Homs Bombing of Khalid ibn al Walid mosque حمص - قصف عنيق جامع خالد بن الوليد 09.07.2013
Association for the protection of Syrian archaeology - Website : جمعية حماية الآثار السورية
Syrian & Hizbullah Forces Bombing Khalid Bin Waleed Grave+Masjid in Homes, Syria
Bashar al Asad Forces & Hizbullah Shia Terrorist forces Bombing the Grave Hazrat Khalid Bin Waleed the Companion of our Holy Prophet P.B.U.H.
Khalid Bin Walid Mosque Homs Syria
Khalid ibn al Walid Mosque in Syria Homs City
Tomb of Khalid, in Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque.
I don't own the music
Khalid ibn al Walid Mosque in Homs, Syria
Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque
The Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque is a mosque in Homs, Syria, located in a park along Hama Street in ash-Shuhada Square. Noted for its Ottoman-Turkish architectural style, the mosque is dedicated to Khalid ibn al-Walid, an Arab military commander who led the Muslim conquest of Syria in the 7th century following the decisive Battle of Yarmouk, which put an end to Byzantine rule in Syria. His dome-topped mausoleum is located in a corner of the prayer hall and has served as a pilgrimage center. Two tall minarets with narrow galleries constructed of alternating horizontal rows of white and black stone are situated at the building's northwestern and northeastern comers and reflect the traditional Islamic architecture style of the Levant.
A small mosque was supposedly built adjacent to the mausoleum of Khalid ibn al-Walid in the 7th century. The current interior shrine that contains Khalid's tomb dates to the 11th century, and is considered to be a significant pilgrimage center.
The present-day mosque was built in the early 20th century, although some sources claim it dates to the late 19th century. Nazim Hussein Pasha, the Ottoman governor of Syria between 1895 and 1909, during the reign of Sultan Abd al-Hamid II, ordered the demolition of the Mamluk-era mosque for renovation. The renovation was completed in 1912, after Hussein Pasha's term as governor ended. Thus, the current Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque is of relatively recent construction and is noted for its Ottoman architectural style.
Video from inside the Khalid Ibn Walid Mosque in Homs that is being restored
War Damages Assessment Homs City Al Khaldiyeh Khalid ibn al Waleed Mosque
In 2014, GHSR Syria Watch will change its name into INTERNATIONAL LAW on SYRIA but will still be a monitoring channel.
War should be by standards and principles to refer in many official conventions, treaties and agreements. That is by far not the case in Syria. Both parties violate a score on rules and articles every day and even almost every hour.
The latest outrages committed by barrel bombings on Aleppo's neighborhood Hanano on December 18, 2013 have forced us to change our course drastically.
We will no longer focus on any battle progress but only on the following issues:
1:
committed violations against the Laws of War, so not on the Geneva Conventions because they are based on these laws.
2:
war damages assessment as they are important to know for in case that Syria sees a opportunity to rebuild the country.
Important: all findings are NOT conclusive. They should be judge by the proper body to rule over alleged violations.
Khaled Bin Al Walid Mosque Syria Homs Eid 2009
Syria, Homs - khaled Ibn El Walid Mosque Shelling
Syria - Reports say Homs is 2/3 destroyed by the civil war, khaled Ibn El Walid Mosque is getting destroyed as we upload this video.
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Khaled bin Walid mosque shelled in Syria's Homs
Video presented as having been shot on July 11, 2013 shows the shelling of the Khaled bin Walid mosque and surrounding area in the Syrian city of Homs, a symbol of the revolt against President Bashar al-Assad. The ancient place of worship noted for its Ottoman and Mameluk architectural style is where a prominent Arab warrior is said to be buried. The historic mosque was the launchpad of anti-regime demonstrations. Residents of Homs have endured a month-long offensive by the regime, which claimed to have recaptured a key rebel district on Monday. ATTENTION: These images have been obtained from YouTube. We have been able to verify that they were filmed in Homs, Syria. Duration: 00:37
Mosquée Khalid ibn al-Walid à Homs - Syrie
La mosquée Khalid ibn al-Walid est une mosquée située à Homs (Syrie). Construite entre 1908 et 1913, elle est de style ottoman et dédiée à Khalid ibn al-Walid, général du prophète Mahomet qui mena la conquête de la Syrie au VIIe siècle. Lors de la guerre civile syrienne des années 2010, elle devient un symbole des rebelles anti-gouvernement et subit pendant les combats de nombreux dommages architecturaux.
