Dhaka – The Magic City

The City of Mosques

Star Mosque (Tara Masjid)

with 4 comments

Star Mosque is situated in Abul Khairat Road, Armenitola, in the old part of Dhaka City. The mosque is not dated by any inscription. It is known that one Mirza Golam Pir, whose ancestors had come to Dhaka and settled in Mohalla Ale Abu Sayeed (present-day Armanitola), erected it. Mirza Golam Pir died in 1860, and hence the date of construction of the mosque may conveniently be placed in the first half of the 19th century.

Photo © Banglapedia

Photo © Banglapedia

Originally it was an oblong (10.06m × 4.04m) three-domed mosque. There were three mihrabs on the Qibla wall in alignment with the three doorways of the mosque, of which the central one was larger than the side ones. The prayer chamber was roofed with three domes, the central one being taller and larger than the other two. The domes are carried in the interior on squinches. The original mosque building was not as decorated as it is now. The dilapidated plain and naked wall of the western side bears witness to the plainness of the past. The three southern doorways of the mosque are no doubt the old ones.

In 1926 a local businessman named Alijan Bepari added a verandah to the mosque on its eastern side, thereby almost doubling the width of the mosque without changing its original plan. Five arches were erected on four pillars on the eastern facade of the verandah. He also financed its resurfacing with delicate and richly coloured tiles of variegated patterns.

In 1987 the three-domed mosque was transformed into a five-domed mosque. At present, the length and breadth of the mosque is 21.34m and 7.98m respectively. Some changes took place in its plan; one mihrab was demolished and two new domes and three new mihrabs were added. Five arched doorways provide entrance to the mosque. The multifoiled arches spring up from octagonal pillars.

The mosque, both inside and outside, is decorated with mosaic. Small chips of Chinaware-plate, cup etc and pieces of glass have been used for mosaic. This type of mosaic is called ‘Chini Tikri‘ work. Vase with flowers is an important decorative motif on the spandrel of the arches and elsewhere on the facade. Flower-vases, flower branches, rosset, crescent, star, and Arabic calligraphic writing have been used in the decoration of the mosque. The outer wall between the doors are decorated with the motif of Fujisan (Mount Fuji) on glazed tiles and a crescent-and-star design decorates the upper part of the facade. Hundreds of blue stars have been created on the domes of white marble. All over the mosque the motif of stars dominate the decoration and so the mosque is called the Star Mosque (Tara Masjid).

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Written by Adib Sajed Adel

April 27, 2009 at 10:48 pm

Posted in Dhaka

Tagged with ,

4 Responses

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  1. Nice work. I did go there but I didn’t know all the details about this historical mosque. Thanks for this.

    Benazir Ahmed

    April 28, 2009 at 9:39 am

  2. I am really lucky that my great grand parent (Alijan bapari)who built allmost half of the Tara mosque in 1926.

    parvez

    September 4, 2010 at 12:45 pm

  3. I am away 10000 km (Canada) from BD.Thanks to Adel to write this article to let the people know about the history of tara mosjid……PARVEZ,Toronto,Canada.

    parvez

    September 4, 2010 at 12:53 pm

    • Thanks Mr. Parvez, you liked my post. I am also very lucky to be a part of the masjid. My great grandfather Haji Md. Sharfuddin Ahmed was a big contributor to the Tara Masjid. My grandfather Mr. Jahangir Md. Adel is the current Motwali of the mosque.

      Adib Sajed Adel

      September 5, 2010 at 1:17 am


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