Live
History of India Team
April 26th
2017
Tucked away
in the small town of Methala (Kodungallur municipality) north of Kochi, is a
two-storied mosque with tiled sloping roofs, typical of the local architecture
here. It isn't opulent and does not look very old, thanks to a fresh coat of
paint it sports, but what makes this quaint little mosque so unique, is that
many believe this is the oldest mosque in India. Dating back to around 629 CE,
this mosque could well have been built in the lifetime of Prophet Mohammad
himself!
The claim
that this is indeed the ‘oldest mosque in India’ is hard to verify, as the
mosque has been renovated several times over the centuries. Only the inner core
of the mosque and its original roof with stylized sharp edges, give any
indication that this structure could have been standing here since the 7th
century CE, as claimed.
This
mosque, built almost 500 years before the earliest one from the Sultanate
period in North India, indicates just how old the Islamic influence is in
coastal Kerala. This sliver of coastal paradise was the gateway of western
faiths into India. Christianity, Judaism and Islam reached and thrived here for
centuries before they spread to the other parts of India.
It was the
Arab traders who first brought Islam to Kerala. Suleiman-al-Tajir, a 9th
century Arab traveller- who wrote the Silsilat-ut-Tawarikh (Account of India
& China) in 851 CE, mentions in his chronicles that there was a small
population of local Muslims in Kerala. Ibn Haukal, a tenth century Arab traveller
and geographer, refers to mosques where Muslims offered prayers. The discovery
of a Muslim inscription from 782 CE at Pantalayini, in Kollam, near Quilandy,
in Kozhikode district, corroborates this. According to literary records, the
mosque architecture in Kerala reached its zenith between 13th and 16th
centuries, which was also the period of Arab supremacy in the maritime trade
with Malabar.
Malik-Ibn-Dinar,
an Arab trader who frequently visited the Kerala coast for trade, is said to
have built this mosque as well as eight others on the coast. He was granted
land by a local king. Local Muslims in Kerala believe that King Cheraman
Perumal after whom the mosque is today named converted to Islam and travelled
to Medina. He died on the way back and was buried in Salalah, Oman where a
dargah is dedicated him even today.
Methala is
a town in the Kodungallur municipality of Kerala. Irinjalakuda railway station
is the nearest railway station from Methala, at a distance of 10.8 kms. Cochin
International Airport is the nearest airport, at a distance of 23.5 km.
Original
Headline: India’s Earliest Mosque
Source: The Live History of India
URL: https://newageislam.com/islamic-history/india’s-earliest-mosque-cheraman-mosque/d/122552