Top cultural destinations in Male, Maldives

29/08/2019   964  4.5/5 trong 3 rates 
Top cultural destinations in Male, Maldives
Many come to the Maldives for seclusion on one of the archipelago’s holiday resorts – tropical islands with pristine white beaches. But take a trip into Malé, the bustling capital city of the Maldives, and immerse yourself in the rich culture of the island nation.

 
  • National Museum

    National MuseumNational Museum

    Just a short walk from the National Art Gallery is the National Museum, situated on the western edge of Sultan Park. The original museum building was opened in 1952 by the first president of the Maldives, Mohamed Amin Didi, and occupied the last remaining part of the Sultan’s palace complex. The museum re-opened on 26 July 2010, the Maldives’ Independence Day, in more modern premises built and funded by the Chinese government as a gesture of their friendship with the island nation. The National Museum is home to a varied range of artefacts of the country’s rich cultural history, including a coral stone head of Buddha from the Maldivian island Thoddoo dating back to the 11th century and the Feyli Kolhu, an intricately crafted suit worn by Sultan Mohammed Thakurufaanu and made in the 16th century.

  • National Art Gallery

    National Art GalleryNational Art Gallery

    The intimate National Art Gallery is located in Sultan Park, a leafy oasis in tiny, bustling Malé. Opened as a reaction to the lack of spaces in which to showcase Maldivian arts and culture, the National Art Gallery was founded by the government of the Maldives in 2005. Its debut exhibition, Maldives Contemporary, featured the works of 29 Maldivian painters. The gallery has gone on to acquire an extensive permanent collection of works by local artists, which includes Hassan Ziyad’s ‘Tsunami’, a realistic landscape depicting the destruction wrought by the 2004 tsunami. In 2012, the gallery hosted the first full-scale contemporary art show in the country, Breathing Atolls, a collaboration between artists from the Maldives and Japan, which explored effects of climate change on small island nations like the Maldives.

  • Grand Friday Mosque

    Grand Friday MosqueGrand Friday Mosque

    The Grand Friday Mosque lies within the grounds of the Islamic Centre. The biggest mosque in the Maldives and among the biggest in South Asia, it has capacity for over 5000 people. The simple but stunning modern structure was opened in 1984 by former President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom. Situated just behind Malé’s jetties and Jumhooree Maidhaan Park, the grand golden dome of the mosque and the towering minarets of the Islamic Centre’s entrance are the most striking features of the Malé skyline, and usually the first landmark visitors see when travelling to the city by boat. The interior walls of the Grand Friday Mosque feature exquisite woodcarvings and Arabic calligraphy. Visitors are able to enter the mosque outside of prayer, but cannot take photographs and must wear respectful clothing.

  • Hukuru Miskiiy

    Hukuru MiskiiyHukuru Miskiiy

    Hukuru Miskiiy, or Old Friday Mosque, is the oldest mosque in the Maldives and the predecessor of the Grand Friday Mosque. The mosque, which is made almost entirely out of carved coral stone, was completed in 1658 after two years of construction while Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar held the throne. The interior of Hukuru Miskiiy is renowned for its beautiful lacquer work and woodcarvings. One of its numerous panels, celebrating the introduction of Islam to the islands, dates as far back as the 13th century. A peaceful garden and a 17th century cemetery encircle the mosque, which was placed on the UNESCO World Heritage Site tentative list in 2013.

Source: Internet

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