Nkramosom dan
Nkramosom dan (/mɒsk/; a ɛfiri Arabic: مَسْجِد, romanized: masjid, bɔ no mǝsdʒid]; a ɛkyerɛ " beaɛ a yɛgyina de y'anim buutu hɔ bɔ mpaeɛ") a wɔsane frɛ no masjid, baabi a nkramofoɔ bɔ mpaeɛ.[1]Mpempii no nkramodan yɛ dan bi a ɛso akata, nanso ɛbɛtumi ayɛ baabiara a wɔbɔ mpaeɛ (sujud), a yɛn nanaso ka ho.[2]Nkramosom dan wɔ agudeɛ a wɔfrɛ no (mihrab) a ɛwɔ afasuo ho a ɛkyerɛ baabi a me fa wɔ(qiblah),[1] baabi a dan a wɔboro wɔn ho ne minarets a ɛkae nnipa sɛ wɔmmɔ mpaeɛ wɔ.[1][3] (minbar) a wɔka Efiada (jumu'ah) asɛmpa (khutba), no na ɛyɛ Central City kramodan bi a ɛwɔ hɔ nanso ɛnyɛ adeɛ a ɛho yɛ na nkramosom dan nketewa mu.[4][1] Nkramodan pii no ara wɔ baabi a mmaa tena ne baabi a mmarima nso tena.[1] Ɛkwan a ɛyɛ a wɔtaa hyehyɛ wɔn ho no gu ahodoɔ pii a ɛgyina mantam,som korɔ ne berɛ korɔ.[5] Nkramosom dan yɛ beaɛ a wɔde bɔ mpaeɛ, Ramadan, ayiyɔ, awareɛ ne nnwumakuo nhyiamu,kyɛ sane gye adeɛ ne baabi a wɔda.[1][6] Nkramosom dan yɛ baabi a tete no na ɛyɛ baabi a yɛma nkaebɔ, kɔɔto a wɔdi mmara so, ɛsom sukuu. Ɛnɛ mmerɛ yi, wɔdi wɔn dwumadie sɛ baabi a wɔde yɛ ɛsom ho nnoɔma ne ababaabaeɛ nkoa.[1][6] Wɔde nnoɔma a ɛhohia no kɔ Great mosque of mecca(a ɛwɔ hajj mfimfini), nkɔmhyɛni no Nkramosom dan a ɛwɔ medi a(baabi a wɔsiee Muhammad) ne Al-Aqsa nkramosom dan a ɛwɔ Yerusalem(wɔgyedi sɛ ɛyɛ beaeɛ a Muhammad de firi hɔ kɔɔ ɔsoro aheman mu).[4] Ɛnam sɛ Nkramosom frɛɛ no nti, ɛmaa Nkramosom dan no dɔɔso wɔ Nkramosom man mu. Ɛtɔ mmerɛ bi a wɔdane nsɔre no yɛ no Nkramosom dan,a ɛnyaa nsunsuansoɔ wɔ kwan a wɔfa so nkramofoɔ dan.[6]Ɛnam sɛ Nkramosom dan a wɔsii no tete no wɔn a wɔyɛ adɔeɛ na ɛsiieɛ nti no, Nkramosom dan a aban siiɛ no ankorankorɛ deɛ no abɛ bunkam so, a pii no ara gyina hɔ ma nkramosom nkanyan ne nnoɔma a wɔyɛ no mpɔtam.[6] Nkramosom dan adi amanyɔsɛm dwumadie pii. Nnipa a ɛwɔ nkramosom dan mu no sesa a ɛgyina mantam korɔ a ɔnii no wɔ.
N'abɔseɛ[sesa]
Edin "Nkramosom dan" firi French din mosquée na ɛbɛtwitwa borɔfo kasa mu, a ɛfiri Italian moschea( Italian moscheta), a ɛfiri Middle Armenian մզկիթ (mzkit‘), Medieval Greek: μασγίδιον (masgídion), anaasɛ Spanish mezquita, a ɛfiri مسجد (asekyerɛ ne sɛ "baabi a yɛbu yɛn mu bɔ mpaeɛ (wɔ mpaebɔ mu)" ne baabi ba yɛbɔ mpaeɛ), ɛbɛtumi afiri Nabataean masgĕdhā́ anaasɛ Arabic Arabic: سَجَدَ, romanized: sajada (asekyerɛ ne sɛ" bɔ wo mu bɔ mpaeɛ"),a ɛbɛtumi afiri Nabataean Arabic masgĕdhā́ anaasɛ Aramaic sĕghēdh.[7]
Abakɔsɛm[sesa]
Nkramofoɔ animdefoɔ ne abakɔsɛm kyerɛ sɛ, nkramosom firi Arabia wɔ Muhammad pɛn so wɔ 7th century CE, na ɔsii nkramosom dan no.[7] Wɔ saa nsɛm yi mu no, nkramosom dan a wɔsii no wɔ Eritrean kuro a ɛwɔ Massawa, anaasɛ Quba nkramosom dan a ɛwɔ Hejazi kuro wɔ Medina (nkramosom dan a ɛdikan a Muhammad sii berɛ a ɔfiri mecca baeɛ wɔ 622 CE), [8]no mu baako na ɛbɛyɛ nkramosom dan a ɛdikan a wɔsii wɔ nkramosom abakɔsɛm.[9] Animdefoɔ binom nso bɔ nkramosom amammerɛ [10]ne nnoɔma a ɛwɔ Qur'an no mu, [11]a ɔsom a yɛfrɛ no Nkramosom no ma Muhammad dikan ansana wɔde nkɔmhyɛfoɔ bi a ɛdiikan baeɛ bi te sɛ Abraham aka ho.[12] Wɔ nkramosom amammerɛ mu no, Abraham na ɔsii Ka'bag('Cube') wɔ Mecca na ne Al-Masjid Al-Haram(The sacred mosque) a nkramofoɔ hunu no sɛ ɛno nkramosom dan a ɛdikan[13] a na ɛwɔ hɔ.[14] Hadith a ɛwɔ Sahih al-Bukhari ka sɛ kaa a yɛ nkramosom dan a ɛdikan wɔ wiase, a nea ɛtɔ so mmienu ne Al-Aqsa a ɛwɔ Jerusalem,[15] a ɛno nso bɛn Abraham.[16] Ɛfiri 638CE mu no Mecca mu trɛ a ɛtumi fa nkramofoɔ a wɔte hɔ anaasɛ wɔn a wɔkɔ hɔ afe biara wɔ kuro no so.[17] Wɔkwan foforɔ so no, Quba nkramosom dan no akyi no, Muhammad toa so sii nkramosom dan foforɔ wɔ Medina, a wɔfrɛ no Al-Masjid an-Nabawi( nkɔmhyɛni no nkramosom dan). Muhammad de ne ho hyɛɛ adansie no a wɔsii no wɔ beaɛ a ɛbɛn ne fie na ɔboa adansifoɔ kyerɛɛ wɔn sɛdeɛ wɔpɛsɛ wɔsi nkramosom dan ma no bɛyɛ krabɛhwɛ wɔ kuro no mu.[18] Nkɔmhyɛni no dan no wɔ esu bi a wofa so hunu no wɔ ɛnɛ nkramosom dan mu te sɛ, "mihrab' a ɛwɔ baabi a wɔbɔ mpaeɛ no ne 'minbar' a ɛyɛ baabi a wɔgyina di dwuma.[19] Nkramosom dan no wɔ patom kɛseɛ a ɛwɔ nkramosom dan pii a wɔsii no saa aberɛ no.[20]
