Musalla Minarets of Herat


The Musalla Minarets of Herat are five huge ruined minaret towers in Herat city, western Afghanistan. The minarets and the complex were built by Queen Gawhar Shad in 1417.

Description

The minarets are each 55 meters tall and resemble crooked chimneys of an old factory. The minarets of Herat are the remains of 20 minarets of the former Musalla Complex.
The Musalla Complex with 20 minarets was fully intact and magnificent until 1885 when the complex was wilfully destroyed by the British during a conflict with Russia. The British used dynamite to reduce the complex to ruin, and this vandalism was justified by them as being necessary to prevent the Russians from sheltering in the complex.
Nine towers survived the destruction of 1885, but the battering had weakened them structurally, and they remained neglected over the next few years due to an unsettled political situation. No repairs or restorations were undertaken, and over time, four more towers collapsed due to structural weaknesses, earthquake and sheer decrepitude. Only five of the original twenty minarets survive today.

History

Musalla Minarets of Herat were built for the Musalla complex by Queen Gawhar Shad in 1417. The complex became an architectural masterpiece of the Islamic world. It was a huge spread of magnificent Islamic religious buildings consisting of a large mosque, Madrassa religious school and mausoleum buildings. The whole complex included 20 minarets which were adorned with tiled surfaces of beautiful intricate patterns and designs.
In 1885, the British were in Afghanistan engaged in a conflict against Russia for the control of the borders. During the conflict, British engineers dynamited the Musalla complex to prevent it from serving as cover for Russians. Nine minarets and two mausoleums were spared destruction. However, an earthquake in 1931 destroyed two more minarets. Another minaret fell in another earthquake in 1951. The five ruined Musalla Minarets of Herat and 2 mausoleums are the only remnants today of a once magnificent architectural complex.

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