Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Only surviving mosque building of 18 former mosques in the Jerez city. Converted into a church after Reconquista. [3] [4] Mosque of las Tornerías: Al-Mustimim Toledo: Spain: 1060 [5] Unusual two-storied mosque. Was built in a busy commercial neighborhood (Arrabal de Francos). Used as a church until 1498–1505, and other uses since.
The original Pantocrator (Kursum Mosque) church building in Patras. The gothic-style Panagia tou Kastrou (Enderun Mosque), the Holy Trinity church in Knights Avenue (Khan Zade Mosque) in Rhodes. The Brontochion Monastery, the Hagia Sophia (Ayasofya Mosque), and Panagia Hodegetria (Fethiye Mosque) churches in Laconia. The Hagia Sophia (Bey ...
Pages in category "Conversion of non-Christian religious buildings and structures into churches" The following 50 pages are in this category, out of 50 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
Church-Mosques (2 P) Churches in art (85 P) Conversion of non-Christian religious buildings and structures into churches (3 C, ... Pages in category "Church buildings"
The Sveti Sedmochislenitsi Church in Sofia was a 15th-century abandoned Ottoman mosque, converted into a church in the 19th century. In Croatia the only three remaining mosques from the Ottoman period, those in Đakovo, Klis and Drniš, have been converted or re-converted into Catholic churches. [24]
Pages in category "Churches converted from mosques" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Buildings no longer used as mosques. These buildings may be used as a different place of worship such as temples, churches, and synagogues. These buildings may be used as museums as the Hagia Sophia, a former church, had been before its reversion into a mosque.
Only surviving mosque building of 18 former mosques in the Jerez city. Converted into church after Reconquista. [1] [9] Mosque of las Tornerías: Al-Mustimim Toledo: Castilla–La Mancha: 1060 [11] Unusual two-storied mosque. Was built in a busy commercial neighborhood (Arrabal de Francos). Used as a church until 1498–1505, and other uses since.