Masjid-i Aqa Buzurg
Kashan, Iran
The Aqa Buzurg (Agha Bozorg) Mosque is a mosque and madrasa located in the central part of Kashan, in the heart of its historic urban core. The complex is named for the theologian Mulla-Mahdi Naraqi II, known as Aqa Buzurg, and an inscription dates the building to 1832-1833 (1248 AH).

The building occupies a long, roughly rectangular footprint oriented northwest to southeast. A sunken courtyard built on two levels (ground level and balcony) occupies the center of the complex. The entrance to the complex is on the northwestern side, at the end of a high street lined with shops. It takes the form of an arched, domed, iwan-portal. This portal leads onto a large, domed vestibule, which overlooks the courtyard from an arched aperture placed directly across from the entrance portal. Flanking this aperture are two archways leading onto a flight of a few stairs that give onto an open roof terrace overlooking both levels of the courtyard. On either side of these two archways (to the right and left as one enters the vestibule) are two broad corridors that descend on ramps and turn at right angles, leading onto arched entrances at either end of the northwestern facade of the courtyard's upper level. 

The upper level of the courtyard is flanked on the northwest side by the roof terrace mentioned above (raised above this upper level by several feet); on the southeastern side by the facade of a monumental mosque; and on its two lateral sides (southwest and northeast) by rows of blind niches, deep enough to sit in. This level serves as a balcony overlooking the sunken ground level of the courtyard.

The ground level is accessible through flights of stairs leading onto hallways that emerge at its four corners. It has a pool at its center and is surrounded on three sides by dormitories for madrasa students. On the northwestern side, under the roof terrace and entrance pavilion, is a basement (sardab) that consists of a large open space vaulted with wide arches. Wind catchers (badgir) in the form of towers rise from this subterranean structure, flanking the entrance pavilion. 

The mosque adjoining the southeastern side of the main court takes the form of a domed pavilion (gunbad-khanah) flanked on one side by a small open court and on the other by a hypostyle prayer hall (shabistan). Its facade facing the southwestern side of the courtyard consists of a large, arched iwan rising two stories, framed by a rectangular pishtaq and flanked by archways rising one story surmounted by balconies overlooking the courtyard and the central iwan. Two minarets rise from either end of the iwan's pishtaq.

The interior of the structure consists of a central, octagonal chamber with a large dome directly behind the central iwan, open through archways on each of its eight sides to an ambulatory surrounding it on three sides. The two side arches on the main courtyard facade lead onto the side arms of the ambulatory. The northeastern arm of the ambulatory opens onto the small side court, while the southwestern arm opens onto the shabistan, which is a rectangular space divided into six aisles of five bays each by twenty freestanding pillars. A single mihrab marks the direction of prayer under the southernmost bay on the southwestern wall of the room.

The rear of this building opens onto a third open air court, which overlooks a smaller sunken court (on ground level), on its southeastern side.

Sources

Haeri, Mohammad-Reza. “KASHAN v. ARCHITECTURE (2) HISTORICAL MONUMENTS.” Encyclopaedia Iranica, XVI/1, pp. 12-21. London: Routledge, 1982-.

Ḥājjī-Qāsimī, Kāmbīz, ed. Ganjnāmah-i farhang-i ās̲ār-i miʻmārī-i Islāmī-i Īrān, Vol. 6, pp. 134-143 (English text)/160-159 (Farsi). Tehran: Dānishgāh-i Shahīd Bihishtī, 1996.

Nārāqī, Ḥasan. Āsār-i tārikhī-i shahristānhā-yi Kāshān va Naṭanz, 254-264. [Tehran: Anjumān-i āsār-i millī, 1348/1969].

Record updates:

  • August 22, 2018 (AKDC staff): data edited (alternate names added); description compiled; bibliography compiled.




Location
Maydan-i Kamal al-Malik, Khiyaban-i Mulla Habib-Allah-i Sharif, Kashan, Iran
Images & Videos
Associated Names
Events
1832-1833/1248 AH
Style Periods
1779-1924
Variant Names
مسجد آقا بزرگ
Original
Masjid-i Aga Bozorg
Alternate transliteration
Building Usages
religious
educational