Khaled Bin Al Walid Mosque Inside Syria Homs 2009
Syria Assad Missiles Cause Mass Destruction in Homs by Khalid Bin Walid Mosque 3 July 13
Commander Khaled bin al Walid (prophet Muhammad's companion) in Homs after shelling
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces were today using their lethal monopoly on the skies to launch recurring airstrikes against rebel-held districts in the central city of Homs.
The Syrian Opposition Coalition warned this afternoon the regime might resort to chemical weapons, having failed so far to make any significant progress on the ground in the battle for Homs, center of the 27-month-old uprising.
Activists said jets and mortars pounded rebel-held areas of the city that have been under siege by Assad's troops for a year, and soldiers fought battles with rebels in several districts.
An activist in Homs told The Associated Press the assault was the worst campaign against the city since the revolution began in mid-March 2011.
Government forces are trying to storm (Homs) from all fronts, another activist told Reuters.
Video footage uploaded by activists on YouTube showed heavy explosions and white clouds of smoke rising from rebel districts.
One clip showed thick black smoke rising from the 13th-century Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque, on the edge of the Khalidiya neighborhood.
The mosque is dedicated to Khalid ibn al-Walid, a companion of Prophet Muhammad and a military commander who led the Muslim conquest of Syria in the 7th century following the decisive Battle of Yarmouk, which put an end to Byzantine rule in Syria. His dome-topped mausoleum is located in a corner of the prayer hall.
The regime's attack on Homs follows military advances by Assad forces, backed by Lebanese Hezbollah fighters, in villages in Homs province and towns close to the Lebanese border.
Three weeks ago Hezbollah spearheaded Assad's recapture of the town of Qusayr on the Lebanese-Syrian border.
Last Wednesday the rebels lost Tal Kalakh, a town located within walking distance of the Lebanon border.
Elsewhere in Syria rebels made major advances in the southwestern city of Deraa, just north of the border with Jordan.
They overran a major military checkpoint in Deraa on Friday and hoped it would allow them to capture the city, cradle of their 27-month-old uprising and an arms pipeline for rebels stretching all the way to Damascus.
The Khaled Ibn Al-Waleed mosque in Homs targeted by shelling from Syrian regime forces
Homs, Syria
The Khaled Ibn Al-Waleed mosque of Homs was targeted by shelling from Syrian regime forces.
Original Video Source
Homs - état des lieux de la mosquée Khalid Ibn al-Walid حمص - الدمار في جامع الصحابي خالد بن الوليد
Association for the protection of Syrian archaeology - Website : جمعية حماية الآثار السورية
Khalid ibn Walid-Moschee in Homs Syrien
Khalid ibn al-Walid Moschee
Die Khalid ibn al-Walid Moschee ist eine Moschee in Homs, Syrien, in einem Park entlang der Hama Street in Ash-Shuhada Square. Die Moschee, die für ihren osmanisch-türkischen Baustil bekannt ist, ist Khalid ibn al-Walid geweiht, einem arabischen Militärkommandeur, der im 7. Jahrhundert die muslimische Eroberung Syriens nach der entscheidenden Schlacht von Yarmouk anführte, die der byzantinischen Herrschaft ein Ende setzte Syrien. Sein Mausoleum mit seiner Kuppelspitze befindet sich in einer Ecke der Gebetshalle und diente als Wallfahrtszentrum. Zwei große Minarette mit schmalen Galerien, die aus abwechselnden horizontalen Reihen von weißem und schwarzem Stein bestehen, befinden sich an den nordwestlichen und nordöstlichen Ecken des Gebäudes und spiegeln den traditionellen islamischen Baustil der Levante wider.
Eine kleine Moschee wurde angeblich im 7. Jahrhundert neben dem Mausoleum von Khalid ibn al-Walid gebaut. Der heutige innere Schrein, der Khalids Grab enthält, stammt aus dem 11. Jahrhundert und gilt als bedeutendes Wallfahrtszentrum.
Die heutige Moschee wurde Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts gebaut, obwohl einige Quellen behaupten, dass sie im späten 19. Jahrhundert entstanden ist. Nazim Hussein Pascha, der osmanische Statthalter von Syrien zwischen 1895 und 1909, während der Herrschaft von Sultan Abd al-Hamid II, befahl den Abriss der Mameluk-Ära Moschee für die Renovierung. Die Renovierung wurde 1912 abgeschlossen, nachdem Hussein Paschas Amtszeit endete. So ist die heutige Khalid ibn al-Walid Moschee relativ neu gebaut und ist für ihren osmanischen Baustil bekannt.
