Mosques in Istanbul

Sultanahmet District
| Facing St.
Sophia stands the supremely elegant, six-minaret, imperial Sultan Ahmet
Mosque. Built between 1609 and 1616 by the architect Mehmet, the bulding
is more familiarly known as the Blue Mosque necause its interior gleams
with a magnificent paneiring of blue and white Iznik tiles. During the
tourist season an evening light and sound show both entertains and informs. The cascading domes and four slender minarets of Suleymaniye Mosque dominate the skyline on the Golden Horn's west bank. Considered the most beautiful of all imperial mosques in istanbul, it was built between 1550 and 1557 by Sinan, the renowned architect of the Ottoman golden age. On the crest of a hill, the building is conspicuous for its great size, wh1ch the four minarets that rise from each corner of the courtyard emphasize. Inside, the mihrab (prayer niche) and the mimber (pulpit) are of finely carved white marble; fine stained glass windows color the incoming streams of light. It was in the gardens of this complex that Suleyman and his wife Hurrem Surtan had their mausolea built. and near here also that Sinan built his own tomb.the mosque complex also includes four medrese, or theoiogical schools, a school of medicine, a caravanserai, a Turkish bath, and a kitchen and hospice for the poor.
|
Sokollu Mosque |
Built between 1597
and 1663. the Yeni (New) Mosque hovers over the harbor at Eminonu greeting
the incoming ferryboats and welcoming tourists to the old city. Today its
graceful domes and arches shelter hundreds of pigeons who make this area
their home. Marvellous lznik tiles decorate the sultan's balcony. The 16th century Sokollu Mehmet Pasa Mosque built in an awkwardly shaped plot on a steeply sloping hill near Sultanahmet is one of the most beautiful examples of classical Turkish architecture and a masterpiece of the architect Sinan. Inside, breathtaking blues, greens, purples and reds color the elegant designs of the lznik tiles. Walls of glass fill the four immense arches that support the central dome at the Mihrimah Sultan Mosque inside the Edirne gate of the old city walls. One hundred and sixty-one windows illuminate this mosque, built by Sinan for Mihrimah Sultan, the daughter of Suleyman the Magnificent, in 1555. |



