It is located near Bab Hatta, north of the Al-Aqsa Mosque.

This soil consists of two floors of masonry, on the first floor there is a mausoleum chamber, adjacent arcades, a cistern for water, a prayer house, and on the second floor, a number of rooms of varying size.

It was a school, and Rabat too, and the school played its intellectual role, and Rabat also played its role, and the school has a record in the Sharia court, describing the soil from an architectural point of view.

It is located near the Hatta Gate, north of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, and was named after its creator, the only King Najm al-Din Yusuf bin Nasser Salah al-Din, who built it in 697 Ah/1297-1398 ad, dating back to the Ayyubid era, and this soil consists of two floors of construction, and on the first floor there is a mausoleum room, adjacent corridors, a water tank, a prayer house, and on the second floor, a number of rooms of varying sizes.

It was a school, and Rabat too, and the school played its intellectual role, and Rabat also played its role, and the school has a record in the Sharia court, describing the soil from an architectural point of view.