Mudhafaria Minaret
The Mudhafaria Minaret is a minaret located in the new Minare Park on the west region of Erbil, in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq.
History
The minaret was built between and by the Turkoman prince of Erbil, during the reign of Salahadin, Muzaffar Al-Din Abu Sa’eed Al-Gawkaboori who had entered in the obedience of Salahadin without war and married his sister.Architecture
The minaret is high and is composed of a high octagonal base and a tall cylindrical shaft, with a balcony located between the base and the shaft. This design was typical for mosques built during the reign of the Ayyubid Sultanate. It is believed that the minaret is the only remnant of a mosque, since destroyed.It is built of baked bricks, the base being decorated with two tiers of niches with pointed arches, two on each of the eight faces that are inscribed in rectangular frames. The balcony parapet is carved with twenty-four small niches, the access door to the minaret steps is on the eastern side of the octagonal base and leads top to the balcony. From there a small door gives access to steps inside the cylindrical shaft that led to the second balcony now collapsed.
The shaft tapers inward and is decorated with several bands of interlocking diagonal Hazar-Baf motifs that are separated with thin bands. Examples of Kufi calligraphy can be seen, showing the names of Muhammad and Mas'oudi Muhammadi, the builders of the minaret.