Stunning Mosque In Iran Becomes A Magnificent Kaleidoscope When The Sun Rises

Published 10 years ago

The exterior of the Nasir al-Mulk Mosque in Shiraz, Iran, while decorative, hints only vaguely at the colorful splendour held within. When you step inside, especially if it’s early in the morning, the mosque truly becomes a vivid and glorious kaleidoscope.

The Nasir al-Mulk Mosque is heavily decorated with stained glass – something very rare in mosque architecture. It was built during the Qājār era by the order of Mirza Hasan Ali Nasir al Molk in 1888. The mosque is famous for its extensive usage of stained glass and the divine feast of colours that it casts with the help of the morning sun. The mosque is often referred to as the “Pink Mosque” due to the dominance of this colour in the intricate and colorful tiles decorating its arches and niches.

If you ever have a chance, go visit this majestic, one-of-a-kind mosque and don’t miss the earliest bus – you won’t regret it!

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Image credits: Mohammad Reza Domiri Ganji

Image credits: Dav Wong

Image credits: Amin Abedini

Image credits: Marinela T. Gondii

Image credits: Lucie Debelkova

Image credits: Amin Abedini

Image credits: my2200

Image credits: Amin Abedini

Image credits: Abbas Arabzadeh

Image credits: my2200

Image credits: Amin Abedini

Image credits: Dav Wong

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19th century architecture, colorful stained glass, full-post, geometry, house of god, house of worship, Islamic arch, Islamic architecture, iwan, mosque, Nasir al-Molk, Nasir al-Mulk, Pink Mosque, stained glass, stained glass windows
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