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Al-Askari Shrine

Al-Askari Shrine, the 'Askariyya Shrine, or Al-Askari Mosque[a] is a Shia Muslim mosque and mausoleum in the Iraqi city of Samarra 125 km (78 mi) from Baghdad. It is one of the most important Shia shrines in the world. It was built in 944.[1] The dome was destroyed in a bombing by Sunni extremists in February 2006 and its two remaining minarets were destroyed in another bombing in June 2007, causing widespread anger among Shias and instigation of the Iraqi Civil War between the country's Shia and Sunni factions.[2] The remaining clock tower was also destroyed in July 2007.[3] The dome and minarets were repaired and the mosque reopened in April 2009.[4]

This article is about the Iraqi mosque. For the medieval Egyptian capital, see Al-Askar.

Al-'Askarī Shrine

Active

944 AD

1

68 metres (223 ft)

20 metres (66 ft)

2

36 metres (118 ft)

1 (destroyed)

3

The 10th and 11th Shī'īte Imams, 'Alī al-Hādī ("an-Naqī") and his son Ḥasan al-'Askarī, known as al-'Askariyyayn ("the two 'Askarīs"), are buried in the shrine.[5] Housed in the mosque are also the tombs of Ḥakīma Khātūn, sister of 'Alī al-Hādī; and Narjis Khātūn, the mother of Muḥammad al-Mahdī.[6] Adjacent to the mosque is another domed commemorative building, the Serdab ("cistern"), built over the cistern where the Twelfth Imam, Muḥammad al-Mahdī, first entered the Minor Occultation or "hidden from the view"—whence the other title of the Mahdi, the Hidden Imam.

History[edit]

The Imams 'Alī al-Hādī ("an-Naqī") and Haṣan al-'Askarī lived under house arrest in the part of Samarra that had been Caliph al-Mu'tasim's military camp ('Askar al-Mu‘tasim, hence an inmate of the camp was called an 'Askarī). As a result, they are known as the 'Askariyyayn. They died and were buried in their house on Abī Ahmad Street near the mosque built by Mu'tasim.[6] A later tradition attributes their deaths to poison.


Nasir ad-Din Shah Qajar undertook the latest remodelling of the shrine in 1868, with the golden dome added in 1905. Covered in 72,000 gold pieces and surrounded by walls of light blue tiles, the dome was a dominant feature of the Samarra skyline. It was approximately 20 m (66 ft) in diameter by 68 m (223 ft) high.

– 10th Imam of Shia

Imam Ali al-Hadi

– 11th Imam of Shia

Imam Hasan al-Askari

– Daughter of Shia's 9th Imam

Hakima Khatun

– Wife of Shia's 11th Imam

Narjis

The Al-Askari Shrine in 1916.

The Al-Askari Shrine in 1916.

The Shrine in 2006 after the first bombing

The Shrine in 2006 after the first bombing

Repairs to the al-Askari Mosque, October 2013

Repairs to the al-Askari Mosque, October 2013

Bab al-Saghir

Damage to Baghdad during the Iraq War

Destruction of early Islamic heritage sites in Saudi Arabia

Holiest sites in Shia Islam

Jannat al-Mu'alla

Jannatul Baqi'

Hammer, Joshua; Becherer, Max (January 2009). . Smithsonian. Vol. 39, no. 10. pp. 28–37. Abstract (characteristic of Smithsonian feature articles): "In 2006, sectarian violence engulfed Iraq after terrorists destroyed the Mosque of the Golden Dome, built on a site sacred to Shiites for 1,100 years. Today, Sunnis and Shiites are working together to restore the shrine and the war-torn city."

"Samarra Rises"

Ellen Knickmeyer and K. I. Ibrahim (23 February 2006). . The Washington Post.

"Bombing Shatters Mosque in Iraq"

ICOMOS Heritage at Risk 2006/2007: Iraq, Askariya Shrine

Collections Search Center, S.I.R.I.S., Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.

Ernst Herzfeld Papers, Records of Samarra Expeditions, Shiite Shrine Complex

Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.

Ernst Herzfeld Papers, Series 7: Records of Samarra Expeditions, 1906–1945

Images of the destruction: before and after

BBC picture gallery

BBC video

NYT picture gallery