Moti Masjid Mosque Lahore Paksitan




Moti Masjid (Pearl Mosque)
This Masjid was built by Jahangir while converted into chaste marble by Emperor Shah Jahan. It is known as Moti Masjid because of the fact that its shiny white domes look like pearls (Moti). The Sikh rulers in Punjab used the Pearl Mosque at Lahore Fort as treasury and named it as Moti Mandir (Pearl Temple).
During Sikh rule other three openings were totally closed by erecting brick walls. The Moti Masjid, or Pearl Mosque, is a relatively small structure located at the western side of the fort. It is built entirely of white marble mined from the town of Makrana in contemporary Rajasthan. The mosque is one of the few buildings inside the fort that deviate from the overall north-south orientation of the complex, satisfying the liturgical requirement that the mosque's mihrab (central niche) face directly toward Mecca. As is the case with many mosques, the outward appearance of the Moti Masjid is dull and unpretentious. It can only be accessed through a small door at the northeast located near the Makatib Khana. The mosque's antechamber is long and dimly lit, creating a sense of enclosure which is suddenly relieved when the visitor crosses the threshold into the mosque's courtyard. All at once, the visitor is confronted with a brightly lit panorama of gleaming marble that visibly proclaims the purity of the mosque in direct contrast to the world that surrounds it.
The facade of the Moti Masjid is divided into five bays with the central bay protruding slightly forward into the courtyard. The five bay facade was a favored Mughal motif that was first seen at the Maryam Zamani Mosque and subsequently employed at most major Mughal mosques. The Moti Masjid differs from the Maryam Zamani precident in the inclusion of two transverse aisles along the western wall instead of one.




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