The Singar Mosque (Bengali: সিঙ্গাইর মসজিদ)[note 1] is a 15th-century mosque that forms a part of the Mosque City of Bagerhat, a designated World Heritage Site in the southwestern region of Bangladesh. This mosque is characterized by its single-domed, square structure constructed with exposed brick and adorned with terracotta decorations.
Location
The Singar Mosque is indeed a constituent of the Mosque City of Bagerhat, located in the south-western region of Bangladesh.[1] Positioned on the southern side of the Bagerhat-Khulna Highway, it is situated approximately 200 metres (660 ft) southeast of the Sixty Dome Mosque.[2][3]
History
The Singar Mosque lacks any inscriptions that can be used to establish its exact date of construction.[2] Architect Abu Sayeed M Ahmed estimates that it is from the 15th century.[4] Other experts believe, based on the known ages of stylistically similar local buildings, that it was built in the mid-15th century.[2][5][6] There is archaeological evidence that at one time the mosque compound was surrounded by a wall with towers at the corners and an entrance gate on the east.[5][7]
Banglapedia describes the mosque's condition in the early 1970s as "in utter ruin". The government's Department of Archaeology took over the site in 1975.[6] In 1984, archaeologist Johanna E. van Lohuizen de Leeuw wrote that the building had been partly restored, but "its corner towers are still in a shocking state".[7] The Mosque City of Bagerhat, of which Singair Mosque is a part, was inscribed on the list of World Heritage Sites in 1985.[1] The mosque was rated as being in a "fair state of preservation" in the 2010s.[6]
Architecture
The mosque is a square of 43'9" x 43'9" externally while internally it has a square plan of 26'0" x 26'0".[9] It has a single hemispherical dome. The entirety is constructed of brick. There are three doorways in the east, and one each in the north and south.[2] The central doorway in the east is higher and wider than the others.[10] The exterior of the west wall has a mihrab projection from the ground to the cornice.[5] At the four corners of the building are engaged circular towers which rise to roof level.[2][6] The cornice is gently curved, being 12 inches (0.30 m) higher at the center than at the ends.[10]
The doorways are pointed archways set within rectangular recesses,[2] at the top of which are several horizontal rows of terracotta ornamentation.[5] The corner towers are divided horizontally at regular intervals by raised bands. The cornice has two bands decorated with terracotta.[6]
The mosque's walls are 7 feet (2.1 m) thick.[5] The interior has a single mihrab in the qibla wall, on axis with the central entrance in the east. It is flanked by two decorated octagonal pilasters from which springs a multifoil arch with terracotta rosettes in the spandrels. All these are bordered by two rectangular frames, the space between which is filled with a four-petalled mesh in terracotta.[2][10] To each side of the mihrab is a multifoil arched niche in a rectangular recess. The north and south walls each have two similar, but smaller niches.[5][10]
Squinches spring from brick pilasters to support the base of the dome.[2]
^Transliterations vary. Signage on site spells it Singair. Perween Hasan uses Shingria and Banglapedia uses Singria, whereas most other sources use Singair.
^ abvan Lohuizen de Leeuw, Johanna E. (1984). "The early Muslim monuments at Bagerhat". In Michell, George (ed.). The Islamic Heritage of Bengal(PDF). UNESCO. p. 176. ISBN92-3-102174-5. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2018-10-06. Retrieved 2020-06-09.
^Hasan, Perween (2007). Sultans and Mosques: The Early Muslim Architecture of Bangladesh. I.B. Tauris. pp. 23, 49. ISBN978-1-84511-381-0.