The Nabi Saeen Mosque (Arabic: مسجد النبي سعين, Masjid al-Nabi Saʿīn; Hebrew: מסגד נבי סעין, Misgad Navi Sa'in) is a mosque located on Nabi Saeen Hill in Nazareth, Israel, at a height of 487 meters (1,598 ft) above sea level. The mosque is located at the top of the ridge enclosing the city from the north, about 150 meters north of the Salesian Basilica of Jesus the Adolescent, providing a panoramic view of Nazareth and the Jezreel Valley to the south, and the Upper Galilee and Haifa outskirts (Krayot) to the north and west.

Nabi Saeen Mosque
مسجد النبي سعين
מסגד נבי סעין
Religion
AffiliationIslam
Location
LocationNazareth, Northern, Israel
Nabi Saeen Mosque is located in Israel
Nabi Saeen Mosque
Shown within Israel
Geographic coordinates32°42′31″N 35°17′43″E / 32.70861°N 35.29528°E / 32.70861; 35.29528
Architecture
Typemosque
Specifications
Length20 m
Width20 m
Dome(s)1
Minaret(s)1

Name

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The mosque is named for the hill on which it sits, which is officially romanized Nabi Saeen on local signs. It has also been variously rendered as En Nabi Sa'id,[1] Neby Sȧîn,[2] Neby Sain,[3][4] and Mt Oaber Simani.[5] It is apparently a local corruption of Isaiah,[2] normally rendered Isha'ya' in Arabic (أشعياء).

Architecture

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Interior
 
interior

The mosque is a two-story structure in the shape of a trapezoid and is 20 meters long and 20 meters wide at its base. Near the northern front facing the street stands an octagonal minaret balcony where four windows surround the high tower, a spire in sharp gray. The front of the second floor is painted in bright green, and has the form of five arches over windows, each a small circular window (similar style windows surround the second floor on all sides). The entire facade is divided into seven parts, including seven separate pairs of narrow columns painted green on the first floor,

The first floor entrance leads into an open corridor on the other side, stretching along the western facade of the building. The mosque is divided into several rooms, including a room which is considered the burial place of a sheikh (مقام, maqām; מקאם, maqām).

References

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  1. ^ "Nazareth", Survey of Palestine, Jaffa, February 1930, Sheet 175-230{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  2. ^ a b Palmer, Edward Henry (1881), Arabic and English Name Lists..., The Survey of Western Palestine, London: Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund, p. 115.
  3. ^ Conder, C.R.; et al. (1880), Map of Western Palestine..., London: Palestine Exploration Fund, Sheet VI.
  4. ^ Maccoun, Townsend (1899), The Holy Land in Geography and in History, p. 171.
  5. ^ Jacotin, Pierre (1818), "Map of Egypt", Geographic and Topographic Maps, Paris. (French)