World: The Great Mosque of Djenné | The New York Times
The Great Mosque of Djenné, Mali, is a magnet for tourists, but it is increasingly difficult for locals to live a normal life around it.
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World: The Great Mosque of Djenné | The New York Times
The Coolest Stuff on the Planet - The Great Mosque of Djenne
If you like mud and you like architecture, this episode of The Coolest Stuff on the Planet is a must-see. Join Matt and Rachel on a virtual tour of the world's biggest mud structure -- the Great Mosque of Djenne in Mali, West Africa.
Festival at the Grand Mosque of Djenné | We Clothe the Mosque Every Year to Protect It
Since 2006, Instruments4Africa (I4Africa) has been working to empower at-risk youth in Mali, through diverse cultural and educational experiences. We facilitate the preservation of the traditional practices that promote intercommunity communication, awareness and conflict resolution. We create spaces where people listen to and learn about each other, building relationships of respect and communities of cooperation, and we organize events that help mend the social fabric through shared artistic expression.
Citizen movements are the driving force behind transformation in the Sahel, that’s why I4Africa, works directly in the remote and isolated communities close to the heart of the insecurity, to support community led events, and search for solutions to local and global challenges.
Streets of Mali: The Great Mosque of Djenne
Please Subscribe. We take a visit to the city of Djenne and visit the the mosque that Mansa Musa built, The Great Mosque of Djenne. Patreon:
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Masons of Djenné - City of Mud
Part one of a four part film series created for the exhibition, Mud Masons of Mali. Djenné masons speak of the history of city, its founding myth, its architecture and the role of the masons in maintaining this architectural legacy. The masons also speak about the importance for the community of the annual ceremony of re-plastering the Great Mosque.
Djenné Masons
Konbaba Tennepo
Boubacar (Bayeré) Kouroumansé
Lassina (Al-Haji) Kouroumansé
Salif Droufo
Almamy (Fa) Kouroumansé
Executive Producer
Mary Jo Arnoldi
Producer/Director
Trevor Marchand
Videographer
Pete Durgerian
Production Assistant
John Heywood
Interviewer
Bilagalama Sissoko
Additional Camerawork
Salahina (Mody) Sounfountera (Djenné)
Trevor Marchand (Leiden)
Translation
Wilfred Willey
Photography
Tevor Marchand
Additional Photography
Barbara Frank
Joseph Brunet-Jailly
Bilagalama Sissoko
Donald Hurlbert, NMNH, Smithsonian Institution
Dan Cole, NMNH, Smithsonian Institution
Narrator
Rae Durgerian
Music
Lassana Diabaté
Toumani Kouyaté
Music Production, Bamako
Paul Chandler
Audio Post-Production
Al Green
Special Thanks to
Annette Schmidt, Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde, Leiden
Michael Spierenburg
Samuel Sidibé, Musée National du Mali
British Academy for the Humanities and Social Sciences
The Netherlands Embassy in Bamako, Mali
Salahina Sounfountera, Mali Tours, Bamako
Indiana University Press
Lucy Durán, School of Oriental and African Studies, London
Violet Diallo
Geert Mommersteeg
Pierre Maas
Charlotte Joy
The Atlantic Fish Shop, Leiden
Al-Hijrah Mosque in Leiden
The Dutch masons of Koninklijke Woudenberg B.V.
Anna Portisch
Great Mosque of Djenne, Africa ????- Go Jetters Series 2 - Go Jetters
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Grandmaster Glitch's giant Grimbella is causing problems for the Great Mosque of Djenne!
Great Mosque of Djenne, Africa ???? - Go Jetters Series 2 - Go Jetters
Grandmaster Glitch has been invited to Djenné in Mali, Africa to visit the people and to see one of his favourite things at work – mud! He is especially impressed by the spectacular Great Mosque of Djenné: the largest structure made from mud in the world! But mud brings problems, and during the rainy season the rain causes damage to the walls of the Mosque and mud houses and the local people get together to help repair them. Glitch wants to help! But when he realises they have to do this job every single year, he makes a massive umbrella to try to keep the Mosque dry so that the local people don’t have to repair it again. Although Glitch was only trying to help, things start to go wrong... The huge Grimbrella swings too close to the Mosque and goes out of control! The Go Jetters need to fix that Glitch!
