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Historic religious sites
CC BY-SA 4.0

Larabanga Mosque

One of West Africas oldest mosques, built in Sudano-Sahelian mud-and-stick style in Larabanga, Savannah Region of Ghana.

Country:Ghana
Language:English
Published:2025-07-22
Audience:Travellers, students, religious-history readers
The Larabanga Mosque is a mud-and-stick mosque located in the village of Larabanga in the Savannah Region of Ghana. It is one of the oldest mosques in West Africa, with a traditional Sudano-Sahelian architectural style featuring whitewashed mud walls, conical buttresses and wooden support beams projecting through the walls. Local oral tradition attributes its founding to a trader named Ayuba in 1421, although building elements have been restored or replaced many times. The mosque has been listed by the World Monuments Fund as one of the worlds 100 most endangered sites due to weathering and inappropriate past restorations.

Keywords

Larabanga
mosque
Sudano-Sahelian
heritage
World Monuments Fund

Source & licence

Source: Wikipedia
Licence: CC BY-SA 4.0
Wikipedia article. CC BY-SA 4.0 attribution required.
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