Great Mosque, Rabat

The Great Mosque (Arabic: الجامع الكبير, romanized: al-jama' al-kbir) of the medina of Rabat in Morocco, also known as the el-Kharrazin Mosque (Arabic: خرازين, romanized: jama' al-kharrazin, lit.

'mosque of the cobblers'), is the largest Friday mosque within the historic Andalusian medina of Rabat (i.e. the district north of the Andalusian walls, along Avenue Hassan II today) in Morocco.

[1] The mosque was originally built in the Marinid period in the late 13th or early 14th century, but it has been reconstructed and restored many times since.

[1][2][3] An extensive restoration took place in 1882, and the current minaret was built in 1939.

This article about a mosque or other Islamic place of worship in Morocco is a stub.

One of the main gates of the mosque.