| Muradiye Mosque | |
|---|---|
Muradiye Camii | |
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Islam |
| Location | |
| Location | Edirne, Turkey |
| Geographic coordinates | 41°40′56.5″N26°33′53.3″E / 41.682361°N 26.564806°E /41.682361; 26.564806 |
| Architecture | |
| Style | Ottoman |
| Completed | 1435-36 |
| Minaret | 1 |
TheMuradiye Mosque (Turkish:Muradiye Camii) is a 15th-centuryOttomanmosque inEdirne, Turkey. The building is noted for the tiles that decorate themihrab and the walls of the prayer hall.
The small mosque was commissioned byMurad II and completed in 1435-6.[a] It originally formed part of aMevlevidervish complex but was later converted into a mosque. The complex included a soup kitchen (imaret) and an elementary school (mekteb) but these buildings have not survived.[3]The mosque has a T-shaped plan with a five bay portico and an entrance hall with a domed room on either side. The prayer hall is separated from the entrance hall by a solid arch. The building has been heavily repaired after suffering earthquake damage. The single stone minaret has been rebuilt several times; the present structure dates from 1957.[3]
The prayer hall has a tiled frieze around three walls and a large tiledmihrab set between two windows. The frieze is formed of eight rows of blue-and-white hexagonal tiles that are set on their points. Some of the tiles were stolen in 2001 and the gaps have been filled with plaster.[4] The tiles have a creamy whitefritware body andcobalt blue designs under a clear transparent glaze.[5] They measure 22.5 cm (8.9 in) across.[6] The very varied designs are arranged haphazardly. Most show the influence of Chineseblue-and-white porcelain produced in the early 14th century during theYuan dynasty.[7] Before the theft in 2001 there were 479 tiles with 53 different designs. Of these, 15 designs occurred only once while the most common design occurred 54 times.[6] Filling the gaps between the hexagonal tiles are plain turquoise glazed triangles. The borders of the frieze are formed by a row of rectangular tiles. Along the top of the frieze are a series of large blue-and-white mouldedpalmette tiles.[6]

The exceptionally large rectangularmihrab is formed of moulded polychrome tiles.[b] A tiled inscription on the outercavetto moulding runs up one side, across the top and down the other side of themihrab. Thecuerda seca cavetto tiles have raised whitenaskh characters which contrast with the cobalt blue background. Running through the shafts of thenaskh characters is a second inscription in yellowKufic characters.[8] Some of the text on the left side is simply a mirror image of that on the right. The inscriptions include text from theQuran (3:32 - 3:35) and a dedication toSultan Murad II who ruled between 1421-1444 and again from 1446-1451.[2]
Thespandrels of the niche consist of elaboratecuerda sec tiles that are decorated with yellow, apple green, turquoise, mauve and cobalt blue glazes. In contrast, the stalactite vault of the niche is formed by white moulded tiles with an underglaze floral decoration in cobalt blue. Some of the floralchinoiserie designs on these tiles repeat those used on the hexagonal blue-and-white tiles of the frieze.[9][7]
The style of the polychromecuerda seca tilework of themihrab is strikingly similar to that of themihrab in theYeşil Mosque (built 1419-21) inBursa and it is therefore considered likely that the tiles were produced by the same team of craftsmen. In Bursa the craftsmen signed themihrab as "the work of the masters of Tabriz".[10][11] After completing the tiles of the Muradiye mosque it is believed that the "Masters of Tabriz" also produced theunderglaze paintedlunette panels of theÜç Şerefeli Mosque (completed in 1447) in Edirne. The blue-and-white hexagonal tiles of the Muradiye Mosque are the earliest example of underglaze painted tiles produced in Ottoman Turkey. They are also the first example of tiles with a frit body produced under the Ottomans.[5]
Although the walls of the mosque above the tiled frieze are now whitewashed, some of the original painted wall-decoration has been preserved. From the surviving patches of paintwork it is evident that at some point the walls were redecorated with a different design. Strikingly, the tilework appears to have been placed on the walls after the second layer of wall-painting had been applied. This can be clearly seen where the painting runs behind the blue-and-white palmette tiles of the frieze.[c] The art historian John Carswell has argued that although the date of 1435-6 above the entrance fits with the dedication to Murad II on themihrab, it is probable that the tiles were transferred to the mosque from an imperial building. As supporting evidence he points to the lack of a coherent pattern to the arrangement of hexagonal tiles and the mixing of the two different styles of rectangular border tiles. Themihrab is also unusually large for the size of the building. Carswell suggests that it is likely that the tiles were original made for a building in the palace complex on the plain below.[14] In 1450 Murad II built a palace complex, theSaray-ı Cedid-i Amire (New Imperial Palace), to the north of the city on an island in the riverTunca. The palace was expanded by successive sultans and in the 17th century accommodated between six and ten thousand people. By the early 19th century much of the palace was in ruinous state and almost nothing now survives.[15]
Geographic data related toMuradiye Mosque, Edirne atOpenStreetMap ![]()