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Мечеть Ходжа Ахрар Вали или Мечеть Джами.

Hodge's mosque Akhrar Valya Khodja Akhrar Vali masjidi or Mosque Dzhami. Djami masjidi-an ensemble basis Registan near Chorsu Square. Only Tashkent sample of the Friday mosque of the domestic type widespread in Central Asia in the late Middle Ages. Description-The main building has the form of the cube blocked by a dome with four windows in the low cylinder. On east wall turned into the yard, the large arch is cut through. A border of arches and niches at an entrance aperture - lancet that is not characteristic to the Central Asian outline, rather Gothic. 

Planning of the mosque rectangular with the large building at the end of a longitudinal axis the East-West. 

History
In the 8th century after the Arab conquest of ancient, Zoroastrian Tashkent the foundation for the mosque was laid. Tashkent which was called then Chach lay in ruins. Arab newcomers gave to the city the new name "ash-Shash", having distorted Chach - since in Arab there was no sound of "h".
"… In 819 the young emir Yakhjya ibn Assad who just received from the Arab deputy of east part of the caliphate the appointed diploma on management of all lands of the present Tashkent region stopped the horse at the height which and now is clearly looked through between three city squares enough – Chorsu, Hodra and Iski-Dzhuva.
"Here we will build our capital, - told Yakhjya to the suite which was respectfully moving behind it, - let on this hill there will be Madina ash-Shash – a northern outpost of Transoxiana!"
In its suite there were Turkic guardsmen, and they amicably caught up the words of the commander: "Yes, yes, the city of Shasha exactly here will rise!"
In language of Turkic peoples "Madina Ash-Shash" sounds as "Shashkent". And on the highest point of the chosen Yakhjya ibn Assad's hill ordered to lay the foundation for the Tashkent's first cathedral Friday mosque."
Note about Monuments of Tashkent
The first building of the Tashkent mosque (Juma masjidi) of Dzhum (The main Friday mosque) was built in 1451 at the expense of Sheikh Ubaydulla Hodzhi Akhrar (Akhror) (1404-1490).
Ubaydulla Akhrar - great the master of Sufism, the head of Muslim clergy and the prophet Mahomed's descendant, preparing for moving, Gulbazar ordered to build the big Friday mosque and madrasah in an ancient Tashkent makhalla. In local legends claim that Ubaydulla helped out money on construction from sale of "threads scraps" which remain after a fabric section on standard pieces.
The main Friday mosque was built on the hill; therefore it was possible to see this majestic building from long distance. Since then and about one today people call this mosque, Ubaydulla Akhror's mosque, in memory of him.
In 1868 the mosque was strongly damaged by a destructive earthquake. In 20 years, in 1888 it was finally restored on the means provided by the Russian emperor Alexander III from military contribution of the Emir Bukhara therefore its began to call the Imperial mosque.
Political events, such as Soviet atheistic mode, led to final fracture of the mosque. Ruins were finally demolished in 1997.
In 2003 the mosque was newly built up on the same place with application of modern methods of construction and finishing.

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