Great Mosque of al-Mansur
| Great Mosque of al-Mansur | |
|---|---|
جامع المنصور | |
The Round City of Baghdad in the time of Caliph al-Mansur, with the Great Mosque in the centre (No. 1) | |
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Islam (former) |
| Ecclesiastical or organisational status | Friday mosque (former) |
| Status | Destroyed |
| Location | |
| Location | Baghdad, Baghdad Governorate |
| Country | Iraq |
| Architecture | |
| Type | Islamic architecture |
| Style | Abbasid |
| Completed | 763 CE |
| Destroyed | After 1327 CE |
| Specifications | |
| Minaret | One (destroyed) |
| Materials | Bricks; timber |
The Great Mosque of al-Mansur (Arabic: جامع المنصور, romanized: Djāmiʿ al-Manṣūr) was the chief Friday mosque of Baghdad during the Abbasid Caliphate.
When the Moroccan scholar and explorer, Ibn Battutah visited the city in 1327, he reported the mosque as still standing, but it disappeared at a later, unknown date; no trace of it survives today.