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Chinese
Architecture- Guangzhou (Canton)
Huaisheng Mosque |
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architect
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built by an uncle of the Prophet, Abi Waqqas |
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location
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Guangzhou, China |
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date
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1695 (thought to be the earliest surviving mosque in China
and has the earliest freestanding minaret in China). |
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style
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Qing
Dynasty Lighthouse minaret does not follow typical stpa Chinese style,
and is by default more Western in design (notable for its integration of the
local Han building tradition with imported Arab styles). |
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construction
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The mosque complex covers an area of about 3,000 square
meters and stretches along the north-south axis, in the Chinese fashion.
Entered from a red-brick gate with a green awning on Guangta Road to the
south, the mosque complex consists of a U-shaped corridor enclosing a
courtyard with a large Bangke tower to the north, followed by the prayer
hall. The streetscape is marked by the mosque's most famous feature, the old
minaret or light tower, which flanks the main gate behind the street wall. |
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type
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Mosque |
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Huaisheng Mosque in December 2007
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The Huaisheng Mosque in Guangzhou, also known as the Lighthouse Mosque,
is, at over 1,300 years old, one of the oldest mosques in China. It was
named in memory of Muhammad. Its calling tower is 36 feet tall with a
pointed tip. The building used to serve as a beacon for boats, which is
how it got its alternative name. It has many other variant names like
Great Mosque of Canton,Guangta Si Mosque, Hwai Sun Su Mosque, Huai-Sheng
Mosque, Ying Tong Mosque, Huai-Shang Mosque, and Huai-Shang Si Mosque.
History
Huaisheng Mosque Minaret/TowerAccording to old manuscripts the
mosque was built by Abi Waqqas who was an uncle of Muhammad. He was on
his first Muslim mission to China in the 630s. It is certain that the
mosque existed during the Tang Dynasty, or in the early years of the
Song Dynasty. The mosque was rebuilt in 1350 then in again in 1695 after
being destroyed in a fire. The Huaisheng Light Tower or minaret was
built at an earlier period.
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Notes
The Great Mosque of Guangzhou, known also as Huaisheng
Mosque (Memorial of the Holy Prophet) or the Guangta Mosque (Light Tower
Mosque), is thought to be the earliest surviving mosque in China and has
the earliest freestanding minaret in China. Manuscripts from 1206 claim
that the mosque was built by an uncle of the Prophet, Abi Waqqas, on the
first Muslim mission to China in the 630s. However, it is more certain
that a mosque was first built here during the Tang Dynasty, or in the
early years of the Song Dynasty. The mosque was entirely rebuilt in 1350
during the Yuan dynasty under the rule of Zhizheng (1341-1368), and
rebuilt again in 1695 under Emperor Kangzi of the Qing dynasty, after
being destroyed in a fire. The Huaisheng Light Tower, the mosque's
unique namesake minaret, was built at an earlier period. Like its
contemporaries at Quanzhou, Hangzhou and Yangzhou, the Great Mosque of
Guangzhou is notable for its integration of the local Han building
tradition with imported Arab styles.
The mosque complex covers an area of about 3,000 square meters
and stretches along the north-south axis, in the Chinese fashion.
Entered from a red-brick gate with a green awning on Guangta Road to the
south, the mosque complex consists of a U-shaped corridor enclosing a
courtyard with a large Bangke tower to the north, followed by the prayer
hall. The streetscape is marked by the mosque's most famous feature, the
old minaret or light tower, which flanks the main gate behind the street
wall.
From the main gate, a narrow courtyard enclosed with high brick
walls passes by the old light tower to its left and leads to an inner
gateway. This monumental gateway is styled after a bangke tower,
consisting of a wooden structure encased in brick. Its stacked, double-eaved
meru roof is carried on pronounced dougong brackets. This gateway tower
bears an inscriptive plaque in Chinese that reads: "Religion that holds
in great esteem the teachings brought from the Western Region." The
U-shaped corridor begins at either side of this gateway and wraps around
the inner courtyard facing the prayer hall.
The prayer hall was rebuilt in concrete in 1935. A portico wraps
around the north, east and southern sides of the prayer hall, arcaded
with columns joined by half dougong joints. When the structure was
rebuilt, its main entrance was moved from the east to the south façade
of the hall so as to open directly into the courtyard to its south. The
mihrab is placed in a shallow semi-circular niche that projects beyond
the western wall. Its hipped roof, which is supported on two internal
columns in addition to the walls, is covered with green tiles. A line of
windows separates the two tiers of this stacked roof.
The Light Tower has no precedent in China with its thick
cylindrical masonry shaft and internal stairway. One of the earliest
examples of Islamic architecture in China, it mimics Arabic styles while
also attempting to integrate them with the local architectural styles.
Its tapering brick shaft rises to a height of thirty-six meters atop a
ten meter stone base. The minaret balcony, which is used for the call to
prayer, is thought once to have had a beacon to guide boats on the
Zhujiang River at night. It is said that when ships sailing along this
segment of the river considered the tower as the sign that they had
arrived at the beginning of the "maritime silk road". Above the balcony,
the minaret is capped with a gourd-shaped dome on a thin turret. The
base of the dome is decorated with two tiers of dougong brackets, adding
a Chinese character to the minaret.
Two intertwined staircases, a structural feat not seen in China
prior to the Song Dynasty, give access to the balcony, and are expressed
on the exterior with windows that spiral up the tower. An inscription
added to the mosque at the time of its reconstruction in 1350 states the
following: "beneath white clouds and where the mountain turns, there
stands a brilliant stone pagoda in the style of the Western Regions.
Handed down by Emperor Gaozu of the Tang dynasty to the present, its
style is unknown in the Central Region," suggesting a completion date
between 650 and 700 for the minaret. Until recently, the Light Tower
minaret was the tallest structure in Guangzhou and served as a main
landmark in the city.
The complex also includes quarters for the imam, a tablet
pavilion for the storage of scripture, and an ablution area, all
composed in the open pagoda style with traditionally sculpted and tiled
roofs complimenting the roofs of the prayer hall and of the secondary
gateway.
Sources:
Dazhang, Sun. 2003. Ancient Chinese Architecture: Islamic
Buildings. New York: Springer-Verlag/Wien. 118-119, 128, 143.
Martin Frishman and Hasan-Uddin Khan, eds. 1994. The Mosque:
History, Architectural Development and Regional Diversity. London:
Thames and Hudson, 210-212.
Petersen, Andrew. 1996. "China". In Dictionary of Islamic
Architecture. London: Routledge, 52-54. http://archnet.org/library/
dictionary/entry.tcl?entry _id=DIA0074 [Accessed May 19,
2004]
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links
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Thanks to
http://archnet.org/library/sites/one-site.jsp?site_id=9141 |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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