Adina Mosque - Proof of Destroyed Temples.


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You can draw your own conclusions from these pictures from Adina Mosque in West Bengal. 

Adina Mosque in the district of   Malda, state of  West Bengal gives the proof of destroyed temples.

The Adina Mosque’s construction absorbed materials from pre-Islamic Hindu and Buddhist structures. According to Encyclopedia Iranica also, the mosque's construction material included stone from Bengali temples.

More Details

Adina Mosque was the largest mosque in medieval times not only in Bengal but also in the whole of the subcontinent. It was, according to an inscription at its back wall, built in 1373 AD by sikandar shah, son of iliyas shah. For a sultan like Sikandar Shah, who declared himself to be the 'most perfect of the sultans of Arabia and Persia' in 1369 AD, and eventually the khalifa of the faithful. The building of such a mosque was a natural manifestation of his power and wealth. Needless to say, a sultan who could compare himself with the Khalifas of Damascus, Baghdad, Cordova or Cairo also erected a mosque comparable in size and grandeur to the great mosques of those capitals. It is curious that the Adina Mosque compares with the mosques of those cities not only in size, but also in plan and standardisation; in fact, it rivals the masterpieces of the world.

The Bengal Sultanate disintegrated during the sixteenth century with the rise of the Mughal Empire.



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Adina Mosque at Malda district of West Bengal 08.jpg

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adina_Mosque
http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Adina_Mosque

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