This mosque is even more illustrative of the earliest attempts to combine Mahometan and Hindoo elements. The plain façade is pierced by three small pointed arches, the minarets, chimney-like in form and dimensions, spring out of the roof, and the centre dome is barely raised above the others by a dwarfed and unlighted clerestory. The columns of the interior (Plate 5), reft from various temples, present every variety of rich ornament, and the parapet of the porch (Plate 6) is essentially Hindoo. Hybut Khan was one of the nobles of Ahmed Shah's court, and built, about the time of the foundation of the city, a suburb which still bears his name. This mosque is said to have been reared in the place of a temple which had been desecrated by slaughtering a cow in it.

4. Hybut Khan’s Mosque.
4. Hybut Khan’s Mosque.
5. Hybut Khan’s Mosque. — Hindoo Pillars.
5. Hybut Khan’s Mosque. — Hindoo Pillars.
6. Hybut Khan’s Mosque. — The Porch.
6. Hybut Khan’s Mosque. — The Porch.