Hala 
                          Sultan Tekke
The Masjid of Umm Haram or the Hala Sultan Tekke, as it is known, is the chief Muslim shrine in Larnaca, on the island of Cyprus. It is also a listed Ancient Monument of B Schedule no.8 in the Larnaca District. The accounts regarding its existence have generally been dated from the first Arab raids on Cyprus (A.D 647 or A.D 649). The most likely account tells of the death of the wife of “Ubada bin al-Samit”, Umm Haram, during a raid upon the island organized by Muawiyah. She fell from her mule and died after breaking her neck during the siege of Larnaca. She was buried near the salt lake and her grave became a sacred shrine. Hala Sultan (Umm Haram) was the Prophet Muhammad’s ‘wet-nurse’. This Masjid named after her, lies in a serene and picture perfect setting on the shores of the Larnaca Salt Lake.
The Masjid of Umm Haram or the Hala Sultan Tekke, as it is known, is the chief Muslim shrine in Larnaca, on the island of Cyprus. It is also a listed Ancient Monument of B Schedule no.8 in the Larnaca District. The accounts regarding its existence have generally been dated from the first Arab raids on Cyprus (A.D 647 or A.D 649). The most likely account tells of the death of the wife of “Ubada bin al-Samit”, Umm Haram, during a raid upon the island organized by Muawiyah. She fell from her mule and died after breaking her neck during the siege of Larnaca. She was buried near the salt lake and her grave became a sacred shrine. Hala Sultan (Umm Haram) was the Prophet Muhammad’s ‘wet-nurse’. This Masjid named after her, lies in a serene and picture perfect setting on the shores of the Larnaca Salt Lake.
During 
                          the second half of the second millennium B.C, the area 
                          of the Hala Sultan Tekke was used as a cemetery by the 
                          people who lived in a large town a few hundred metres 
                          to the West. A part of this town was excavated by a 
                          Swedish archaeological mission and proved to be a major 
                          urban centre of Late Bronze Age Cyprus. More recent 
                          archaeological investigations conducted by the Department 
                          of Antiquities under the women’s quarter of Hala 
                          Sultan Tekke have revealed building remains dated to 
                          the late Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic periods 
                          (6th – 1st c. B.C). Several finds indicate that 
                          the site might have been used as a sanctuary but the 
                          limited scale of the investigations precludes definite 
                          conclusions about its use.
The 
                          Ottomans built the Masjid complex itself in a series 
                          of stages in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. 
                          A shrine was built by Sheikh Hassan in A.D 1760. Later 
                          the Masjid was constructed and the complex assumed its 
                          present form around A.D 1816/17. Hala Sultan Tekke is 
                          composed of a Masjid, mausoleum, minaret, cemetery, 
                          and living quarters for men and women.
Hala 
                          Sultan is the Turkish form of “Umm Haram”. 
                          For Muslims, the Tekke is considered as one of the most 
                          important visiting sites after the Kaaba in Makkah, 
                          the Prophet Muhammad’s tomb in Medina and Mescid-i 
                          Aksa, the biggest Masjid in Jerusalem.
Description of the Tekke
When the Masjid, minaret and living quarters were constructed after A.D 1760, we get more accounts and descriptions about the shrine and the Tekke from Muslim as well as from Christian travellers and pilgrims. According to the stories told by the foreign travellers visiting Cyprus, there was a tomb which was known as the “old woman’s tomb” between A.D 1683-1767. Both Muslims and Christians considered the tomb as a sacred place; therefore it attracted worshippers from both religions.
                         
                        
When the Masjid, minaret and living quarters were constructed after A.D 1760, we get more accounts and descriptions about the shrine and the Tekke from Muslim as well as from Christian travellers and pilgrims. According to the stories told by the foreign travellers visiting Cyprus, there was a tomb which was known as the “old woman’s tomb” between A.D 1683-1767. Both Muslims and Christians considered the tomb as a sacred place; therefore it attracted worshippers from both religions.
It 
                          is said that the tomb was discovered by a dervish called 
                          Sheikh Hasan. It is highly probable that Sheikh Hasan 
                          travelled around Cyprus and spread the stories about 
                          Umm Haram. People hearing the stories started to visit 
                          the tomb. The myths suggest that the dolmen stones had 
                          healing powers and people coming with certain illnesses 
                          touched the stones and their diseases were cured, and 
                          crippled visitors started to walk. The dervish managed 
                          to convince some religious figures of the site’s 
                          sacred nature in A.D 1760 and with the permission he 
                          received from the authorities he constructed a shrine 
                          around the tomb. He decorated the tomb and the shrine 
                          with the presents brought by the people. According to 
                          another story, Cyprus governor Mehmet Agha erected wooden 
                          fences around the tomb in order to protect it from the 
                          plague in A.D 1760. His successor Acem Ali Agha replaced 
                          the wooden fences with a bronze fence with two doors.
