The Katra Masjid is a former
caravanserai
A caravanserai (or caravansary; ) was a roadside inn where travelers ( caravaners) could rest and recover from the day's journey. Caravanserais supported the flow of commerce, information and people across the network of trade routes covering ...
, mosque and the tomb of Nawab
Murshid Quli Khan. It was built between 1723 and 1724.
It is one of the largest caravanserais in the
Indian subcontinent. It was built during the 18th century, when the
early modern Bengal Subah was a major hub of trade in
Eurasia. The Katra Masjid is located in the north eastern side of the city of
Murshidabad, in the Indian state of
West Bengal. The most striking feature of the structure are the two large corner towers having loopholes for musketry.
The site is maintained and protected by the
Archaeological Survey of India and the
Government of West Bengal
The Government of West Bengal also known as the West Bengal Government, is the subnational government of the Indian state of West Bengal , created by the National Constitution as the state's legislative, executive and judicial authority. The ...
.
According to the
List of Monuments of National Importance in West Bengal, the Tomb and Mosque of Murshid Quli Khan (also Katra Masjid) are ASI Listed Monuments.
Etymology
Close to the mosque there was a ''bazaar'' (market). The word ''katra'' means
caravanserai
A caravanserai (or caravansary; ) was a roadside inn where travelers ( caravaners) could rest and recover from the day's journey. Caravanserais supported the flow of commerce, information and people across the network of trade routes covering ...
while ''masjid'' means mosque.
Geography
Location
Katra Masjid is located at .
Hazarduari Palace and its associated sites in the Kila Nizamat area (forming the central area in the map alongside) is the centre of attraction in Murshidabad. Just a little away are Katra Masjid,
Fauti Mosque,
Jama Masjid and the
Motijhil
Motijhil (also Motijheel, literal translation: Pearl Lake), also known as Company due to its association with the East India Company, is a horse-shoe shaped lake in Murshidabad, West Bengal, India. It was created by Nawazish Muhammad Khan, the ...
area. There is a group of attractions in the northern part of the town (as can be seen in the map alongside). Some attractions such as
Khushbagh,
Rosnaiganj
Rosnaiganj is a village in the Murshidabad-Jiaganj CD block in the Lalbag subdivision of Murshidabad district in the state of West Bengal, India.
Geography
Location
Rosnaiganj is located at .
The area was earlie ...
,
Baranagar,
Kiriteswari Temple
Kiriteswari Temple is situated in Kiritkona village under the Nabagram (community development block), Nabagram Community development blocks in India, CD block in the Lalbag subdivision of Murshidabad district in the state of West Bengal. This is ...
,
Karnasuvarna and others are on the other side of the river and there are attractions in the neighbouring
Berhampore
Berhampore (, ) is a city and a municipality in the state of West Bengal, India. As of 2011 census, Berhampore urban agglomeration had a population of 305,609 and is the seventh largest city in West Bengal (after Kolkata, Asansol, Siliguri, D ...
area also (not shown in the map).
Note: The map alongside presents some of the notable locations in Murshidabad city. Most of the places marked in the map are linked in the larger full screen map. A few, without pages yet, remain unmarked. The map has a scale. It will help viewers to find out the distances.
Construction
Murshid Quli Khan on reaching old age, expressed his desire to construct his tomb adjacent to a mosque. He entrusted the responsibility for constructing the mosque to his trusted follower who was an architect, Murad Farash Khan .
Features
The mosque stands on a square plinth. It is a brick built mosque and is surrounded by double storied domed cells, which were built for those who read the
Quran in those days, they can also be called a ''
Madrasa''. All the rooms can in all accommodate 700
Quran readers. These rooms from a cloister to the huge courtyard in front of these rooms.
