i-Jahan Numa The Masjid-i-Jahan Numa
commonly known as Jama Masjid of Delhi is the
principal mosque of Old Delhi in India. Commissioned
by the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan and completed
in the year 1656 AD, it is one of the largest
and best known mosques in India. It is also at
the beginning of a very busy and popular street/center
in Old Delhi, Chandni Chowk. (There are also Jama
Masjids in many other cities with a history of
Islamic rule, or large Muslim populations.)
Masjid-i-Jahan Numa means "the mosque commanding
a view of the world", and the name Jama Masjid
is a reference to the weekly congregation observed
on Friday (the yaum al-jum`a) at the mosque. The
courtyard of the mosque can hold up to twenty-five
thousand worshippers. The mosque also houses several
relics in a closet in the north gate, including
a copy of the Qur'an written on deer skin. The
cost incurred on the construction in those times
was 10 lakh (1 million) Rupees.

Shah Jahan built several important mosques in
Delhi, Agra, Ajmer and Lahore. The Jama Masjid's
floorplan is very similar to the Moti Masjid at
Agra, but the Jama Masjid is the bigger and more
imposing of the two. Its majesty is further enhanced
because of the high ground that he selected for
building this mosque.
Jama Masjid, northeast entrance, by Paul La Porte,
http://laporte.uchicago.edu/india2.htmThe courtyard
of the mosque can be reached from the east, north
and south by three flights of steps, all built
of red sandstone. The northern gate of the mosque
has 39 steps. The southern side of the mosque
has 33 steps. The eastern gate of the mosque was
the royal entrance and it has 35 steps. These
steps used to house food stalls, shops and street
entertainers. In the evening, the eastern side
of the mosque used to be converted into a bazaar
for poultry and birds in general. Prior to the
1857 War of Indian Independence, there was a madrassah
near the southern side of the mosque, which was
pulled down after the mutiny.
The mosque faces west. Its three sides are covered
with open arched colonnades, each having a lofty
tower-like gateway in the centre. The mosque is
about 261 feet (80 m) long and 90 feet (27 m)
wide, and its roof is covered with three domes
with alternate stripes of black and white marble,
with its topmost parts covered with gold. Two
lofty minarets, 130 feet (40 m) high, and containing
130 steps, longitudinally striped with white marble
and red sandstone, flank the domes on either side.
The minarets are divided by three projecting galleries
and are surmounted by open twelve-sided domed
pavilions. On the back of the mosque, there are
four small minarets crowned like those in the
front.
The Dome of the Jama MasjidUnder the domes of
the mosque, is a hall with seven arched entrances
facing the west and the walls of the mosque, up
to the height of the waist, are covered with marble.
Beyond this is a prayer hall, which is about 61
meters X 27.5 meters, with eleven arched entrances,
of which the centre arch is wide and lofty, and
in the form of a massive gateway, with slim minarets
in each corner, with the usual octagonal pavilion
surmounting it. Over these arched entrances there
are tablets of white marble, four feet (1.2 m)
long and 2.5 feet (760 mm) wide, inlaid with inscriptions
in black marble. These inscriptions give the history
of the building of the mosque, and glorify the
reign and virtues of Shah Jahan. The slab over
the centre arch contains simply the words "The
Guide!"
Jama Masjid, northeast entranceThe mosque stands
on a platform of about five feet (1.5 m) from
the pavement of the terrace, and three flight
of steps lead to the interior of the mosque from
the east, north, and the south. The floor of the
mosque is covered with white and black marble
ornamented to imitate the Muslim prayer mat; a
thin black marble border is marked for the worshippers,
which is three feet long and 1 ½ feet wide.
In total there are 899 such spaces marked in the
floor of the mosque. The back of the mosque is
cased over to the height of the rock on which
the mosque stands with large hewn stones.
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