-
Sulaymaniyya Takiyya (Arabic: التَّكِيَّة السُّلَيْمَانِيَّة, romanized: at-
Takiyya as-Sulaymāniyya; Turkish: Şam Süleymaniye Külliyesi) is a
takiyya (Ottoman-era...
- The
Salimiyya Takiyya (Arabic: التكية السليمية, romanized: at-
Takiyya as-Salīmiyya) is a
takiyya (Ottoman-era
Arabic name for a
mosque complex which served...
-
Haseki Sultan Imaret was an
Ottoman public soup
kitchen established in
Jerusalem to feed the poor
during the
reign of
Suleiman the Magnificent. The imaret...
- (modern Turkish: tekke),
eventually making its way into
Arabic as تَكِيَّة
takiyya (plural تَكَايَا takāyā) and in
languages of the
Balkans (Albanian: teqeja;...
-
commercially more important. In 1559 the
western building of
Sulaymaniyya Takiyya,
comprising a
mosque and khan for
pilgrims on the road to Mecca, was completed...
-
MOKTAR DJEBLI.
Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd ed, Brill. "
TAKIYYA", vol. 10, p. 134. Quote: "
TAKIYYA "prudence, fear" ...
denotes dispensing with the ordinances...
-
Syrian route 1.
Sulaymaniyya Takiyya 2.
Maydan 3.
Kiswa 4. Khan
Dannun 5.
Ghabaghib 6.
Sanamayn 7.
Muzayrib 8.
Mafraq 9.
Birkat Zizia 10. Dab'a 11. Qatrana...
-
coffin was
taken to
Syria and
buried in the
cemetery of the
Sulaymaniyya Takiyya in Damascus.
Mehmed had an
optimistic and
patient personality according...
-
legacy in
Damascus by
commissioning the
construction of the
impressive Takiyya al-Sulaimaniyya
mosque along the
Barada River,
situated outside the city...
- of saqqa-khanas (public drinking-water repositories),
husayniyyas and
takiyyas (both are
places to
commemorate Husayn), and zur-khanahs (traditional Persian...