Schwetzingen Park Mosque Explained

Red Mosque (Schwetzingen)
Native Name:German: Rote Moschee
Native Name Lang:de
Map Type:Germany
Map Size:225px
Map Relief:yes
Coordinates:49.3836°N 8.5658°W
Location:Schwetzingen, Germany
Festivals:-->
Organizational Status:-->
Architecture Type:mosque
Architecture Style:Mock Turkish
Groundbreaking:1779-1793
Date Destroyed:-->
Elevation Ft:-->

The Schwetzingen Park Mosque (German: Moschee im Schwetzinger Schlossgarten), also known as the Red Mosque (German: Rote Moschee) is a decorative building in the park of Schwetzingen Palace in the former Electoral Palatinate, now the northern tip of Baden-Württemberg, Germany. Built in 1779–1793 AD, it is the oldest mosque-like building in Germany.

The Schwetzingen Park Mosque was not intended as an actual place for Muslim prayer, and did not serve as one except for brief periods in the 1870s and 1980s. Instead, it signalled acknowledgement of the value of non-Christian religions and specifically Islam, underlined by a number of inscriptions inside and outside the building that are meant to embody ageless wisdom attributed to a semi-mythical Orient. As such, the Schwetzingen Park Mosque can be viewed as an early monument to religious tolerance and an exemplar of the Age of Enlightenment.

History

The Red Mosque was built on the design of French architect Nicolas de Pigage on the orders of Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria, in a hybrid style that was intended to partly mimic Ottoman architecture. The first stage of construction was the Turkish Garden (French: jardin turc) in 1776. The construction of the mosque began in 1779 and was completed in 1792–1793, while the minarets were completed only in 1795–1796. The cost was about 120,000 guilders, making the mosque the most expensive building in the Schwetzingen Park. At the time construction began, the court had already moved to Munich because Charles Theodore had become Elector of Bavaria in 1778, while retaining his electoral dignity in the Palatinate.

The building lacks some typical elements of a mosque, such as a mihrab, minbar and ablution fountain, even though it features two tall minarets and a domed prayer hall. It was actually used for Islamic worship after the Franco-Prussian War, when prisoners of war from the Maghreb were housed in military hospitals near Schwetzingen, as well in the 1980s. Since 1970, the entire Schwetzingen Palace complex has been reconstructed in accordance with the park maintenance plan. The restoration of the mosque began in the 1990s and was completed in 2007. The state of Baden-Württemberg has invested about 2.5 million euros to renovate the exterior of the mosque, 6 million euros to renovate the prayer aisles and 1.5 million euros to the interior.[1]

Architecture

The dome of the mosque is similar to elements of Christian architecture, and the way its façade is flanked by the minarets is reminiscent of the Karlskirche in Vienna, consecrated in 1737. The interior of the main and secondary domes are decorated with stars, viewed as a common symbol of Islam. Courtyards are located at the rear end of the building, unlike in a typical Ottoman mosque.

The mosque, with a ceiling decorated with stars, represents the night and the sky in a spiritual and spiritual sense, and at the same time is a symbol of life after death.[2]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Kirsten Baumbusch: Tempel des Geistes erstrahlt in frischem Rosé – Orientalisches Ambiente im Schwetzinger Schlosspark. In: Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung, 19. July 2023.
  2. Jan A.M. Snoek: Schwetzingen: more than just a masonic garden. In: Joannes A. M. Snoek (Hrsg.): Symbolism in 18th century gardens: the influence of intellectual and esoteric currents, such as freemasonry. Den Haag 2006, ISBN 90-807778-3-8, S. 149–187 (esswe.org).