
Gazi Husrev-beg Mosque
Meilleur moment pour visiter
Visit early morning or late afternoon to avoid tour groups and enjoy warm light on the courtyard tiles. Avoid Friday midday when worship services limit visitor access.
Conseils budget
Mosque access for worshippers is free; non-Muslim visitors usually pay a small entrance donation, so carry a few Bosnian marks or euros in cash. Sarajevo tourist passes rarely include mosque entry, so buy tickets on site or join an inexpensive local walking tour to save.
Recommandé pour
History buffs, Architecture lovers, Culture seekers, Photography enthusiasts
Planifiez votre visite
30-45 min
À propos
Faits rapides: Sunlight pours through colored windows onto cool marble, and the carved wooden minbar and sweeping dome make the interior feel like a hushed, sculptural orchestra. More than a place of worship, the complex once hosted a lively market and still houses a library of rare Ottoman manuscripts, surprising visitors who expect only a prayer hall.
Points forts: Built in 1531 as an Ottoman endowment, the courtyard still smells of lemon soap and beeswax in the mornings because the original wooden shutters and brass lamps are oiled by hand every week. A local story says a 19th-century warden named Hasan slipped a folded note and a coin into one brass lamp for safekeeping, and guides will quietly point out the lamp if you ask, saying you can sometimes hear the coin rattle when the floor warms in the sun.
Conseils d'initiés
- Dress modestly: shoulders and knees should be covered, and women may be asked to wear a headscarf so carry a lightweight scarf.
- Remove shoes at the entrance and use the provided shelves or a bag to keep them with you.
- Photograph the courtyard façade and the mihrab from the doorway, avoid flash inside, and always ask permission before taking pictures of worshippers.
- Avoid Friday noon prayers for quiet visits, and plan to arrive 15 minutes before opening to skip small tour groups.
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Avez-vous entendu parler des visites à pied gratuites ?
Après avoir voyagé dans plus de 30 pays, il y a une chose que j'aurais aimé qu'on me dise dès le premier jour, et cela a complètement changé ma façon de découvrir les nouvelles villes.
Les visites à pied gratuites. Oui, vraiment gratuites. Pas besoin de carte de crédit. Pas de piège.
Guide local, 2-3 heures
Sites majeurs, trésors cachés, histoires locales
100% basé sur les pourboires
Les guides ne gagnent que des pourboires, ils donnent donc le meilleur d'eux-mêmes
Vous donnez le pourboire que vous jugez juste
À la fin, donnez simplement le pourboire que vous jugez juste
J'ai fait ces visites dans des dizaines de villes et elles ont été le point fort de presque tous mes voyages. Si vous visitez Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, faites-le le premier jour. Vous me remercierez plus tard.