Beaeɛ a . menyaa mmoa firiiɛ[sesa]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Archive copy, archived from the original on 2017-12-25, retrieved 2022-07-21
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ↑ Longhurst, Christopher E; Theology of a Mosque: The Sacred Inspiring Form, Function and Design in Islamic Architecture, Lonaard Journal . Mar 2012, Vol. 2 Issue 8, p3-13. 11p. “Since submission to God is the essence of divine worship, the place of worship is intrinsic to Islam’s self-identity. This ‘place’ is not a building per se but what is evidenced by the etymology of the word ‘mosque’ which derives from the Arabic ‘masjid’ meaning ‘a place of sujud (prostration
- ↑ Nuha N. N. Khoury (2009). "Mosque". In Juan Eduardo Campo (ed.). Encyclopedia of Islam. Infobase Publishing.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Patrick D. Gaffney (2004). "Masjid". In Richard C. Martin (ed.). Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World. MacMillan Reference.
- ↑ Nuha N. N. Khoury (2009). "Mosque". In Juan Eduardo Campo (ed.). Encyclopedia of Islam. Infobase Publishing.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Patrick D. Gaffney (2004). "Masjid". In Richard C. Martin (ed.). Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World. MacMillan Reference
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 For the word's origin from French and probable origin from Italian moscheta, see "mosque, n.". OED Online. December 2011. Oxford University Press. [1]. For the derivation of moscheta from Arabic sajada see "mesquita, n.". OED Online. December 2011. Oxford University Press. [2]. For the probable origin of "sajada" from Aramaic, and the meanings of sajada and masjid in Arabic, see "masjid, n.". OED Online. December 2011. Oxford University Press. [3]. For the inclusion of Spanish mesquita, possible derivation from Nabataean masgĕdhā́, and the Aramaic sĕghēdh, see Klein, E., A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the English Language (Elsevier Publishing, 1966), p. 1007.
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosque#CITEREFTajuddin1998
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books?id=aMsvDAAAQBAJ
- ↑ https://archive.org/details/islamguideforjew00fepe/page/9
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quran
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books?id=5nRJK9sLjLsC
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books?id=aMsvDAAAQBAJ
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosque#CITEREFKuban1974
- ↑ https://www.searchtruth.com/book_display.php?book=55&translator=1&start=0&number=585#585
- ↑ Michigan Consortium for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (1986). Goss, V. P.; Bornstein, C. V. (eds.). The Meeting of Two Worlds: Cultural Exchange Between East and West During the Period of the Crusades. Vol. 21. Medieval Institute Publications, Western Michigan University. p. 208. ISBN 978-0-9187-2058-0.
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosque#CITEREFDumperStanley2007
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosque#CITEREFChiu2010
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosque#CITEREFCosmanJones2008
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosque#CITEREFChiu2010