Bajra Shahi Mosque

Bajra Shahi Mosque (Bengali: বজরা শাহী মসজিদ, romanized: Bojra Shahi Mosjid, Arabic: شاهي مسجد بجرا) is an 18th-century mosque located in the Bazra Union under Sonaimuri Upazila of Noakhali District, Bangladesh.

[1] The mosque is located in a rural setting 20 kilometres (12 mi) north of Noakhali, at the village of Bazra.

The site is enclosed by an outer wall with an ornate gateway on the east, the whole situated on high ground on the western side of a dighi (reservoir).

[2][3] The mosque was built by Aman Ullah in 1741-42 during the reign of the Mughal emperor Muhammad Shah.

It is in a fairly good state of preservation,[2] and is on the government Department of Archaeology's list of protected sites.

The eastern face of Bajra Shahi Mosque has three doorways, each opening under a half-domed vault and flanked by slender minarets.
The interior is divided into three bays by multi-cusped arches.