Al-Zahir Mastaba

This mastaba is located northwest of the courtyards of Al-Aqsa Mosque, and it is a wide mastaba that was called by this name in relation to the renovator and renovator of its mihrab, Prince Balawi Al-Zahiri, in the year 795 AH-1392 AD.

Ali Pasha Mastaba

This mastaba is located east of Bab al-Nazir, and one of its names is the mihrab of Ali Pasha, relative to its originator, and that was in the year 1047 AH - 1637 AD. There is a beautiful mihrab on it, whose stones contrast with white and red.

Al-Karak Mastaba

It is located in the corner of the southeastern rock nave. It was called by this name - according to some historians - because the city of Karak can be seen from it, and this matter is not known precisely, especially in our time, but it can be said that it is It is located in the direction leading to the city of Karak from that side. Its construction dates back to the era of paving the Courtyard of the Honorable Rock in 1845 AD.

Al-Buraq Mosque Mastaba

It is a wide mastaba located east of Al-Buraq Mosque, and a stone mihrab stands on it.

Honorary Corner Bench

This zawiya is located next to the closed door of the northern Maghribi Mosque.

Qaytbay Sabil

It is located southeast of Bab al-Mutahara and Bab al-Qattanin, and was attributed to the existing sabil at its northwestern end. This mastaba was established between the years 857-865 AH corresponding to 1453-1461 AD during the reign of King Al-Ashraf Saif Al-Din Inal, and it has a stone mihrab on it.

The Mastaba of the Dome of Moses

It is located to the east of Bab al-Silsilah, and is attributed to the Dome of Moses that is located on it. The mastaba was established in the year 674 AH-1275 AD.

It has a mihrab from a high wall, built specifically to show the mihrab, and another mihrab in the northern wall of the dome building is visible from the outside, and the mihrab of the dome protrudes outwards, so it is visible on the courtyard of this mastaba.

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Mastaba and Mihrab of Flowers

This mastaba is located to the north of the western portico of the Al-Qibli Mosque, and it was called by this name in relation to the roses and flowers that were planted near it.

Pinewood Mastaba and Mihrab

This mastaba is located north of the Dome of Yusuf Agha al-Qibliyya, and is attributed to the large number of pine trees surrounding it that shade it. It has a mihrab built inside its own wall, and it is known today as Abu Bakr Al-Siddiq’s Mastaba.

Mastabat Sabil Suleiman

This mastaba is located southeast of Bab Faisal, and its construction dates back to the Ottoman era, and it appears that the construction of the mastaba was also done by Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, whose reign was distinguished by the construction of the fountains, and therefore it was attributed to his name.< /p>

Its foundation date is estimated at 943 A.H.-1536 A.D. There is a visible mihrab on its southern side, facing it on the other side, Sabil Suleiman.

Aladdin al-Basiri's Mastaba

It is located east of Bab Al-Nazir, with a slight deviation to the south. The mastaba was built in 800 AH-1397 AD by Saif al-Din Jarkas al-Nasseri, and the mastaba has a mihrab surrounded by two beautiful small marble columns. It is also called Mastaba al-Basiri and Mihrab Jaraks.

mud bench

It is located west of the southern western Qantara, in the north of which is Qasim Pasha's Sabil, whose construction dates back to 1174 AH - 1760 AD.

The cup bench

It is located to the east of the chalice and has a semi-iron mihrab on it that shows the direction of the qiblah and separates between worshipers and pedestrians. Two great cypresses grew in the mastaba, which shaded its users from the intense heat.

This mastaba is located east of the eastern altar, below the level of the road leading to the   Al-Qibli Mosque.

Al-Ghazali's Mastaba

This mastaba is located directly south of Bab al-Tawbah and Bab al-Rahma. It is new and does not have a mihrab on it. Rather, there is a metal mihrab made of metal.

The terrace east of the eastern retreat

It is high and has the shape of a wide mihrab on which food for the birds is placed.

This mastaba is located south of and adjacent to the Zakat Committee, and adjacent to the western wall of the rock courtyard. It is elongated in shape and has little width.

The terrace of the two western gates

This mastaba is located west of the plate of the rock and adjacent to it. It was given this name because it is located between the two western pillars: the southern and the middle. Three olive trees grew in the mastaba.

Al-Tankazi School Mastaba

This terrace is located to the east of the school, not far from it. It is a modern, small, low terrace, in which a tall tree used to grow, but it was cut down later.

Mastaba Eastern Moorish Mosque

This mastaba is located east of the Maghribi Mosque, which is used today as an Islamic museum for the Al-Aqsa Mosque. The end of the thirties of the twentieth century.

The funeral bench

It is located north of the Funeral Chapel, located in the northern portico of the Al-Qibli Mosque. It is an open terrace with nothing to protect it from the heat of the sun.

