The Gazanfer-beg Mosque

The Gazanfer-beg Mosque is named after the mosque of the same name.

The mosque is located in the central city core of Visegrad, and includes the areas of Bikavac, Ban Polje, Mirlovići, Hunište, Dušće, Jonđe, Gornja and Donja Crnča, Jelačići, Crni Vrh, Osojnica, Okolište, Barima, Miloševića, and Gornja and Donja Brštanica.

Before the aggression against Bosnia and Herzegovina, more than 650 Bosniak families lived in the Gazanfer-beg Mosque area. Today, about 30 Bosniak households live in the same area.

The Gazanfer-beg Mosque, which was first built in the first half of the 16th century and about whose endowment there is no relevant historical data, was under state protection during the long period of communist rule.

It was restored in 1990, and demolished to the ground on June 6, 1992.

The renovated mosque was officially opened on July 7, 2012.