Shitta-Bey Mosque
Ụlọ okpukperechi alakụba Shitta-Bey bụ ụlọ ụka nke ndị alakụba, ebe mmụta okpukpe, bụrụkwa otu n'ime ụlọ alakụba kachasị ochie na Naịjirịa.[1] Ụlọ alakụba ahụ dị na Martins Ereko Street, Lagos Island, Lagos, Nigeria. E guzobere ya n'afọ 1892, ndị Ụlọ ọrụ Naijiria n'ahụ maka Ọ́bánka na ihe ndị akpụrụ akpụ (Nigerian Commission for Museums and Monuments) ahọpụtakwa ya dịka ihe ncheta mbụ n'afọ 2013. Ụlọ alakụba a, nke a na-ewere dị ka otu n'ime ihe nketa akụkọ ihe mere eme kachasị mkpa nke Naijiria, ka akpọkwasịrị aha onye guzobere ya bụ onye Naijiria a mụrụ na Sierra Leone, Mohammed Shitta Bey, onye bụ onye aristocrat, onye ọrụ ebere na onye ọchụnta ego.[2]
Akụkọ ihe mere eme
dezieOwuwu ụlọ ụka ndị alakụba ahụ bụ Mohammed Shitta Bey, (onye ọchụnta ego na onye ọrụ ebere, onye Yoruba nne na nna ya mụrụ na (Sierra Leone) bidoro ya n'afọ 1891. Otu Onye Brazil na-ese ụkpụrụ ụlọ João Baptista da Costa lekọtara owuwu ụlọ ahụ nke e ji tebulu rụọ na-egosi ihe owuwu Afro-Brazilian. Ụlọ ụka Shitta-Bey mepere n'abalị anọ nke ọnwa Julaị afọ 1894, n'ememe nke Gọvanọ Lagos, Sir Gilbert Carter duziri. Ndị ọzọ bịara gụnyere Oba Oyekan I, Edward Wilmot Blyden, Abdullah Quilliam (onye nọchitere anya Sultan Abdul Hamid II nke Alaeze Ukwu Ottoman), na Ndị Kraịst Lagosian a ma ama dị ka James Pinson Labulo Davies, John Otunba Payne, na Richard Beale Blaize yana ndị nnọchi anya mba ọzọ.[2] Quilliam wetara Sultan nke Turkey akwụkwọ ozi a kwadoro na-arịọ ndị Alakụba Lagos ka ha nabata agụmakwụkwọ ọdịda anyanwụ. [1]
Ọ bụ na oge mbido ahụ ka Sultan Abdul Hamid nke Abụọ nyere Mohammed Shitta aha "Bey", Ottoman Order of Medjidie 3rd class (nke kachasị elu maka onye nkịtị). Mgbe nke ahụ gasịrị, a maara Mohammed Shitta site na aha mgbagwoju anya Shitta-Bey.[3][4]
Edensibia
dezie- ↑ Nurudeen. "Shitta Bey Mosque: Visiting a historic masterpiece", Daily Trust Newspapers, Daily Trust Newspapers, Oct 23, 2015. Retrieved on 29 January 2018.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Nigeria's Turkish mosque, the trust of Sultan Abdülhamid II. Dailysabah.com. Daily Sabah. Retrieved on 20 December 2018. Kpọpụta njehie: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "DS" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ Singleton. That Ye May Know Each Other: Late Victorian Interactions between British and West African Muslims. California State University, San Bernardino CSUSB ScholarWorks. Library Faculty Publications. Retrieved on 19 December 2016.
- ↑ Adam. The Wide World Magazine: An Illustrated Monthly of True Narrative, Adventure, Travel, Customs, and Sport, Volume 17. G. Newness, 1906, 221–227. Retrieved on 19 December 2016.
- Ostien (2012-01-01). "Legal Pluralism in Colonial Lagos: The 1894 Petition of the Lagos Muslims to their British Colonial Masters" (in en). Die Welt des Islams 52 (1): 51–68. DOI:10.1163/157006012X627904. ISSN 1570-0607.