List of mosques in Germany

This is a list of mosques in Germany by states.

Baden-Württemberg

Name Images City Year Group Remarks
Schwetzingen Masjid
Schwetzingen 1779 U Oldest mosque architecture in Germany. Non-functional as a mosque.
Mimar Sinan Masjid Mosbach
Mosbach 1990s DITIB
Yavuz Sultan Selim Mosque
Mannheim-Jungbusch 1995 DITIB Capacity: 2.500.
Große Moschee
Buggingen 1998 DITIB
Alperenler Masjid
Rheinfelden (Baden) 1996 DITIB
Fatih Masjid
Heilbronn 1987 IGMG
Mevlana Masjid
Eppingen 1996 IGMG
Central Masjid Offenburg
Offenburg 2002 DITIB
Bait-ul-Ahad Mosque Bruchsal 2012 AMJ Eisenbahnstraße 8

76646 Bruchsal [1]

Bavaria

Name Images City Year Group Remarks
Freimann Masjid
Munich-Freimann 1973 IZM Foundation stone in 6. October 1967
Bait-un-Naseer Mosque Augusburg ? AMJ https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/augsburg/ ;Donauwörther Straße 165, 86154 Augsburg
? Penzberg 2005 U https://web.archive.org/web/20141223133238/http://www.irsmm.org/content/penzberg-mosque-bavaria-germany
Masjid in Sendling Munich-Sendling 1989 DITIB

Berlin

Name Images City Year Group Remarks
Wünsdorf Mosque
Berlin-Wilmersdorf 1915 U Wilmersdorfer Moschee
The oldest standing mosque in Germany—the Wünsdorf Mosque, built in 1915 at the Halbmondlager POW camp, was Germany's first, but it was demolished in 1925–26.
Berlin Mosque
Berlin-Wilmersdorf 1924-1927 AAIIL
Şehitlik Mosque (Berlin)
Berlin-Neukölln 2004 DITIB Architect: Hilmi Şenalp; Capacity: 1.550.
Omar Ibn Al-Khattab Mosque
Berlin-Kreuzberg 2008 U
Khadija Mosque
Berlin-Heinersdorf 2008 AMJ
Fussilet mosque Berlin / Friedrich-Krause-Ufer ? Fussilet 33 e.V.[2]
Ibn Ruschd-Goethe mosque Berlin 2017 Seyran Ateş It is the first liberal mosque in Germany. Burqa and niqāb are banned. Men and women pray together. Women aren't forced to wear a headscarf.[3]

Bremen

Name Images City Year Group Remarks
Fatih Mosque
Bremen-Gröpelingen 1999 IGMG Capacity: 1.300

Hamburg

Name Images City Year Group Remarks Height Minaret (m)
Fazle Omar Mosque
Hamburg-Lokstedt 1957[4] AMJ First mosque built after World War II in Germany 8
Imam Ali Mosque
Hamburg-Uhlenhorst 1965[4] Sh Build by Iranian business men 16
Central Mosque Hamburg
Hamburg-St. Georg 1977 IGMG 36 to floor
20 steel tower structure[5]
Al-Nour Mosque (Hamburg) Hamburg-Horn 2018 Islamisches Zentrum Al-Nour e.V. - 'Kuwait' 44

Hessen

Name Images City Year Group Remarks
Abu Bakr Moschee
Frankfurt am Main 1966 IGF Islamische Gemeinde Frankfurt e.V. one of the biggest mosques in Frankfurt
Noor Mosque
Frankfurt am Main 1959 AMJ
Anwar Mosque
Rodgau 2008 AMJ
Nuur ud Din Mosque
Darmstadt 2003 AMJ Haasstraße 1a

64293 Darmstadt[6]

Bait-ul-Baqi Mosque Dietzenbach ? AMJ Theodor-Heuss-Ring 48

63128 Dietzenbach[7]

Baitus Shakur
Groß-Gerau 1992 AMJ Biggest Ahmadiyya mosque in Germany. Capacity: 850.
Baitul Huda
Usingen 2004 AMJ
Fatih Mosque
Stadtallendorf 2004 DITIB
Bait-ul Aziz
Riedstadt 2004 AMJ
Muqeet Mosque
Wabern 2007 AMJ
Bashir Mosque
Bensheim 2006 AMJ
Baitul Ghafur
Ginsheim-Gustavsburg 2011 AMJ Lange Streng 13

65462 Ginsheim-Gustavsburg[8]

Baitul Hadi Mosque
Seligenstadt 2011 AMJ
Baitul Baqi
Dietzenbach 2011 AMJ
Baitul Aman
Nidda 2011 AMJ
Ata Mosque Flörsheim am Main ? AMJ Altkönigstraße 10

