Jami' Siksik
Jaffa, Israel
The Siksik mosque was built in the 1880's in what used to be one of Jaffa's most vibrant areas. This area was located at the end of the road leading from Jerusalem through Ramla and Latrun, to Jaffa. It was a place where travelers found shelter in khans or cheap hotels, and where immigrants coming by sea would find a wagon to carry them to their next destination.

Beyt Eshel Street, where the mosque is located, used to be named on the Siksik family who had many assets in the street and who built the mosque. Today the only remains of the small elegant mosque are a sabil (drinking fountain) in the form of a recessed niche, a cylindrical minaret rising from behind it, and a small vaulted room behind the sabil.


Sources:

Or, Even, Peder, Shimon and Shaham, Zvi. 1988. Midrakhon Yafo: Madrikh leSiyur Azmi. Tel Aviv: Israel Museum.

Petersen, Andrew. 2001. A Gazetteer of Buildings in Muslim Palestine: Part 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 167, 173.

Yanon, Ya`acov. 2001. Sviv Kikar ha-Shaon. Jerusalem: Yad Izhak Ben-Zvi, 200.
Location
Shari' Beyt Eshel (Shari' Siksik ), Jaffa, Israel
Images & Videos
Associated Names
Part of Site
Events
1883/1300 AH
Style Periods
1299-1922
Variant Names
Siksik Mosque
Variant
Jami Siksik
Variant
Building Usages
religious