Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ankara: A 550-Year-Old Monument To A Conqueror Fatih Mosque

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ankara: A 550-Year-Old Monument To A Conqueror Fatih Mosque

    A 550-YEAR-OLD MONUMENT TO A CONQUEROR FATIH MOSQUE

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    March 30 2013

    The architect Sinan-ı Atik (Old Sinan or Azadli Sinan, Freedman Sinan)
    was given instructions to make Fatih's mosque higher and bigger than
    the Haghia Sophia because the sultan wanted to outdo the Byzantine
    church. Not much is known about this architect, although served an
    apprenticeship under an expert in the field

    March 1463 and the first spade full of dirt was turned over for the
    debut imperial mosque in Istanbul, to be built on the fourth and
    highest hill in the old city. Fatih Sultan Mehmed had been busy in
    the nearly 10 years since he had conquered Constantinople. In fact,
    he barely spent 20 days in the city after the conquest before he was
    back in the saddle and on his way to Edirne, which had been the capital
    of the growing Ottoman Empire. He left behind officials instructed
    to rebuild the city and settle the Turks, who were being brought in
    to repopulate Istanbul from Anatolia, in various districts while he
    set forth on campaigns in Serbia and then the Morea.

    Construction was everywhere in Istanbul, including the site of the new
    palace Mehmed wanted built, today's Topkapı Palace. In his monumental
    work on Mehmed the Conqueror, historian Franz Babinger points out that
    the Ottoman ruler was not particularly interested in architecture,
    unlike his father before him and his son afterwards. What put it in
    his head to build a large mosque we'll never know; however, he chose
    the area on which the remains of the second most important Byzantine
    church in the city, the Church of the Holy Apostles, was located.

    Originally built by Emperor Constantine I in the fourth century -
    he was buried there - the church was rebuilt in the sixth century by
    Emperor Justinian I, although some believe it was the latter's wife,
    Theodora, who ordered the reconstruction. It was subsequently ruined
    during the Fourth Crusade when the Latin invaders of the city plundered
    it in the thirteenth century. Enough was left of the church and the
    complex around it to serve as the ecumenical Greek patriarchate between
    1453 and 1456. That moved elsewhere and the remains of the church
    were pulled down and construction of Fatih's mosque began. During
    excavations, some of the sarcophagi of the emperors were uncovered
    and they are now in front of the Istanbul Archaeological Museum.

    The architect Sinan-ı Atik (Old Sinan or Azadli Sinan, Freedman Sinan)
    was given instructions to make Fatih's mosque higher and bigger than
    the Haghia Sophia because the sultan wanted to outdo the Byzantine
    church. Not much is known about this architect although he would have
    served an apprenticeship under an expert in the field. It has been
    suggested that he may have earned his position by converting some of
    the many churches in the city - 300 is the number mentioned but that
    seems rather high when one considers that we're only talking about the
    historic peninsula - into mosques. One legend says he was a Christian,
    possibly Armenian, but if so, he converted later.

    'Mosques of Istanbul'

    Whatever training Sinan may have had, he laid out one of the most
    symmetrical of mosque complexes ever built in Istanbul. It was also
    the first monumental project in the Ottoman imperial architectural
    tradition. Henry Matthews points out in his book, "Mosques of
    Istanbul," that the design of the newly constructed mosque reflected
    both Ottoman and Byzantine principles. The mosque was central to
    the complex, which covered nearly 11,000 square meters (roughly 2.5
    acres). In addition to the mosque, which stands in the middle of a
    large plaza, there were eight medreses (advanced schools that were
    roughly the equivalent of a university), a primary school, a hamam,
    hospital, hospice, a soup kitchen big enough to feed 1,000 people a
    day, a library, caravanserai and the mausolea of Fatih Sultan Mehmed
    and his wife, Gulbahar Hatun. In his book, "The Mosque in Early Ottoman
    Architecture," Aptullah Kuran notes that historical records indicate
    that there were eight more medreses that no longer exist but may have
    been in alignment with the ones that do still exist.

    When this mosque was finished, the story goes that Fatih Sultan
    Mehmed was furious with the architect. The dome was only 26 meters in
    diameter, whereas the one in the Hagia Sophia is just over 30 meters
    in diameter. He is said to have ordered the architect's hand cut off.

    The architect then went to court against the sultan, who lost the case
    and was sentenced to have his hand cut off. When Sinan realized that
    the sultan was going to obey the court order, he forgave him, thus
    saving him from the punishment, and converted to Islam. The sultan then
    gave him presents to make up for his loss. After the architect's death
    in 1471, the same year the mosque was finished, his entire estate was
    donated to a mescit (small mosque), zaviye (sufi lodge) and a school
    that he had built in the Fatih district. His grave is in the section
    of the Sinan-ı Atik Mosque cemetery known as the Kumrulu Mescit. It's
    a nice story but whether it's true or not is for you to decide.

    Mosque badly damaged in an earthquake

    The mosque in the center of the plaza today is not the original one
    built by Sinan-ı Atik and finished in 1471. That one was badly damaged
    in an earthquake in 1509 and restored at the orders of Sultan Bayezid
    II. The mosque subsequently collapsed in the earthquake of 1766 and
    was rebuilt in 1771 by Sultan Mustafa III's architect, Mehmed Tahir
    Agha, on the same foundations. In this second building, which changed
    the original mosque significantly, the dome, which had been very big
    (26 meters in diameter), was reduced in size and supported with four
    half domes that were in turn supported by four columns. The mosque
    now took on a rather Baroque appearance in the interior, since that
    was the popular style of the time. The tombs belonging to Fatih Sultan
    Mehmed and his wife were also restored following the earthquake, with
    the former decorated in Baroque style and the latter in a plainer
    style that probably was truer to its original appearance. There were
    three gates to the courtyard, one on the kible side and two on the
    other side. The stone conic caps on the minarets were made in the
    nineteenth century. The only parts of the first mosque that exist
    today are the three walls of the courtyard, the mihrab, the fountain,
    the crown gate and the minarets up to the first balcony.

    While the Fatih Mosque is still very impressive today, Suleymaniye
    Mosque and other mosques built by the later Koca Mimar Sinan overshadow
    it. Still, 550 years is certainly a respectable amount of time to be
    in use.

    March/30/2013

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/a-550-year-old-monument-to-a-conqueror-fatih-mosque.aspx?pageID=238&nID=43905&NewsCatID=438

Working...
X