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17 Dhu al-Hijjah 1447 AH
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Basra

Prayer Times in Basra, Al Basrah

June 3, 202617 Dhu al-Hijjah, 1447 AH
Upcoming Prayer
Fajr
03:23 AM
00:56:09
Sunrise
04:47 AM
Dhuhr
11:47 AM
Asr
03:24 PM
Maghrib
06:47 PM
Isha
08:05 PM

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Preview times under a different calculation method. The default for Iraq is Egyptian General Authority of Survey (Bis).

Supplementary times

Imsak
03:13
Midnight
23:47
Qiyam al-Layl
01:27
Last third of night
Qibla
Qibla bearing: 220.2° from North (roughly SW). 1,286 km to Makkah.

Accurate Basra Prayer Times, Al Basrah Iraq

Get precise prayer times in Basra, Al Basrah, Iraq, calculated using the Russia Custom method with Standard (Shafi, Hanbali, Maliki) juristic calculation for Asr. Today's Fajr begins at 03:23 and Isha at 20:05. The fasting duration from Fajr to Maghrib is 15 hours 24 minutes.

Timezone & Coordinates

Basra is located in the Asia/Baghdad timezone (UTC +03:00), at latitude 30.4942 and longitude 47.8192. eSalah automatically adjusts for Daylight Saving Time.

🌖 Moon tonight in Basra

Full details →
Phase
Waning gibbous (89% illuminated)
Sunrise
04:46 AM
Sunset
06:47 PM
Moonrise
09:35 PM
Moonset
06:51 AM
Moonset lag after sunset −11 h 55 min

The moon sets before the sun tonight — no crescent will be visible in the western sky after sunset.

Moon age
18.1 days
Sun-moon elongation
140.5°

Basra was founded as a garrison town in 636 CE on the Shatt al-Arab and grew into one of the great early Islamic cities — a port linking the Persian Gulf to the Indian Ocean and a center of the rationalist Mu'tazila theological school, the early Sufi tradition of Hasan al-Basri, and Arabic philology under figures such as al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi, who composed the first Arabic dictionary. Basra was also the home of the female mystic Rabi'a al-Adawiyya, an early articulator of disinterested love of God whose example shaped subsequent Sufi devotional vocabulary across the Muslim world. The city's Imam Ali Mosque and the broader fabric of historic mosques and shrines along its older quarters preserve fragments of this layered history despite the heavy damage of the twentieth-century wars. Today Basra remains a predominantly Shia city with a long Sunni and Christian presence, and its mosques host active congregations and Muharram processions.