In 
                          another account, Giovanni Mariti, who visited Cyprus 
                          between A.D 1760-1767, wrote that the shrine was built 
                          by the Cyprus governor Ali Agha. According to Mariti 
                          until A.D 1760 they used the stones of the standing 
                          church in the ruined Meneou village as the construction 
                          materials. In another source, it is mentioned that construction 
                          of the Masjid was initiated by the Cyprus governor Seyyid 
                          Mehmet Emin Efendi in a classical Ottoman style, and 
                          it was completed in November A.D 1817.
The 
                          entrance to the garden of the Tekke is through a gate, 
                          on which there is an Ottoman inscription dated 4.3.1813. 
                          Sultan Mahmud II’ monogram appears on both sides 
                          of the inscription and reads, “Hala Sultan Tekke 
                          was built by God’s beloved great Ottoman Cyprus 
                          governor”. The garden at Tekke was designed by 
                          a pasha (a high ranking military officer), hence it 
                          was known as “Pasha garden” before 1760 A.D. 
                          The complex of buildings adjacent to the Tekke was known 
                          as “Gül?en-Feyz” (the rose garden of 
                          plenitude). To the north (left) of the Tekke entrance 
                          there used to be a guesthouse for men. On the right 
                          of the entrance, there was another guesthouse of which 
                          one block was reserved for men (Selaml?k) and the other 
                          for women (Haremlik). In the past, people used to promise 
                          to dedicate themselves to serve the Hala Sultan Tekke 
                          if their wish came true.
The 
                          Masjid was built with yellow stone 13 x 13 cm blocks. 
                          It is a square shaped construction and it is covered 
                          with a kubbe (dome-shaped top). A balcony lies in front. 
                          Within the Masjid can be found a wooden women’s 
                          section and a wishing well. The minaret is connected 
                          to the Masjid at its northwestern corner. It was repaired 
                          in A.D 1959.
                          
Umm Haram’s 
                  tomb is located behind the qibla wall (in the direction of Makkah) 
                  of the Masjid. At the entrance of the tomb there is an inscription 
                  in Arabic script, which dates back to A.D 1760. On the eastern 
                  section of the tomb there are five separate tombs. In the past, 
                  former sheikhs of the tomb were buried next to Umm Haram’s 
                  tomb. Thus, two former Sheikhs of the Tekke were buried at the 
                  eastern section of Umm Haram’s tomb. A two-leveled marble 
                  sarcophagus, with the date 12 July 1929, is the most important 
                  tomb there. The tomb belongs to the Queen of Hashemite Adile 
                  Hüseyin Ali, the Turkish wife of the last Hashemite King 
                  Hüseyin ibn ?erif Ali, who was the grandson of the Ottoman 
                  vizier Mustafa Re?it Pasha. Since the former king was the descendant 
                  of the Prophet Mohammad, after his death, he too was buried 
                  there.
At 
                          the eastern corner of the Masjid and the Tekke, there 
                          is a cemetery, which was closed to burials around A.D 
                          1899. The tombs in the cemetery belong to Mustafa Efendi 
                          (died in A.D 1821); Mustafa Agha who was believed to 
                          be the governor of Cyprus (died A.D 1813); Muhtar Efendi 
                          who was the tax collector of Cyprus (died on 5 October 
                          1843); and ebu Bekir Nejib Efendi (died A.D 1855).
Opposite 
                          to the Masjid, there is an octagonal fountain, which 
                          was built around A.D 1796-1797 by the Cypriot governor 
                          Silahtar Kaptanba?? Mustafa A?a, who was known to be 
                          an expert on the waters of Cyprus. This information 
                          is recorded on the marble inscription located on the 
                          fountain. On an inscription dating back to A.D 1895, 
                          which was recently discovered in the Tekke’s garden, 
                          it is written that the water was brought by Abdül 
                          Hamit.
Opposite 
                          to the Masjid, there is an octagonal fountain, which 
                          was built around 1796-1797 by the Cypriot governor Silahtar 
                          Kaptanba?? Mustafa A?a, who was known to be an expert 
                          on the waters of Cyprus. This information is recorded 
                          on the marble epigraph located on the fountain. On an 
                          epigraph dating back to 1895, which was recently discovered 
                          in the Tekke’s garden, it is written that the water 
                          was brought by Abdül Hamit. According to the United 
                          Nations Development Programme, Islam’s third sacred 
                          holy site after the Kaaba in Makkah and the Masjid of 
                          the Prophet in Medina, is Hala Sultan Tekke, or Umm 
                          Haram in Cyprus, which has long been the destination 
                          of Muslim pilgrims. 
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