Construction in Damascus According to
Fatimid tradition, the head of Husayn had been secretly moved by the
Abbasids from its original burial site at the
Great Mosque of Damascus. In the year 985, the 15th Fatimid Caliph,
Abu Mansoor Nizar al-Aziz Billah, traced the site of his great-grandfather's head through the office of a contemporary in
Baghdad. It was "rediscovered" in 1091, a couple of years after a campaign by
grand vizier Badr al-Jamali to reestablish Fatimid control over
Palestine under Caliph
al-Mustansir Billah. Upon the discovery, he ordered the construction of a new
Friday mosque and
mashhad (memorial shrine) on the site. A magnificent minbar was also built, today in Hebron and known as the
Minbar of the Ibrahimi Mosque. The mausoleum was described by
Mohammed al-Abdari al-Hihi as the most magnificent building in Ashkelon.
Transfer of the minbar to Hebron map (1870s) showing
al-Jura (middle), the ruins of ancient Ashkelon (today Tel Ashkelon, left), and the
Mesh-hed Sidna el Husein (right) In 1187
Salah ad-Din (Saladin) succeeded in
recapturing Jerusalem from
Crusaders and securing Muslim (
Ayyubid) control over most of the region. However, he judged that Ashkelon was too vulnerable to a Crusader counterattack and he worried about its potential use as an enemy
bridgehead against the newly recaptured Jerusalem. He therefore decided to demolish the city in 1191 but transferred the Fatimid minbar of al-Husayn's now-empty mashhad to the
Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron, which was also a holy site and was situated at a safer distance from the Crusader threat. The minbar has remained there until the present day.
British Mandate period During the
British Mandate period it was described as a "large
maqam on top of a hill" with no tomb but a fragment of a pillar showing the place where the head had been buried. File:Muslim Celebrations at Wady Nemil and Al Husayn Shrine in Ashkelon.jpg|April 1943, with the shrine in the background. File:Moslem (i.e., Muslim) celebrations at Mejdal (Wady Nemill and Sey'd Hussein Shrine at Ascalon) and at Gaza (el Muntar) April 20th, 21st and 22nd 1943 LOC matpc.21707.jpg|Celebrations in April 1943, with
Aref al-Aref and
Julian Asquith, 2nd Earl of Oxford and Asquith visiting. File:Moslem (i.e., Muslim) celebrations at Mejdal (Wady Nemill and Sey'd Hussein Shrine at Ascalon) and at Gaza (el Muntar) April 20th, 21st and 22nd 1943. Mounted villagers at the shrine who LOC matpc.21689.tif|April 1943 File:Moslem (i.e., Muslim) celebrations at Mejdal (Wady Nemill and Sey'd Hussein Shrine at Ascalon) and at Gaza (el Muntar) April 20th, 21st and 22nd 1943. Mounted villagers at the shrine who LOC matpc.21690.tif|April 1943 File:Moslem (i.e., Muslim) celebrations at Mejdal (Wady Nemill and Sey'd Hussein Shrine at Ascalon) and at Gaza (el Muntar) April 20th, 21st and 22nd 1943. The procession in open courtyard of LOC matpc.21685.tif|April 1943 File:Moslem (i.e., Muslim) celebrations at Mejdal (Wady Nemill and Sey'd Hussein Shrine at Ascalon) and at Gaza (el Muntar) April 20th, 21st and 22nd 1943. The procession in open courtyard of LOC matpc.21686.jpg|April 1943 File:Moslem (i.e., Muslim) celebrations at Mejdal (Wady Nemill and Sey'd Hussein Shrine at Ascalon) and at Gaza (el Muntar) April 20th, 21st and 22nd 1943. The Shrine of Seyid Hussein from S.E. LOC matpc.21688.tif|April 1943 ==Destruction in 1950==