Great Mosque of Central Java

Great Mosque of Central Java
Masjid Agung Jawa Tengah

Aerial view of the mosque from the Asmaul Husna Tower
Basic information
Location Semarang, Central Java, Indonesia
Geographic coordinates 6°59′02″S 110°26′45″E / 6.983863°S 110.445964°E / -6.983863; 110.445964Coordinates: 6°59′02″S 110°26′45″E / 6.983863°S 110.445964°E / -6.983863; 110.445964
Affiliation Islam
Branch/tradition Sunni Islam
Website masjidagungjateng.com/home
Architectural description
Architect(s) Ir. H. Ahmad Fanani
Architectural type Mosque
Architectural style Mix of Javanese, Arabic, and Greek
Date established 2006
Construction cost Rp. 198,692,340,000[1]
(US$ 22,000,000)
Specifications
Capacity 15,000
Dome(s) 1
Dome dia. (outer) 20 m (66 ft)
Minaret(s) 4
Minaret height 62 m (203 ft)

The Great Mosque of Central Java (Indonesian: Masjid Agung Jawa Tengah) is a mosque in the city of Semarang, Central Java.

Layout

The interior

The mosque complex covers 10 hectares (25 acres). There are three central buildings arranged in the shape of a U, with the domed mosque at the centre; all buildings have pitched, tiled roofs, while the central mosque has four minarets. The central roof resembles the roof of a "joglo", the traditional Javanese house, and symbolises the rising steps toward heaven or to gain God's blessing. The long buildings forming the arms of the U house a library and auditorium respectively;[2] the auditorium can hold up to 2,000 people.[1]

In the central courtyard are six large hydraulically operated umbrellas, inspired by the ones at Al-Masjid al-Nabawi in Medina, which are used to protect worshipers;[2] the six umbrellas represent the six tenets of iman.[3] More than 15,000 worshipers can fit in the 7,669-square-metre (82,550 sq ft) prayer area.[2][4] At the open end of the U is a series of Arabic-style arches, with Arabic calligraphs of 99 attributes of Allah, stood on 25 pillars, each representing one of the named prophets in Islam.[3] Beyond the arches is an inscription on a 3.2-metre (10 ft) tall, 7.8 ton stone from Mount Merapi, designed by Nyoman M. Alim.[1][3]

Nearby is the 99-metre-tall (325 ft) Asmaul Husna Tower, designed to resemble the minaret of a mosque in Kudus; the height represents the 99 attributes of Allah.[5] Used for calling Muslims to prayer, the tower also houses a radio station for da'wah and museum at its base and restaurant and observation deck near its summit.[2][5] The upper levels are accessible by lift.[6] On premises there is also a 23-room hotel.[5]

History

Preparations for the mosque's construction began on 6 June 2001, when the governor of Central Java formed the Coordination Team for the Construction of the Great Mosque (Tim Koordinasi Pembangunan Masjid Agung) which consisted of state bodies such as the provincial and city governments as well as private bodies such as the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI). Of the waqf land once under the purview of the Kauman Mosque of Semarang, only the site at Jl. Gajah was deemed large enough. In September 2001 the team published a proposed construction schedule.[4] Funding came from the provincial government.[3]

Construction began on 6 September 2002, when minister of religion Said Agil Husin al-Munawar, head of MUI Sahal Mahfudz, and governor of Central Java Mardiyanto laid the first stake. While the mosque was still under construction, Chabib Thoha led Friday prayers on 19 March 2004.[4] The mosque was dedicated on 14 November 2006 by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his wife.[1][2]

In October 2008, a rotating restaurant opened on the eighteenth floor of the Asmaul Husna Tower; at the time of its opening, it was the furthest off the ground in Indonesia and could seat twenty diners.[6] The mosque is also a tourist attraction, with buses and trams available to transport visitors around the grounds.[2]

References

Footnotes
Bibliography
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