Madeena 1
Madeena 1
Madeena 1
SAUDI ARABIA
WRITTEN BY:
John Bagot Glubb
Assʿad Sulaiman Abdo
See Article History
Alternative Titles: Al-Madīnah, Al-Madīnah al-Munawwarah, Al-Madina, Madīnat
Rasūl Allāh, Yathrib
Medina, Saudi Arabia: Prophet's MosqueThe Prophet's Mosque, showing the green dome
built above the tomb of Muhammad, Medina, Saudi Arabia.Omar Chatriwala (CC-BY-2.0)
(A Britannica Publishing Partner)
Medina is celebrated as the place from
which Muhammad established the Muslim community (ummah) after
his flight from Mecca (622 CE) and is where his body is entombed.
A pilgrimage is made to his tomb in the city’s chief mosque. Only
Muslims are allowed to enter the city. Pop. (2010) 1,100,093.
Physical And Human Geography
Landscape
City site
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In Turkish times there was a small military landing ground at
Sultanah, to the south near the garrison’s barracks, but the area is
now occupied by the king’s palace and its extensive satellites. There
too are the ruins of the tomb of ʿAmr ibn al-ʿĀṣ, the celebrated
conquerer for early Islam of Palestine and Egypt. The tomb
of Aaron is located on the highest point of Mount Uḥud.
Other religious features of the oasis include the mosque of Qubāʾ,
the first in Islamic history, from which the Prophet was vouchsafed a
view of Mecca; the Mosque of the Two Qiblahs, commemorating the
change of the prayer direction from Jerusalem to Mecca, at al-Rimāḥ;
the tomb of Ḥamza, uncle of the Prophet and of his companions who
fell in the Battle of Uḥud (625), in which the Prophet was wounded;
and the cave in the flank of Uḥud in which the Prophet took refuge on
that occasion. Other mosques commemorate where he donned his
armour for that battle; where he rested on the way thither, and where
he unfurled his standard for the Battle of the Ditch (Al-Khandaq); and
the ditch itself, dug around Medina by Muhammad, in which the
rubble of the great fire during the reign (1839–61) of
Sultan Abdülmecid I was dumped. All these spots are the object of
pious visitation by all Muslims visiting Medina; they are forbidden to
non-Muslims. In addition the city is also the site of the Islamic
University, established in 1961.
But the cynosure of all pilgrims is the Prophet’s Mosque, which
Muhammad himself helped to build. Additions and improvements
were undertaken by a succession of caliphs, and the chamber of the
Prophet’s wives was merged in the extension during the time of the
Umayyad caliph al-Walīd ibn ʿAbd al-Malik. Fire twice damaged the
mosque, first in 1256 and again in 1481, and its rebuilding was
variously undertaken by devout rulers of several Islamic countries.
Sultan Selim II (1566–74) decorated the interior of the mosque with
mosaics overlaid with gold. Sultan Mahmud II built the dome in 1817
and in 1839 painted it green, this being the accepted colour of Islam.
Sultan Abdülmecid I initiated a project for the virtual reconstruction of
the mosque in 1848 and completed it in 1860. This was the last
renovation before the modern expansion planned by King ʿAbd al-
ʿAzīz in 1948 and executed by King Saud in 1953–55. The mosque
now includes a new northern court with its surrounding colonnades,
all in the same style as the 19th-century building but of concrete
instead of stone from the neighbouring hills. The qafaṣ (cage), to
which female worshippers were formerly restricted, has been
dismantled, while, apart from minor repairs, the southern (main) part
of the mosque has remained intact. It comprises the three
ornamental iron structures representing the houses of the Prophet
and containing respectively (according to general consensus) the
tomb of the Prophet himself under the great green dome, those of the
first two caliphs, Abū Bakr and ʿUmar, and that of the Prophet’s
daughter Fāṭimah. A specially adorned section of the pillared
southern colonnade represents the palm grove (al-Rawḍah) in which
the first simple mosque was built.
Prophet's MosqueProphet's Mosque, Medina, Saudi Arabia.Ali Imran
The Prophet's MosqueThe Prophet's Mosque, Medina, Saudi Arabia.AP
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The modernization of Medina has not been so rapid as that
of Jiddah, Riyadh, and other Saudi towns. Building development has
involved the complete dismantlement of the old city wall and the
merging of that historic area with the now built-up pilgrim camping
ground (al-Manakh) and the Anbariyyah quarter, beyond the Abu
Jidaʿ torrent bed, which was formerly the commercial quarter and in
which the Turks established the railway station and terminal yards.
The foundations of the old city wall were found to be lower than the
surface of accumulated silt and rubble, but no attempt has been
made to examine the excavations from the archaeological point of
view. Nor has any archaeological work been done on the ruined sites
of the old Jewish settlements, the largest of which was Yathrib (the
Lathrippa or Iathrippa of Ptolemy and Stephanus Byzantius), which
gave its name to the whole oasis until Islamic times. There are also
several interesting mounds (ʿitm), besides the village of Al-Quraidha,
which would certainly produce historical data of interest. The Islamic
cemetery of al-Baqīʿ (Baqīʿ al-Gharqad) was shorn of all the domes
and ornamentation of the tombs of the saints at the time of the
Wahhābī conquest of 1925; simple concrete graves in place of the
old monuments and a circuit wall have been installed.
People
Agriculture
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Mechanical pumps for irrigation, in use since Turkish times early in
the 20th century, have virtually replaced the old draw wells. Drinking
water is supplied by an aqueduct from a spring at the southern end of
the oasis. In addition to the plentiful supply of subsoil water at no
great depth, a number of important wadis meet in the vicinity of
Medina and bring down torrents of water during the winter rains. Of
these the most notable are the Wadi al-ʿAqīq from the western
mountains and a wadi coming down from the Al-Tāʾif area to the
south.
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