Four big
minars stand at the four corners. These are octagonal in plan and taper upwards. The two towers or the minarets in front of the mosque are 70 feet high and 25 feet in diameter. The whole mosque is quadrangular in shape, the whole mosque has no pillar support but it has been given support by a raised platform below the mosque or by several arches. The mosque has however been destroyed in the 1897 earthquake. Each minar has a winding staircase which leads to the top, one can see a major part of the city of
Murshidabad from there. At the two ends of the mosque, two miratets measuring 70 feet high, are still existing to date in a dilapidated condition, they had domes which were destroyed in the 1897 earthquake. In 1780 AD, a traveller name
William Hodges wrote that 700
Quran readers lived there in the mosque. Hodges in his book ''Select Views of India'' describes it as "''a grand seminary of Musalman learning, adorned by a mosque which rises high above all the surrounding buildings''".
The entrance to the mosque is by fourteen flight of stairs from the east, Nawab Murshid Quli Khan has been buried under these stairs.
It has been done so as per the Nawab's wish who was repentant for the misdeeds committed by him and ordered this out of humility. He wanted to be buried in such a place where he could be trodden and could get the foot prints and the touch of the feet of the noble men who climb those stairs and enter the mosque. So since the year 1725 when he died his mortal remain buried under the stairs. In the mosque there is a slab embedded at the top where it is written in
Arabic: "''Muhammad, the Arabian, the glory of both worlds. Dust be on the head of him who is not the dust of his portal''".
This mosque is rectangular in plan. The dimensions are: 45.5m X 7.32m. It has been divided into five bays, each with an arched entrance and the central one is the most prominent one as it has a slender turret. The mosque has five domes. Some of them have been destroyed others have survived the great earthquake of 1897, which almost destroyed most of the building. The total area is 19.5 acres and can accommodate 2000
Namaz readers, that is the reason one can find 2000 squared type mats depicted on the floor, each of them used by a single
Namaz reader.
The cells in the mosque are two storied and are 20 feet square. each have 6 arched doorways. 15 steps edged with stones lead up to the gate with 5 arches on either sides and a stone paved pathway which leads to the central door of the mosque. The open spaces between these cells and the mosque are 13 feet wide on either sides and 42 feet wide at the back of the mosque. the terrace in front of the mosque is 166 feet by 110 feet.
Gallery
File:Katra debaditya chatterjee.jpg, The mosque.
File:Katra_Mosque_By_Ansuman_Bhattacharya.jpg, Katra Mosque.
File:Katra_Mosque_ventilation_window_-_Murshidabad.jpg, Mosque ventilation window.
File:The Arch Supported Katra Mosque.JPG, The arch supported Mosque.
File:Floor Asanas in Katra Masjid.JPG, The square type mats depicted on the floor.
File:Arabian Inscription Written in Katra Masjid That Means Arab's Muhhamad Is World's Glory!!.JPG, The Arabian
The Arabian Peninsula, (; ar, شِبْهُ الْجَزِيرَةِ الْعَرَبِيَّة, , "Arabian Peninsula" or , , "Island of the Arabs") or Arabia, is a peninsula of Western Asia, situated northeast of Africa on the Arabian Plate. ...
inscription that says: "''Muhammad, the Arabian, is glory of both worlds. Dust be on the head of him who is not the dust of his portal''".
File:The Persian Inscription In The Katra Mosque Destroyed In An Earthquake.JPG, The Persian inscribed slab inside the earthquake destroyed mosque which says that this mosque was constructed by Nawab Nazim Murshid Quli Khan.
File:The Entrance..of the Katra Mosque.JPG, The open space or the terrace between the mosque and the entrance in the east.
File:Murshidabad.gif, Early 19th-century view of the Katra Mosque.
File:Katra Masjid Mosque.jpg, One of the towers of the mosque, the dome has fallen in the 1897 earthquake
File:Katra Masjid Dome Destroyed.jpg, The dome of the mosque which was destroyed in the 1897 earthquake
See also
*
Nawabs of Bengal and Murshidabad
References
External links
*
*
Nawab Nazim Murshid Quli Khan
*
Murshidabad
*
{{Tourist attractions in Murshidabad
Islamic rule in the Indian subcontinent
Mosques in Murshidabad
Tourist attractions in Murshidabad
1724 establishments in India
Religious buildings and structures completed in 1724
Monuments of National Importance in West Bengal