Mosque of Mohammed Ali: Difference between revisions

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(New page: thumb|[[Luigi's photograph of the '''Mosque of Mohammed Ali'''.]] The '''Mosque of Mohammed Ali''' is a mosque in...)
 
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[[Image:MosqueofMohammedAli_MIM.png|thumb|[[Luigi]]'s photograph of the '''Mosque of Mohammed Ali'''.]]
[[Image:MosqueofMohammedAli_MIM.png|thumb|[[Luigi]]'s photograph of the '''Mosque of Mohammed Ali'''.]]
The '''[[Wikipedia:Mosque of Muhammad Ali|Mosque of Mohammed Ali]]''' is a mosque in [[Cairo]], [[Egypt]]. [[Luigi]] visited it during the events of the game ''[[Mario is Missing!]]''. A '''Gingerbread Clock''' was stolen from the mosque, and the plumber had to return it. He was rewarded a prize of 1,400 [[dollar]]s.
The '''[[Wikipedia:Mosque of Muhammad Ali|Mosque of Mohammed Ali]]''' is a mosque in [[Cairo]], [[Egypt]]. [[Luigi]] visited it during the events of the game ''[[Mario is Missing!]]''. A '''Gingerbread Clock''' was stolen from the mosque, and the plumber had to return it. He was rewarded a prize of 1,400 [[bill|dollar]]s.


==Pamphlet Information from ''Mario is Missing!''==
==Pamphlet Information from ''Mario is Missing!''==

Revision as of 14:47, May 10, 2011

Luigi's photograph of the Mosque of Mohammed Ali
Luigi's photograph of the Mosque of Mohammed Ali.

The Mosque of Mohammed Ali is a mosque in Cairo, Egypt. Luigi visited it during the events of the game Mario is Missing!. A Gingerbread Clock was stolen from the mosque, and the plumber had to return it. He was rewarded a prize of 1,400 dollars.

Pamphlet Information from Mario is Missing!

The Mohammed Ali Mosque was built by a sultan in 1430 [sic] using the Turkish style of the Ottoman Empire. Its nickname, The Alabaster Mosque, comes from the valuable white stone that covers the temple's facade. The clock tower on the courtyard's western side was a gift to the sultan by King Louis Philip of France in return for the stone obelisk, which now stands in front of France's Place de la Concorde. Egyptian sultans lived in the mosque until 1517. It is now used only for prayer.

Trivia

  • Contrary to the pamphlet information, the mosque was built in 1830 rather than 1430.