Category: Architecture Photography
Post Type:
Photography
Mixed Media: None
Pays
one point
and 2 member cents.
© Copyright 2024. supergold All rights reserved.
supergold has granted FanStory.com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
Posted: May 11, 2014
in istanbul
inside the Blue Mosque
by supergold
Interested in this? Contact The Artist
You can own this. Offers accepted. Information
this is only a small area of the interior; imagine being surounded by all this beauty, as described below;
Sultan Ahmed Mosque, known as the Blue Mosque because of its bluish interior decoration, is the most important mosque of Istanbul standing next to the Byzantine Hippodrome in the old city center. It was built by the Ottoman sultan Ahmed I between 1609 - 1616 facing Hagia Sophia, in order to compete with it. Its architect was Sedefkar Mehmet Aga, a poet and inlayer as well, and a student of the greatest architect Sinan. When Ahmed I died in 1617, he was buried near the mosque and a mausoleum was built over his tomb.
Like all the big and important mosques of that time, also the Sultan Ahmed Mosque was built as a complex including a theological school, an imperial lodge, a kitchen for the poor, bazaar shops to raise money for the maintenance works, and a small library. The mosque has an outer courtyard accessible by several gates, an elevated inner courtyard (named as "late comers courtyard") paved in marble and surrounded by a portico with small domes. In the center of this courtyard there is a fine fountain for ablutions which is dry today. This is the only mosque in Istanbul having 6 minarets; four of these have three balconies on each, and two have two balconies on each, that makes a total of 16 in all, reached by spiral stairs (closed to the public). Muslims are called to prayer from these balconies five times a day by the Muezzin. Top of the minarets and top of the domes are covered with lead.
There are 3 entrances to the mosque, and after entering inside one gets shocked by the floral and geometrical interior decoration and beauty of over 21 thousand Iznik (Nicea) tiles, about 260 windows with stained glass, and calligraphy art of Koranic verses. The 34-meter high central dome is surrounded by smaller domes and semi-domes to distribute the heavy weight of the main dome, and all of them are supported by 4 huge pillars (called "elephant legs"). The marble niche which shows the direction of Mecca, called Mihrab, is aligned with the axis of the mosque. On the right of Mihrab there is a marble Minbar, the pulpit where the Imam goes up and gives his sermon. On the other side of the mosque, to left corner, there is the sultan's lodge where he used to pray in private away from the crowd.
by supergold Interested in this? Contact The Artist
Mixed Media: None
Recognized |
inside the Blue Mosque
by supergold
You need to login or register to write reviews. It's quick! We only ask four questions to new members.
© Copyright 2024. supergold All rights reserved.
supergold has granted FanStory.com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.