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The Great Mosque of Djenne - Masterpiece of African Islamic Architecture
The Great Mosque of Djenne is undoubtly a Masterpiece of African Islamic Architecture.
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The great mosque of Djenne is perhaps the most unique religious building in the world. It is situated in the present day Mali and is one of the wonders of the African Islamic architecture. It is the largest Mud Structure building in the world and is situated in the Djenne city of Mali.
Although the actual date of construction of this site is not known; however, through the oral traditions, it is believed that the first mosque at this site was built somewhere in the 13th century; while, the present structure was constructed in 1907. Over the period of many centuries, this great Mosque became the hub of religious and cultural activities of Mali. It also became a site for the annual festival. During this festival, the entire City gathers and participate in the plastering of the Mosque where the fresh mud plaster is done on the exterior portion of the building. The mosque was constructed for the first in 13 century, the second time somewhere between 1834 to 1836 during which the original damage building was replaced. while the third time, it was constructed in 1907
Due to its unique construction and architecture in 1988 this mosque along with the city of Djenne was declared as a World Heritage site by UNESCO.
The main entrance of The Mask is from the Northern side of the building while the Qibla direction is towards the east-pointing Makkah. The outer walls of the building or not precisely orthogonal to one and others hence the building has a trapezoidal outline. During the Middle Ages, the mosque was the important Islamic learning center in Africa where thousands of the students came to study the Quran in the town of Djenne.
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Great Mosque of Djenne, Mali
This video clip of the Great Mosque at Djenne, Mali and the adjacent Djenne Monday market were taken on 21 January 2008. It is said that the Great Mosque is the largest building in the world constructed of mud brick. For information about the Great Mosque, please refer to
【K】Mali Travel-Djenne[말리 여행-젠네]바니 강과 흙으로 만든 젠네 모스크/Great Mosque of Djenne/Bani River/Island/Ship
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[한국어 정보]
10세기경부터 현재의 모습을 갖춘 젠네. 사하라 사막의 대상들이 머물다 가는 곳이었다. 현재 7개의 종족 3만 3천여 명이 살고 있다. 1,100킬로미터 길이의 바니강은 말리에서 니제르 강 다음으로 긴 강이다. 젠네는 이 바니강이 휘감고 있는 섬이다. 그래서 이렇게 배를 타고 건너가야만 한다. 니제르강이 모래의 강이라면 바니강은 진흙의 강이다. 젠네는 그래서 진흙으로 만들어진 도시다. 젠네 모스크. 전부 흙으로만 만들어진 사원이다. 13세기에 처음 세워진 것으로 기록되어 있다. 75평방미터의 바닥에 천장의 높이가 최고 50미터다. 이 야자나무들은 사원의 지지대 역할을 하며 외벽 보수공사 시에는 발판이 되기도 한다. 젠네 모스크는 흙벽돌로 건물을 짓는 아도베 건축양식의 대미로 꼽힌다. 이 양식으로 지어진, 세계에서 가장 큰 건물이다.
[English: Google Translator]
Since the 10th century Djenné with the current figure. Target of the Sahara Desert where they repose was going. Seven species are currently 30,000 people living in 3,000. Bani River is 1,100 kilometers long Niger river next to the longest river in Mali. Djenné is an island that has wound around the Bani River. So I do go across on a boat. If the Niger river Sand River Bani River is a river of mud. Djenné city made of mud so. Djenné Mosque. All of a temple made of clay only. It is recorded as the first built in the 13th century. The height of the ceiling to the floor of 75 square meters up to 50 meters. The palm trees and the support role of the temple exterior wall renovations when there is often the springboard. Djenné mosque is regarded as the US ah Tobe architecture build building clay bricks. Built in the style, it is the largest building in the world.
[French: Google Translator]
Depuis le 10e siècle, Djenné avec le chiffre actuel. Cible du désert du Sahara où ils repos allait. Sept espèces sont actuellement 30.000 personnes vivant dans 3000. Bani est de 1.100 kilomètres de long fleuve Niger à côté du plus long fleuve au Mali. Djenné est une île qui est enroulé autour de la rivière Bani. Donc, je ne vais travers sur un bateau. Si la rivière rivière Sand fleuve Niger Bani est un fleuve de boue. La ville de Djenné fait de boue ainsi. Mosquée de Djenné. Tout d'un temple fait d'argile seulement. Il est enregistré comme le premier construit au 13ème siècle. La hauteur du plafond au plancher de 75 mètres carrés jusqu'à 50 mètres. Les palmiers et le rôle de soutien des rénovations temple mur extérieur quand il est souvent le tremplin. Djenné mosquée est considérée comme l'architecture construction en briques d'argile de construction US ah Tobe. Construit dans le style, il est le plus grand bâtiment du monde.
