Himmeti Zade Nesuh-beg, or simply Nesuh Bey (Bosnian: Nesuh-beg) is the name given by historian Muvekit for the founder of one of the first mosques in the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina, built in Vrhbosna (part of modern Sarajevo) in 1452[1] near the Latin bridge.[2]
Nesuh-beg has been incorrectly attributed as the second sanjak-bey of Bosnia, in fact no individual named Nesuh-beg was a governor in Bosnia; the first sanjak-bey of Bosnia was Mehmed-beg Minetović (1463 — 1464), who was the real founder of the mosque.[3] The mosque does not exist today.
References
- ↑ Omer Ibrahimagić (1996). Bosanska srednjovjekovna država i suvremenost: zbornik radova. Fakultet Političkih Nauka. p. 139. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
Prema tvrdnji Muvekita u Vrhbosni je još 1452 godine, Nesuh beg sagradio svoju džamiju.
- ↑ Anali Gazi Husrev-begove biblioteke, Volumes 25-26. p. 198.
Himmeti Zade Nesuh-beg (843/1439-40.) U Sarajevu je podigao česmu, džamiju sa kamenom munarom, mekteb i česme u blizini Latinske ćuprije. O gradnji džamije govori se u sačuvanoj vakufnami10 Kenan Ali-age koji je uz spomenutu ...
- ↑ Esma Smailbegović. Narodna predaja o Sarajevu. p. 121.
različitim istorijskim ličnostima.48 U Bosni takođe nikada nije namjesnikovao neki Nesuh-beg, već je džamiju koju mu predaja pripisuje podigao prvi bosanski upravitelj sa titulom san- džak-bega, Mehmed-beg Minetović (1463 — 1464)49.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.