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#chehelakhtaran #jamkaran #ekstravelvlogs The Chehel Akhtaran Mosque is a Shi'ite Friday mosque, part of the Chehel Akhtaran Complex, located in the county of Qom, in the province of Qom, Iran. The mosque was built in the 20th century, during the Qajar era. The mosque was added to the Iran National Heritage List on 6 September 2004, administered by the Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organization of Iran. The Chehel Akhtaran Complex, added to the Iran National Heritage List on 29 December 1973, includes the mosque and three Imamzadehs in honor of Chehel Akhtaran, Musa al-Mubarqa, and Zeid respectively. The Jamkaran Mosque also known as Saheb al-Zaman Mosque, is a Shia mosque and shrine located in the village of Jamkaran, on the outskirts of the city of Qom, in the province of Qom, Iran. Twelver belief holds that the twelfth Shia Imam—the promised Mahdi—once appeared and offered prayers at Jamkaran. Many Shia Muslims go to this mosque on Wednesday nights and the night of the middle of Sha'ban - the birthday of Mahdi - and perform its rituals. The mosque has a history of over a thousand years, and receives more than 15 million pilgrims annually. The Fatima Masumeh Shrine is the mausoleum of Fatima bint Musa, located in Qom, Iran. Qom is considered one of the holiest cities in Shia Islam along with Najaf, Karbala, Mashhad, Samarra, Kadhimiya, and Kufa. Fatima bint Musa was the sister of the eighth Imam Ali al-Rida, and the daughter of the seventh Imam Musa al-Kazim. In Shia Islam, women are often revered as saints if they are close relatives to one of the Twelver Imams. Fatima Masumeh is therefore honored as a saint, and her shrine is considered one of the most significant shrines in Shia Islam. Every year, millions of Shia Muslims travel to Qom to honor Fatima Masumeh and seek her intercession with God. Also buried within the shrine are three daughters of the ninth Imam Muhammad al-Taqi, Persian poet Parvin Etesami, six members of the Safavid dynasty, eleven members of the Qajar dynasty, and many other notable political figures, scholars, and clerics.[1] The shrine has attracted dozens of seminaries and religious schools.