None.
Some people point to the Ziggurats of 3rd millennium Mesopotamia and claim them as indicative of the people's ability to build the tower, but ability doesn't provide evidence of performance.
Unfortunately we do not have any evidence whether the tower existed at all and how it looked like exactly. If it existed, it had been destroyed long time ago.
Assuming it actually existed, it would have been in the area of Babylon in Mesopotamia.
The Bible does not specify an exact height (or number of stories) for the Tower of Babel.
No, the Tower of Babel and the Mosque Tower are different structures. The Tower of Babel is a biblical story about a tower built to reach the heavens, while a Mosque Tower is a minaret attached to a mosque where the call to prayer is made.
In Babel next to the Kings palace.
Tower of Babel - M. C. Escher - was created in 1928.
The tower of Babel was not really a tower but a place where all men could meet. It was the last vestige of civilization before the wilderness.
The Tower of Babel is a biblical story found in Genesis, and its historical existence is debated, with no definitive archaeological evidence to confirm its age. The pyramids of Egypt, particularly the Great Pyramid of Giza, were constructed around 2580–2560 BCE. Since the Tower of Babel's narrative likely reflects events from a much earlier or concurrent period, it is difficult to establish a precise timeline. However, the pyramids are generally recognized as being older than the earliest references to the Tower of Babel.
The cast of Tower of Babel - 2005 includes: Miller Oberlin as Miller
The Tower of Babel is traditionally considered to have occurred after the Flood, as described in the Book of Genesis. The narrative of the Flood is found in Genesis chapters 6-9, while the story of the Tower of Babel is in Genesis 11:1-9. This places the Tower of Babel in the post-flood timeline of biblical history.
The tower symbolizes human resistance to God's will.
The Tower of Babel story from the Bible is considered a religious and mythological account rather than a historical event. There is no archaeological or historical evidence to support the existence of a tower reaching the heavens or the confusion of languages at a particular point in time. Additionally, it is unlikely that there was ever a single universal language spoken by all people. Language diversification is a gradual and ongoing process throughout human history.