A religious place in Iran | A place where people want their origins | Shrine market
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 Published On Jul 23, 2023

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This religious place is located in the city of Qom in Iran, which is a religious place for those who believe in Islam and worship the One God. People go there to ask for their blessings and ask for good.
Fatima Masoumeh Shrine is the burial place of Fatima Masoumeh and a complex of tombs in the center of Qom city. The tomb of Fatima Masoumeh is located in the middle of a tomb with a height of 20.1 meters and a length and width of 95.2 x 20.1 meters and it is covered with exquisite tiles from the beginning of the 7th century. Around the shrine, there is a wall with a height of two meters and a length and width of approximately 80.4 x 40.4 meters, which was built in the lunar year 950 and decorated with mosaic tiles, and now this wall is covered with a mesh shrine made of silver.
History: The historical course of Fatimah Masoume shrine has undergone changes during different periods. In the year 605 AH, Amir Muzaffar Ahmed bin Ismail, the elder of Al Muzaffar family, made the greatest master tile maker of that time, Muhammad bin Abi Taher Kashi Qomi, to make and pay various tiles for the shrine. He was engaged in this work for eight years until finally, in 613, the shrine tiles were prepared and laid.

According to Chardin, a French traveler of the Safavid era, the word "Eager to understand" was included in the inscription of Sardar Bana to record the year of the building, which is calculated as Abjad 1065 (the reign of Shah Abbas II).

This shrine was renovated during the Qajar period in 1256 AD with the efforts of Mirza Ali Asghar Khan Atabaki, and the Atabaki court was built in this period and added to the structure of the shrine.

In 1301, the tomb was equipped with electric lights for the first time. With the approval of the parliament, the electric engine of the royal palace, which was recently replaced with another engine, was handed over to this tomb.[1]

In 1377, the shrine was rebuilt in a new form, which is a mixture of tiles and stones, and the internal walls were decorated with green marble.
In contrast to some of the pilgrimage letters written for the innocent and Imam-born, it is important to note that Fatima Masoumeh's pilgrimage was narrated by Ali bin Musa al-Reza.

Fatima Masoumeh's pilgrimage has been recreated for the first time in the central library of Astan Quds Razavi in the handwriting of Ali bin Musa al-Reza in 2018. This ziyaratname has been recreated with the handwriting attributed to Ali bin Musa al-Reza, which was adapted from the Qur'an number 1586 of the central library of Astan Quds Razavi attributed to him.

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