A platform with steps used by a speaker or prayer leader in some mosques. Sometimes referred to as a pulpit.
(Arabic) In Muslim architecture: The high pulpit in a mosque; the elevated structure of steps in a mosque from which the khutba is given during Friday communal prayers.
The pulpit in a mosque, often three steps
Staircase-like monumental pulpit in the Friday mosque from which the sermon is delivered.
Arabic word initially referring to the pulpit used in Medina by Muhammad, and later referring to the pulpit installed in each mosque to the right of the Mihrab for the reading of the Koran and prayers by the Imam.
A raised structure or pulpit from which announcements to the Muslim community were made, and from which sermons were preached.
a pulpit in a mosque, usually where Friday prayer is spoken
A pulpit (some times a wooden steps) placed on the right of the mihrab used by the Imam to deliver his Jumua lecture (khutba)
A pulpit in a mosque from which preachers deliver their religious sermons. En.
A Minbar (Arabic: منبر, also spelt Mimbar) is a pulpit in the mosque where the Imam (leader of prayer) stands to deliver sermons (khutbah خطبه ). The minbar is usually shaped like a small tower with a pointed roof and stairs leading up to it. It is often richly ornamented, though in its simplest form the minbar is just a small platform with only a few steps.