Jamia Karimia Mosque (Urdu: جامعہ کریمیہ مسجد), also known as the Neevin Mosque, or Neevin Masjid (), is a 15th-century mosque built during the Lodi dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate. It is located in the ancient Walled City of Lahore, in Pakistan's Punjab province. It is notable for its foundation 25 feet below street level. The mosque is further noted for being one of Lahore's few remaining pre-Mughal Empire monuments.
Unlike the Badshahi Masjid, Sunehri Mosque, and Mariyam Zamani Mosque which were desecrated under Sikh rule,Note: Badshahi was used as horse stables under Sikh rule: and then damaged by Maharaja Ranjit Singh's son, Sher Singh: Note: Sikh administrators converted the Mariyam Zamani Mosque into a gunpowder factory: Note: Sunehri Mosque was converted into a Gurudwara after neighbouring Sikh residents complained that the Muslim call to prayer was disturbing them. Neevin Mosque remained untouched. It also was not greatly altered in appearance under Sikh and British rule, although its minarets had to be rebuilt following an earthquake in the early 1900s.
The mosque's prayer hall can accommodate approximately 100 worshippers, and is divided into three roughly equally-sized sections. Each section features a short dome typical of the Lodi-style, as well as an archway that opens onto the mosque's central courtyard.
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