BursaPrayer Times in Bursa, Bolu
Prayer Times in Bursa, Bolu
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- Jafari — Ithna Ashari
- University of Islamic Sciences, Karachi
- Islamic Society of North America
- Muslim World League
- Umm al-Qura, Makkah
- Egyptian General Authority of Survey
- Custom
- University of Tehran — Institute of Geophysics
- Algerian Ministry of Religious Affairs
- Gulf 90 Minutes Fixed Isha
- Egyptian General Authority of Survey (Bis)
- UOIF — France
- Sistem Informasi Hisab Rukyat Indonesia
- Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı, Turkey
- Germany Custom
- Russia Custom
- Kuwait Ministry of Awqaf
- Tunisian Ministry of Religious Affairs
- London Unified Prayer Times
- Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura
- World Islamic Mission (Oslo)
- Moonsighting Committee Worldwide
- Jordan Ministry of Awqaf
- Jabatan Kemajuan Islam Malaysia
- Kementerian Agama Republik Indonesia
- Moroccan Ministry of Habous and Islamic Affairs
- Dubai (experimental per Aladhan)
- Comunidade Islâmica de Lisboa
- Qatar (Ministry of Awqaf)
Supplementary times
Accurate Bursa Prayer Times, Bolu Turkey
Get precise prayer times in Bursa, Bolu, Turkey, calculated using the Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı, Turkey method with Standard (Shafi, Hanbali, Maliki) juristic calculation for Asr. Today's Fajr begins at 04:11 and Isha at 21:29. The fasting duration from Fajr to Maghrib is 15 hours 40 minutes.
Timezone & Coordinates
Bursa is located in the Europe/Istanbul timezone (UTC +03:00), at latitude 40.5833 and longitude 30.9000. eSalah automatically adjusts for Daylight Saving Time.
Bursa was the first major Ottoman capital, captured by Orhan Gazi in 1326, and served as the imperial seat through the fourteenth century before the move to Edirne and ultimately Istanbul. It is the burial place of the early Ottoman sultans Osman, Orhan, Murad I, and Bayezid I, and the site of some of the formative monuments of Ottoman Islamic architecture: the Ulu Cami (Grand Mosque) of 1399 with its forest of twenty domed bays and central fountain, the Yeşil Cami (Green Mosque) and Yeşil Türbe of 1419-1424 with their tile-revetted interiors, and the Hüdavendigar and Muradiye complexes that combined mosque, madrasa, hospice, and tomb in the early kulliye form. Bursa's Friday prayer at the Ulu Cami remains one of the largest in northwestern Anatolia, and the city retains a strong tradition of devotional life, hammam culture, and Islamic crafts inherited from its imperial centuries.