Sinan Pasha Mosque
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The Sinan Pasha Musjid is an Ottoman Musjid in the city of Prizren, Kosovo. It was built in 1615 by Sofi Sinan Pasha, bey of Budim. The Musjid overlooks the main street of Prizren and is a dominant feature in the town’s skyline.
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Sofi Sinan Pasha started construction of the Musjid in either 1600 or 1608. Sofi Sinan Pasha, an Albanian and former beylerbey and kaymakam in Bosnia should not be confused with grand vizier Sinan Pasha, who built the Sinan Pasha Musjid in the nearby city of Kaçanik.
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It is widely considered that the stones used to build the Musjid were taken from nearby Holy Archangels Monastery, a Serbian Orthodox monastery founded by Serbian Emperor Stefan Dušan. In fact, parts of the former monastery can be seen in the Musjid. The monastery, which was abandoned after the arrival of the Ottomans in the 16th century, had fallen to ruins by the 17th century. Hasan Kaleshi, an Albanian historian, sustained in 1972 that Sofi Sinan Pasha couldn’t have possibly ordered any monastery destruction as this was impossible without a Sultan decree, rather, he ordered the use of the spare stones to a better deed as ordered by the Sultan.
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Sinan Pasha Musjid was declared a Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance in 1990 by the Republic of Serbia.
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The Prizren municipality intended to build a library within the Musjid in order to preserve not only the original Ottoman manuscripts found in the Musjid, but also other valuable ones that can be found all over Kosovo. However, the Islamic Union of Kosovo filed a lawsuit against the Prizren Municipality in order to not allow the Musjid to become a museum, but instead to have it continue to be a religious building.