Share

Share

Djamaâ Sidi Ramdane

Information

The mosque bears the name of Sidi Ramadan, one of the troops who took part in Uqba ibn Nafi’s early Muslim conquests of North Africa. Ramadan was named the city’s chief by Uqba when Algiers was taken over. After passing away, he was interred inside the mosque’s pillar. According to a different story about the origin of the name, Sidi Ramadan was a kind-hearted wali of Biskra. The mosque was actually known as Al-Qaid Ramadan Mosque, according to Sheikh Abdurrahman al-Gilani. He also mentions Ibn al-Mufta, who made significant contributions to the mosque’s foundation.

Mosque Data

Architect

Type

Central

Country

United Kingdom

Owner

Year

1097

Area

400 square meters

Drawings

Interactive Map

Want to add some changes to this page?

Related Publications

Related Experts

Share

Please Sign In

Register

All Rights Reserved | Abdullatif Al Fozan Award for Mosque Architecure © 2024

Suggest an edit

Your Contact Details

I agree to the terms outlined below:

You agree to upload and assign Mosqpedia Database the rights to use the content worldwide and in perpetuity across all current and future media platforms. Mosqpedia Database may edit, copy, adapt and translate your contribution.

The content will be distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Deed – Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International – Creative Commons

All data will be stored in line with data protection regulations.

Upload Images

I agree to the terms outlined below:

You agree to upload and assign Mosqpedia Database the rights to use the content worldwide and in perpetuity across all current and future media platforms. Mosqpedia Database may edit, copy, adapt and translate your contribution.

The content will be distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Deed – Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International – Creative Commons

All data will be stored in line with data protection regulations.

Guidance Regarding Image Size

You’re leaving us?