Syria research 20121016 Khalid ibn al Waleed Mosque in Al Khaldiyeh, Homs City
ABOUT THIS UPLOAD
This upload is an research video and is not meant for viewer who want to keep themselves posted on the latest developments. Still, you can watch it.
The video you can watch here can also be watch on were they are published as part on a research.
The research is about to seek answers on the question what's Assad's intentional signature behind the war in Syria but before the Russian 'intervention' in 2015.
The uploads are part of seeking the answer on that question.
Since the imposed tightened guidelines by YouTube and the rules by the European Union regarding graphic content, needed to be publish in articles, it is not possible to post documented and archived material on YouTube.
I will use other ways to have these material released.
Syria research on 2012: Khalid ibn al Waleed Mosque in Al Khaldiyeh, Homs City
ABOUT THIS UPLOAD
This upload is an research video and is not meant for viewer who want to keep themselves posted on the latest developments. Still, you can watch it.
The video you can watch here can also be watch on were they are published as part on a research.
The research is about to seek answers on the question what's Assad's intentional signature behind the war in Syria but before the Russian 'intervention' in 2015.
The uploads are part of seeking the answer on that question.
Since the imposed tightened guidelines by YouTube and the rules by the European Union regarding graphic content, needed to be publish in articles, it is not possible to post documented and archived material on YouTube.
I will use other ways to have these material released.
حمص - قصف جامع الصحابي خالد بن الوليد Homs - bombardement mosquée Khaled ibn al Walid
Association for the protection of Syrian archaeology - Website : جمعية حماية الآثار السورية
Homs - state of the bombing of Khalid ibn al-Walid mosque 29.06.2013
#حمص - قصف مسجد الصحابي خالد بن الوليد 29.06. 2013
#Homs - Bombardement la Mosquée #Khalid Ibn al-Walid 29.06.2013
يعود بناء جامع خالد بن الوليد إلى القرن 7 هجري (القرن: 13 ميلادي)، والبناء الحالي إلى العهد العثماني في القرن 19 الميلادي أيام السلطان عبد الحميد الثاني. حيث أقيم المسجد الجامع على أنقاض المسجد القديم الذي كان قائمًا في نفس المكان في مدينة حمص ومبني وفق الطراز المملوكي أيام السلطان الظاهر بيبرس في القرن السابع الهجري. ويتميز الجامع الحالي ببناء على الطراز العثماني المتصف بالتناوب بين اللونين الأبيض والأسود في حجارته ممزوجًا بطراز سوري جميل. فديو : ثامر بيطار
A small mosque was supposedly built adjacent to the mausoleum of Khalid ibn al-Walid in the 7th century. The current interior shrine that contains Khalid's tomb dates to the 11th century, and is considered to be a significant pilgrimage center.
Several sources state that the Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque was originally built around Khalid's mausoleum during the reign of Mamluk sultan al-Zahir Baybars in 1265. The building was later restored during the reign of Mamluk sultan al-Ashraf Khalil in 1291. According to local tradition, when Tamerlane invaded Syria in the early 15th century, he spared Homs from destruction because it contained the mosque and the mausoleum of Khalid ibn al-Walid, whom he held in great regard in light of Ibn al-Walid's role as a companion of Islamic prophet Muhammad and a commander of the Muslim Arab army that conquered the city of Damascus and Byzantine Syria.
Throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, during Ottoman rule, the Dandan family, the most prominent clan of the Arab Bani Khalid tribe, held a stake in the extended revenue shares of the mausoleum and the mosque. The Bani Khalid claimed descent from Ibn al-Walid and the accompanying tribes that participated in the conquest of Syria under his command. However, their claim of ancestry had been previously refuted by the Mamluk-era historian al-Qalqashandi.
The present-day mosque was built in the early 20th century, although some sources claim it dates to the late 19th century. Nazim Hussein Pasha, the Ottoman governor of Syria between 1895 and 1909, during the reign of Sultan Abd al-Hamid I, ordered the demolition of the Mamluk-era mosque for renovation. The renovation was completed in 1912, after Hussein Pasha's term as governor ended. Thus, the current Khalid ibn al-Walid Mosque is of relatively recent construction and is noted for its Ottoman architectural style. According to historian David Nicolle, the mosque's construction by the Ottoman government was an attempt to maintain the allegiance of the increasingly restive Arab inhabitants of Syria. In later years Khalid was adopted as a hero and symbol of Arab nationalism. From Wikipedia