Number / Mosque tablet with Bosnian Arabic pattern
(رقيم لوح مسجد ذو نقش بالبوسنية العربية)

Title Number / Mosque tablet with Bosnian Arabic pattern
Title Original رقيم لوح مسجد ذو نقش بالبوسنية العربية
Publication Date: 1574
Publication Place - World Museum, Vienna
Subject to forbid
Type Other
Language Undetermined
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Physical Dimensions الطول : 53 سم ، العرض : 36 سم ، الارتفاع : 6 سم
Library: Museum With No Frontiers
Library Asset ID 13.830
Record ID object;EPM;at;Mus23;3;ar
Library Location World Museum, Vienna
Date 1574
Notes Zvornik is located in northeastern Bosnia and Herzegovina on the left bank of the Dania River. Around 1460, the Ottomans occupied the city and the fortresses above it, where the Serbian border could be monitored. In the fort, the church was converted into a mosque, which was restored in 1574. This preserved stone inscription bears testimony to this restoration. During the Austrian campaign in 1878 against Bosnia, parts of the fortress were destroyed, and a year later the stone tablet arrived in Vienna.
Sample Text “Reqim/Mosque tablet with inscription in Bosnian Arabic” within Explore Islamic Art Collections. Museum Without Borders, 2026. https://islamicart.museumwnf.org/database_item.php?id=object;EPM;at;Mus23;3;ar
View in source Museum With No Frontiers Museum With No Frontiers - Ottoman library catalog search
Museum With No Frontiers - Ottoman library catalog search Museum With No Frontiers

Number / Mosque tablet with Bosnian Arabic pattern

(رقيم لوح مسجد ذو نقش بالبوسنية العربية)
Publication Date 1574
Publication Place - World Museum, Vienna
Subject to forbid
Type Other
Language Undetermined
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Physical Dimensions الطول : 53 سم ، العرض : 36 سم ، الارتفاع : 6 سم
Library Museum With No Frontiers
Library Asset ID 13.830
Record ID object;EPM;at;Mus23;3;ar
Library Location World Museum, Vienna
Date 1574
Notes Zvornik is located in northeastern Bosnia and Herzegovina on the left bank of the Dania River. Around 1460, the Ottomans occupied the city and the fortresses above it, where the Serbian border could be monitored. In the fort, the church was converted into a mosque, which was restored in 1574. This preserved stone inscription bears testimony to this restoration. During the Austrian campaign in 1878 against Bosnia, parts of the fortress were destroyed, and a year later the stone tablet arrived in Vienna.
Sample Text “Reqim/Mosque tablet with inscription in Bosnian Arabic” within Explore Islamic Art Collections. Museum Without Borders, 2026. https://islamicart.museumwnf.org/database_item.php?id=object;EPM;at;Mus23;3;ar
Museum With No Frontiers - Ottoman library catalog search
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