65439 Flörsheim am Main [9]

Dar-ul-Amaan Mosque Friedberg ? AMJ Strassheimer Straße 16

61169 Friedberg [10]

Bait-us-Samad Mosque Gießen ? AMJ Marburger Straße 83

35396 Gießen[11]

Bait-ul-Wahid Mosque Hanau ? AMJ Hafenstraße 6

63450 Hanau[12]

Sadiq Mosque Karben ? AMJ Am Spitzacker 18b

61184 Karben[13]

Mahmud Mosque Kassel ? AMJ Graf-Haeseler-Straße 6

34134 Kassel[14]

Mevlana Mosque (Kassel-Oberzwehren)[15] Kassel 2014 U

Lower Saxony

Name Images City Year Group Remarks
Baitus Sami
Hannover 2008 AMJ
Salimya Mosque
Göttingen 2006 DITIB
Islamisches Kulturzentrum Wolfsburg Wolfsburg ? U Located at Berliner Ring 39, 38440 Wolfsburg. The Imam is Arabic. This mosque attracts all the Muslims in the city, majority of which are Turkish. Official website : http://www.islam-wolfsburg.de/

North Rhine-Westphalia

Name Images City Year Group Remarks
Alnoor Islamic Zentrum Belecke ? U Maintained by Islamisches Zentrum Belecke
Bilal Mosque
Aachen 1964 IZA Maintained by Islamisches Zentrum Aachen
Mansoor Mosque Aachen ? AMJ https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/aachen/;Feldstraße 47 (im Navi 45)

52070 Aachen

Wesseling Mosque
„Mimar Sinan Camii“
Wesseling 1987 DITIB
King Fahd Mosque
Bonn-Bad Godesberg 1995 SA
Baitul Momin
Münster-Hiltrup 2003 AMJ
Vatan Mosque
Bielefeld-Brackwede 2004 DITIB
Merkez Mosque
Wuppertal-Elberfeld ? DITIB
Nasir Mosque
Isselburg 2007 AMJ
Hürth Camii Hürth 2004 Ditib
DITIB-Merkez-Moschee
Duisburg 2008[16] DITIB 4th largest mosque in Germany, Capacity: 1.200.
Cologne Central Mosque
Cologne 2017 DITIB Construction began 2009. The largest mosque in Germany.[17]

Rhineland-Palatinate

Name Images City Year Group Remarks
Hamd Mosque
Wittlich 1998 AMJ Capacity: 600.
Tahir Mosque (Koblenz)
Koblenz-Lützel 2004 AMJ

Schleswig-Holstein

Name Images City Year Group Remarks
Centrum Masjid Rendsburg
Rendsburg 2008 IGMG Capacity: 300; 2 Minarets à 26 m.
Bait-ul-Habib Mosque Kiel 25 August 2004 AMJ https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/kiel/; Flintbeker Straße 7

24113 Kiel

Group

AAIIL Lahore Ahmadiyya Group
AMJ Ahmadiyya Muslim Community
ATIB Union der Türkisch-Islamischen Kulturvereine in Europa
DITIB Diyanet İşleri Türk İslam Birliği
IGMG Millî Görüş
IZA Islamic Centre Aachen
IZM Islamic Centre Munich
SA Saudi Arabia (Wahhabism)
Sh Shia Islam
TJ Tablighi Jamaat
U Unknown
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See also

References

  1. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/bruchsal/
  2. Heil, Georg (February 22, 2017). "The Berlin Attack and the "Abu Walaa" Islamic State Recruitment Network". Combating Terrorism Center. Retrieved March 28, 2017. Both men also attended prayers at the Fussilet mosque in Berlin, which Amri visited on the day of the attack and where he used to sleep occasionally. The Fussilet mosque is run by an association named “Fussilet 33 e.V.,” which had already attracted police attention for suspected Islamic State recruiting.
  3. Germany, SPIEGEL ONLINE, Hamburg. "Frauenrechtlerin gründet Moschee: "Unsere Religion nicht den Rückständigen überlassen" - SPIEGEL ONLINE - Politik". SPIEGEL ONLINE. Retrieved 2017-06-16.
  4. Ossama Hegazy (2015). "Towards a German Mosque". In Erkan Toğuşlu (ed.). Everyday Life Practices of Muslims in Europe. Leuven University Press. pp. 193–216. ISBN 978-94-6270-032-1.
  5. "Minarte History". 3 October 2019.
  6. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/darmstadt/
  7. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/dietzenbach/
  8. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/ginsheim-gustavsburg/
  9. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/floersheim/
  10. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/friedberg/
  11. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/giessen/
  12. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/hanau/
  13. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/karben/
  14. https://ahmadiyya.de/gebetsstaette/moscheen/kassel/
  15. "Nach sechs Jahren: Moschee für 3,5 Millionen Euro fast fertig", Hessische/Niedersächsische Allgemeine (in German), 15 May 2014
  16. "Muslim Integration: Why No One Protested against Germany's Biggest Mosque", Der Spiegel, 27 October 2008
  17. "How Recep Tayyip Erdogan seduces Turkish migrants in Europe". The Economist. 31 August 2017. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
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