Takyeh Moaven-ol-Molk
| Takyeh Moaven-ol-olk  تکیه معاونالملک  | |
|---|---|
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| Location | Kermanshah, Iran | 
| Coordinates | 34°18′49″N 47°04′13″E / 34.313551°N 47.070376°E | 
| Built | 1903 | 
| Architect | Hossein naghash e tehrani Seyed abulqsem mani Hossein khan Moein al-roaya  | 
| Architectural style(s) | Persian architecture | 
![]() Location in Iran  | |
Takyeh Moaven-ol-Molk (Persian:تکیه معاون الملک) is a takyeh and historic building in Kermanshah, Iran. It was built during the Qajar era as a Shia mourning site. On 1 December 1975 Takyeh Moaven-ol-Molk was recognized as National monument of Iran. During the Persian Constitutional Revolution, the building suffered significant damage. Later it was renovated.[1]
Description
The building, which lies six metres lower than ground level, has three parts: Hussainiya, Zaeynabiya and Abbasiya. Museum of Anthropology of Kermanshah, and Clothes and Jewelry Museum of Kermanshah are located in Abbasiya.[2]
The Hossainieh walls are covered and adorned with beautiful multi colored tiles, depicting a wild gamut of images, Islamic era Ghazi (warrior), Battle of Karbala and Iranian shahs, Shahnameh kings, European villages, local notables in 19th-century costumes alongside pre-Islamic motifs including Achaemenid dynasty as well as Persepolis.[3]
The architect was Asqar Memarbashi whose name has been written in an inscription on the building’s façade.
Gallery
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 -  			Abbasiya
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According to indigenous people's beliefs this heritage is sanctificated by the 8th Shia Imam -  			
Ancient history of Iran -  			

 -  			Story of Joseph
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Story of Soleiman ibn sor'al-khaza'i -  			
Dome 
References
- ^ "Tekyeh Moaven al-Molk". Retrieved 19 July 2025.
 - ^ >"Beautiful Tiling in Iran's Moaven-ul-Molk Tekyeh". Retrieved 19 July 2025.
 - ^ "Tekyeh Moaven al-molk of Kermanshah". Retrieved 19 July 2025.
 