Al-Tumar Mastaba

Eastern Settlement Entrance Terrace

The southeast terrace

It is located close to the eastern wall, and it is the last mastaba towards the south. The mastaba is surrounded by dozens of perennial olive trees, and there is no mihrab built for it.

The Great Eastern Mastaba

East of the Mastaba of Sabra and Shatila, in the south of it is the southeastern mastaba, and in its east is the wall of the blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque. .

Semi-cylindrical mastaba

This mastaba is located west of Suleiman's chair (Dar al-Hadith al-Sharif) towards the south, and it is also east of the corner of the northeastern rock's courtyard towards the north. It is a terrace raised off the ground, narrow in size, and newly built.

The Mastaba of Sabra and Shatila

This mastaba is located east of the corner of the southeastern plate of the rock, and the mastaba is very recent. It was established at the end of the year 1403 AH - 1982 AD. It was turned into a memorial in memory of the martyrs of the Sabra and Shatila massacre that was committed against the Palestinians in Lebanon in The same year.

There is no mihrab for the mastaba, but rather the form of an iron mihrab, and in its southwestern corner a short cylindrical marble column on which the honorable verse was written      On its western wall, the name of the mastaba and the date of the massacre were inscribed.

Al-Asbat Gate

This mastaba is located in the northeastern corner of Al-Aqsa Mosque, southeast of the Lions' Gate. It is of recent construction, and it was called by this name due to its proximity to the aforementioned door.

Translation Bench

This small mastaba is located on the perimeter of the northern plateau of the rock, at the corner of the plateau of the rock, and it is of recent age. On the floor of the mastaba there is a cement foundation that was the basis for an aluminum room inhabited by the area guard, but the room collapsed and the foundation remained.

The Dome of the Greens Terrace

This mastaba is located to the north of the headquarters of the local zakat committee, along the nave of the rock from the west, and it is elongated in shape and has little width.

Path for the ablution

This mastaba is located to the north of the main portico of the al-Qibli mosque, with a slight deviation to the west.

 

The terrace southwest of Bab al-Tawbah and al-Rahma

Its name indicates its whereabouts, and it is of medium size recently, and has half a concrete mihrab on it.

Northeast terrace of the eastern retreats

Its name indicates its location, as it is on the edge of the eastern courtyard of the rock, and it has a wide mihrab, consisting of a large arc that reaches a height from the ground by one pedestal.

Iron Door Bench

It is located north of Bab Al-Hadid, with a slight deviation towards the north.

This mastaba is located in the southwest of the Asardiya School, and it is a new mastaba whose construction dates back to the end of the Ottoman era.

Bab al-Qataneen Gate

It is located to the west of the courtyard of the rock, and it was called by this name because it is the nearest terrace to it.

Badyer Square

This mastaba is located west of the northwest arch, which is located on the perimeter of the nave of the rock, and it was called by this name in relation to its builder and the builder of the sabil.

Shaalan Path

It is located north of the aforementioned sabil and adjacent to it.

A terrace south of the headquarters of the local zakat committee

Floor Mihrab

This mihrab is located south of the dome of al-Khader on the ground. It is a rectangular black slab with an arc head inside a white frame in the shape of a mihrab.

Mihrab of David

It is located in the southern wall of Al-Aqsa Mosque, east of Al-Qibli Mosque. There is no proof of a relationship between the name and the person named. The construction of the mihrab dates back to the years 796-698 AH corresponding to 1296-1298 AD, during the reign of Sultan Hussam al-Din Lajeen.

The mihrab is large, high, wide, and deep and can be seen from a distance.

Mihrab of the eastern wall

This mihrab is located along the city wall, and the (common) pool from the inside ascends to it by steps, and in the north of this small mihrab is a small courtyard that accommodates a prayer, and perhaps the presence of the mihrab and the courtyard is for the guard watching what wanders outside the city walls. The mihrab is small in size and is of Ottoman era.

Mihrab of Zakariya

It is located inside the eastern room of the Al-Qibli Mosque, and it is entered through Al-Aqsa Mosque. In the room is a mihrab. It is said that it is the mihrab of Zakariya, peace be upon him, from which he used to enter Maryam Bint Imran, peace be upon her, and that he is the one mentioned in the book. The Holy Qur’an says: “Whenever Zakariyya enters the sanctuary, he finds provision with her.”

Mihrab of the Nave of the Rock

This mihrab is located on the perimeter of the southern courtyard of the rock between the two southern arcades. Its height is the height of the low stone wall surrounding the courtyard of the rock, and it is located inside this wall.

The mihrab is a stone carved into the shape of a low mihrab, which was made in this way as a sign of the direction of the qiblah in the place. The date of the mihrab's construction is unknown, and it is likely that it is Ottoman-era and its date is the date of the paving of the rock's nave.

Mihrab of the southern western pediment

This mihrab is located in the northern wall of the northern knee of the aforementioned colonnade. It is small in size, and its inscription probably dates back to the Ottoman era.

 

 

 



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