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Tomb of Turhan Sultan

Coordinates:41°00′58.2″N28°58′18.8″E / 41.016167°N 28.971889°E /41.016167; 28.971889
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mausoleum of 5 Ottoman Sultans, at Fatih, İstanbul, Turkey
Entrance to the Tomb of Turhan Sultan

TheTomb of Turhan Sultan (Turkish:Turhan Sultan Türbesi) is themausoleum of fiveOttoman sultans, located atFatih inIstanbul, Turkey. It was built in 1663 forTurhan Sultan, firstHaseki of SultanIbrahim and mother of SultanMehmed IV.

Overview

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The tomb is situated on the corner of Bankacılar St. and Yeni Cami St. inEminönü quarter of Fatih in Istanbul.[1] It was built in 1663 forTurhan Sultan (c. 1627–1683). She was the firstHaseki Sultan ofSultan Ibrahim (reigned 1640–1648) and the mother andValide Sultan of SultanMehmed IV (r. 1648–1687). The tomb was built as part of theNew Mosque complex, of which construction was started in 1598 bySafiye Sultan (c. 1550 – c. 1619), the Haseki of SultanMurad III (r. 1574–1595), the Valide Sultan of SultanMehmed III (r. 1595–1603) as well as the grandmother of SultansAhmed I (r. 1603–1617) andMustafa I (r. 1617–1618, 1622–1623), and completed by Turhan Hatice Sultan in 1665. The tomb contains 44 graves in total. In addition to Turhan Sultan, five sultans, Mehmed IV,Mustafa II (r. 1695–1703),Ahmed III (r. 1703–1730),Mahmud I (r. 1730–1754) andOsman III (r. 1754–1757), rest in the tomb. Other notables areŞehzades andSultanas, namely princes, princesses, andKadın (consorts) as relatives of the sultans.[2]

Architecture

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The tomb was built by court architect Mustafa Agha. It was designed in square-plan having a porch of the size 15 m × 15 m (49 ft × 49 ft) in front of its entrance gate. The porch's dome is carried bypendant vaults andarched vaults built with interchangeably white and red stones. The porch is decorated with tiles and carvings. The rectangular panels on the porch walls contain each a red and pale greenrosette on white ground. The panels have decorative fillings on the corners. On the right side of the gate, an inscription reads literally "Oh! myAllah, who opens the doors, open auspicial doors to us".[2]

Windows in two rows around the building, with exception on the porch side, bring light inside the tomb. The lower row windows are rectangular and are barred while the upper row windows have pointed-arch design. The tomb's interior is decorated withIznik tiles and carvings. The original decorations on the walls and at the dome interior were recovered during the restoration works in 1959. In the 19th and 20th centuries, some carvings were added as copies of the original ones in the medallions and rosettes. A tile belt surrounding the interior contains the inscription of the 1st-30thāyāt of theQuranicsurahAl-Mulk. An inscription in two lines ofTaʿlīq script was attached into the western wall of the tomb during the burial of Sultan Mehmed IV. Sultan Ahmed III built a library on the right side of the porch. In later years, two more tombs, named "Havatin" and "Cedid Havatin", were built next to the tomb.[2]

References

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  1. ^"İstanbul Türbeler Müzesi Müdürlüğüme BağlıBulunan Türbelerin Lstesi" (in Turkish). Kültür Varlıkları ve Müzeler Genel Müdürlüğü. Retrieved19 July 2019.
  2. ^abc"Eminönü Hatice Turhan Sultan Türbesi" (in Turkish). TAS stanbul. Archived from the original on June 12, 2016. Retrieved19 July 2019.

41°00′58.2″N28°58′18.8″E / 41.016167°N 28.971889°E /41.016167; 28.971889

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