[Information]
■클립명: 아프리카048-말리01-09 바니 강과 흙으로 만든 젠네 모스크/Great Mosque of Djenne/Bani River/Island/Ship/Adobe
■여행, 촬영, 편집, 원고: 김병수 PD (travel, filming, editing, writing: KBS TV Producer)
■촬영일자: 2010년 12월 December
[Keywords]
,아프리카,Africa ,,말리,Mali,Republique de Mali ,,김병수,2010,12월 December,,,,
Djenné - Mali
Djenné is a town and an urban commune in the Inland Niger Delta region of central Mali. The town is the administrative centre of the Djenné Cercle, one of the eight subdivisions of the Mopti Region.
The town is famous for its distinctive adobe architecture, most notably the Great Mosque which was built in 1907 on the site of an earlier mosque. To the south of the town is Djenné-Djeno, the site of one of the oldest known towns in sub-Saharan Africa. Djenné together with Djenné-Djeno were designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1988.
Djenne Mosque Prayer | Whether They're Muslim or Not, We Want People to Come Here.
Sonic Dispatches from Traditional Mali: Grand Mosque of Djenne, Mopti.
If large parts of oral and musical traditions disappear, traditional belief structures can disappear with them. People can lose their bearings and right actions are no longer reinforced. Such a loss of community structure is particularly dangerous as fundamentalism and extremist ideologies seek to infiltrate The historically peaceful & religiously tolerant societies of Mali.
From February 2015 to February 2017, i4Africa has organized more than 22 community cultural events, drawing 200,000 visitors from Mali, Mauritania, Niger, and Burkina Faso.
The Great Mosque in Djenné, Mali - The biggest mud structure
Thousands plaster mosque of Djenne in Mali
Several thousand residents of Djenne, a historic World Heritage city in central Mali, participate in the annual plastering ceremony of the Grand Mosque, which will now be powered by solar electricity.
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Adobe Towns: Djenné
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The trio of documentary films portraying Djenné in Mali, Shibam in Yemen and Yazd in Iran is devoted to the unique adobe architecture that dominates these three desert towns. It was developed in cooperation with the Länder-Menschen-Abenteuer-department of German TV-station SWR and ARTE. Each film describes the history, the cultural context, the knowledge, and the secrets of clay construction.
Adobe Towns is also about three very different kinds of living and expressing Islam.
3D Heritage Documentation of the Djenne Mosque and Timbuktu Mosque in Mail by the Zamani Project
This 3D Model is produced by the Zamani Project (University of Cape Town) as part of the African Cultural Heritage Sites and landscapes documentation project. It is derived from high resolution terrestrial Laser-Scan data and represents the site as is with cm accuracy and without any augmentation. For presentation purposes a low or medium -resolution model was used.
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For more information, please look at 'The African Cultural Heritage and Landscape Database': zamaniproject.org
Djenne, Mali - Largest Mud Brick Mosque in the World 2012 - 6 of 10
WANT Tour of Mali
The path to the Great Mosque of Djenné
The Great Mosque of Djenné is the largest mud brick or adobe building in the world . The mosque is located in the city of Djenné, Mali on the flood plain of the Bani River and was designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1988.
Unfortunately 2012 is a bad year for the city, tourism has disappeared due to the terrorist threat of Al Qaeda and the risk of kidnapping. Half of the city has flead to other areas in Mali in the search of better opportunities. Very sad.
Mali's Old Towns of Djenne Added To Endangered World Heritage Sites List
UNESCO is adding Mali's Old Towns of Djenne, famous for their adobe architecture, to its list of World Heritage in Danger sites. The decision was made Wednesday in Istanbul, where the 40th session of the World Heritage Committee is being held. The committee expressed concern over the historic towns, saying insecurity stood in the way of safeguarding measures. It appealed to the international community to support Mali's efforts to protect the site. The Old Towns of Djenne have been inhabited since 250 B.D. They became a market center and a major link in the trans-Saharan gold trade.
This video was produced by YT Wochit News using