Minaret (Indonesian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Minaret" in Indonesian language version.

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  • Donald Hawley, Oman, pg. 201. Jubilee edition. Kensington: Stacey International, 1995. ISBN 0905743636
  • The appearance of Minaret in Syria has led to speculation on the possible Christian origin: The Syriac Churches, which were numerous possessed elevated tours or spaces where a space was managed so that it could fit one person. This person called people to prayer with a wooden drum. Whether this filiation is verified or not, one thing is for sure: Minaret is an architecture tradition in many countries that has been found in all Muslim religious architectures. Stone engraved in the Byzantine World. Cooked bricks Mesopotamian spheres where the caliphate would move under the Abbasid dynasty at the beginning of the end of the 8th century. It was then that the Minaret has evolved towards an octagonal or circular shape which we are more familiar with, here as well the Minaret would affirm itself as detached tour of religions landmarks - Mosques, Schools, Mausoleum. While an attachment, and probably thought as one of the most prestigious monument of the époque, there were other traditions such as the Ziggurat. The Minaret of the Grand Mosque of Samarra, the Malawiya, edified around 850, reproduced the helical structure of these Mesoptoamian tours.