well it is a pulpit next to the mihrab The minbar is a seat at the front of the mosque. The imam sits on the minbar while delivering the khutbah (sermon) at salat-al-Jumah (Friday prayer.)
It is a a place, that is a bit higher than where the rest of the praying Muslims are, where the Imaam or preacher stands and gives his speach.
a minbar and a qur'an init blud
The minbar is an Arabic word that the Islam leader (or Imam) in the mosque steps up and stands to give sermon to Muslims in the mosque. pulpit
The minbar inside the mosque is a structure of few steps (minimum three steps) ended by a seating flat area. This is to be stepped up by the leader of the mosque (Imam) when delivering a sermon during Friday prayer or other religious occasions as Eid Al-fitr or eid Al-Adha.
The balcony on a mosque is typically called a "minbar." It is a raised platform from which the imam delivers sermons (khutbah) during Friday prayers. The minbar is often elaborately designed and has steps leading up to it, symbolizing the importance of the message being conveyed to the congregation.
The mosque minaret is not different than the church towers or minarets.
The place where the imam stands during prayer is called the "minbar." It is typically a raised platform in a mosque from which the imam delivers sermons (khutbah) and addresses the congregation. The minbar is often situated to the right of the prayer area, allowing the imam to lead the prayers effectively.
The building is called Mosque (or Masjid) and the tower is called minaret (or Me'zana)
Well a mosque (most in America that I know of) have a section for guys to pray in and then a section for women to pray in. They are separate places where both genders cannot see each other. Other mosques in other countries have a part that the Imam goes to call the adhan and then there is the room for the men to pray in. Sometimes there is a room for the women to pray in. And there is a bathroom, either attached outside or inside.
When the Hagia Sophia was converted into a mosque in 1453, the Christian features were removed, and Islamic faetures, like the minbar and mihrab, plus four minarets, were added. Even though the mosque has now been secularized, it still retains its Islamic appearance.
People reading their prayer in the prayer hall, maybe an imaam giving a sermon on the minbar, people making ablution in the wudhu facilities, classrooms where children are reading the Holy Quran and learning about Islam.
Mihrab (Arabic: محراب‎ miḥrāb, pl.محاريب maḥārīb) is a semicircular nichein the wall of a mosque that indicates the qibla; that is, the direction of theKaaba in Mecca and hence the direction that Muslims should face when praying. The wall in which amihrab appears is thus the "qiblawall."Mihrabs should not be confused with the minbar, which is the raised platform from which an Imam (leader of prayer) addresses the congregation.
After the Ottoman Turks conquered Constantinople in 1453, they converted the Hagia Sophia, originally a Christian cathedral, into a mosque. They made several modifications, including the addition of minarets, a mihrab, and a minbar, while also preserving many of its Christian mosaics and architectural features. In 1935, the building was secularized and turned into a museum, but in 2020, it was reconverted into a mosque by the Turkish government.