Katra Masjid
The Katra Masjid is a former Shia caravanserai, mosque and tomb, in a partial ruinous state, located in the north eastern side of the city of Murshidabad, in the state of West Bengal, India. The complex contains the tomb of its founder, Nawab Murshid Quli Khan, and is one of the largest caravanserais in the Indian subcontinent, with capacity for 700 readers at any one time. Built in, when the early modern Bengal Subah was a major hub of trade in Eurasia, the most striking feature of the structure are the two large corner towers having loopholes for musketry. The structure was significantly damaged by the 1897 Indian earthquake.
The site is a List of [Monuments of National Importance in West Bengal|Monument of National Importance], maintained and protected by the Archaeological Survey of India since 1910, and the Government of West Bengal.
Location
and its associated sites in the Kila Nizamat area is the centre of attraction in Murshidabad. Just a little away are Katra Masjid, Fauti Mosque, Jama Masjid and the Motijhil area. There is a group of attractions in the northern part of the town. Some attractions such as Khushbagh, Rosnaiganj, Baranagar, Kiriteswari Temple, Karnasuvarna and others are on the other side of the river and there are attractions in the neighbouring Berhampore area also.Architecture
, 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.The former mosque is reportedly a copy of the Kartalab Khan Mosque in Dhaka, also built by Murshid Quli Khan, approximately 25 years earlier. The Katra Masjid stands on a square plinth, built of brick, and surrounded by double storied domed cells that were built for those who read the Quran, like a madrasa. Up to 700 Quran readers can be accommodated in these rooms that from a cloister to the huge courtyard.
Four large minars stood at the four corners, of which two have since been partially destroyed. These are octagonal in plan and taper upwards. The two towers or the minarets in front of the mosque are high and in diameter. The whole mosque is quadrangular in shape, has no pillars, and is supported by a raised platform below the mosque and by several arches. The mosque was, however, partially destroyed in the 1897 earthquake. Each minar has a winding staircase which leads to the top, and a major part of the city of Murshidabad may be viewed from the top of the minars. At the two ends of the mosque, the two minarets are in a dilapidated condition, and they had bulbous domes, also destroyed in the 1897 earthquake. In 1780 CE, a traveller named William Hodges wrote that 700 Quran readers lived in the mosque. In his book, Select Views of India, Hodges described the mosques as "a grand seminary of Musalman learning, adorned by a mosque which rises high above all the surrounding buildings".
The former mosque is rectangular in plan. The dimensions are. It was 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 site area is. The mosque can accommodate 2,000 Namaz readers, with 2,000 squared type mats depicted on the floor, each of them used by a single Namaz reader.
The cells in the former mosque, locally called Katra, are two storied and are ; and each have six arched doorways. There are fifteen steps edged with stones lead up to the gate with five 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 wide on either sides and wide at the back of the mosque. The terrace in front of the mosque is.
The former mosque has two inscriptions on basalt slabs, that translated from Persian, state that the mosque was constructed by Nawab Nazim Murshid Quli Khan in ; and, that translated from Arabic, read, ''"Muhammad, the Arabian, is the glory of both worlds. Dust be on the head of him who is not the dust of his portal."''