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Üç Şerefeli Mosque

Coordinates:41°40′41.1″N26°33′12.7″E / 41.678083°N 26.553528°E /41.678083; 26.553528
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mosque in Edirne, Turkey
Üç Şerefeli Mosque
Üç Şerefeli Camii
Religion
AffiliationIslam
Location
LocationEdirne,Turkey
Üç Şerefeli Mosque is located in Turkey
Üç Şerefeli Mosque
Location of the mosque in Turkey.
Geographic coordinates41°40′41.1″N26°33′12.7″E / 41.678083°N 26.553528°E /41.678083; 26.553528
Architecture
TypeMosque
StyleOttoman architecture
Groundbreaking1438
Completed1447
Specifications
Dome dia. (outer)24 m
Minaret4
Minaret height67 m (tallest)[1]
Materialslimestone

TheÜç Şerefeli Mosque (Turkish:Üç Şerefeli Camii) is a 15th-centuryOttoman mosque inEdirne, Turkey.

History

[edit]

The Üç Şerefeli Mosque was commissioned by Ottoman sultanMurad II (r. 1421–1444, 1446–1451), and built between 1438 and 1447.[2][3][4] It is located in the historical center of the city, close to theSelimiye Mosque andOld Mosque. The name refers to unusualminaret with three balconies (Turkish:üç şerefeli).[5] It was originally called the New Mosque (Yeni Cami) to distinguish it from the city'sOld Mosque (Eski Cami) nearby.[6]

In theŞakaiki NumaniyeTaşköprüzade relates how 'Certain accursed ones of no significance' were burnt to death in front of the mosque byMahmut Paşa who accidentally set fire to his beard in the process.[7][when?]

The mosque was severely damaged by fire in 1732[2] and by an earthquake in 1752[8] but was repaired and partly reconstructed on the order ofMahmud I.[2][8]

Architecture

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Design

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The Üç Şerefeli Mosque is one of the most important mosques of this period ofearly Ottoman architecture.[3][4] It has a very different design from preceding mosques. The floor plan is nearly square but is divided between a rectangular courtyard and a rectangular prayer hall. Thecourtyard has a central fountain and is surrounded by aportico of arches and domes, with a decorated central portal leading into the courtyard from the outside and another one leading from the courtyard into the prayer hall. The prayer hall is centered around a huge dome which covers most of the middle part of the hall, while the sides of the hall are covered by pairs of smaller domes. The central dome, 24 meters in diameter (or 27 meters according toDoğan Kuban[9]), is much larger than any other Ottoman dome built before this.[2] The mosque, which is built in cut stone (particularly Burgaz limestone[2]) and makes use of alternating bands of coloured stone for some of its decorative effects, also marks the decline of the use of alternating brick and stone construction seen in earlier Ottoman buildings.[10] Its architect is not known.[2]

On the outside, this design results in an early example of the "cascade of domes" visual effect seen in later Ottoman mosques, although the overall arrangement here is described bySheila Blair andJonathan Bloom as not yet successful compared to later examples.[3] The mosque has a total of fourminarets, arranged around the four corners of the courtyard. Its southwestern minaret, at over 67 metres (220 ft) tall,[1] was the tallest Ottoman minaret built up to that time and it features three balconies, from which the mosque's name derives.[11]

The two blue and turquoiseunderglaze-painted tile panels in thetympana of the courtyard windows were probably produced by the same group of tilemakers who had decorated theYeşil Mosque (1419–21) inBursa, where the tiles are signed as "the work of the masters of Tabriz" (ʿamal-i ustadan-i Tabriz). The running pattern of the Chinese influenced floral border tiles is similar to those in the smaller and slightly earlierMurad II Mosque in Edirne.[12][13]

  • Elements of the mosque
  • One of the lateral entrances into the mosque
    One of the lateral entrances into the mosque
  • The courtyard
    The courtyard
  • Entrance portal to the prayer hall, with muqarnas stonework
    Entrance portal to the prayer hall, withmuqarnas stonework
  • Tile decoration above one of the courtyard windows
    Tile decoration above one of the courtyard windows
  • Interior of the prayer hall (with mihrab and minbar on the left)
    Interior of the prayer hall (withmihrab andminbar on the left)
  • The main (central) dome
    The main (central) dome
  • One of the two pairs of lateral domes
    One of the two pairs of lateral domes
  • Detail of the mihrab
    Detail of the mihrab
  • The southwestern minaret, featuring three balconies
    The southwesternminaret, featuring three balconies

Influences

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The overall form of the Üç Şerefeli Mosque, with its central-dome prayer hall,arcaded court with fountain, minarets, and tall entrance portals, foreshadowed the features of later Ottoman mosque architecture.[3] It has been described as a "crossroads of Ottoman architecture",[3] marking the culmination of architectural experimentation with different spatial arrangements during the period of theBeyliks and the early Ottomans.[3][4][2] Kuban describes it as the "last stage in Early Ottoman architecture", while the central dome plan and the "modular" character of its design signaled the direction of future Ottoman architecture in Istanbul.[14]

Scholars have tried to suggest various possible sources of influence and inspiration for this design. Blair and Bloom suggest that it is a grander-scale version of theSaruhanid congregational mosque or Ulu Cami (1367) inManisa, a city with which Murad II was familiar.[3]Godfrey Goodwin suggests that all the elements needed for the design of the Üç Şerefeli Mosque were already present in the existing mosques of western Anatolia, such as the Ulu Cami of Manisa and theIsa Bey Mosque ofSelçuk, but that they had simply not been united together in a single design.[15] Kuban suggests that the mosque's spatial design evolved from the importance of the domed space commonly found in front of the mihrab in earlyIslamic architecture, as well as from the influence of earlier single-domed Ottoman mosques.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abGoodwin 1971, p. 100.
  2. ^abcdefgGoodwin 1971, p. 97.
  3. ^abcdefgBlair & Bloom 1995, p. 145.
  4. ^abcdKuban 2010, p. 143.
  5. ^Reifstahl 1937, p. 253.
  6. ^Necipoğlu 2011, p. 79.
  7. ^The Bektashi Order of Dervishes by John Kingsley Birge, 1982 (p 60 - 62)
  8. ^abKuban 2010, p. 145-146.
  9. ^Kuban 2010, p. 145.
  10. ^Kuban 2010, pp. 145, 147.
  11. ^Goodwin 1971, p. 99-100.
  12. ^Carswell 2006, pp. 16, 24–25, fig. 9.
  13. ^Goodwin 1971, pp. 97–98.
  14. ^Kuban 2010, p. 148.
  15. ^Goodwin 1971, pp. 93–96.

Sources

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External links

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Geographic data related toÜç Şerefeli Mosque atOpenStreetMap Edit this at Wikidata

Wikimedia Commons has media related toÜç Şerefeli Mosque.
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