Nuruosmaniye Mosque

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Nuruosmaniye Mosque
Nuruosmaniye Mosque Mars 2013.jpg
Basic information
Location Istanbul, Turkey
Geographic coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Affiliation Islam
Architectural description
Architect(s) Mustafa Ağa, Simon Kalfa
Architectural type Mosque
Architectural style Ottoman Baroque architecture
Groundbreaking 1749
Completed 1755
Specifications
Height (max) 43.50 m [1]
Dome dia. (inner) 25 m [2]
Minaret(s) 2
Minaret height 60 m?

The Nuruosmaniye Mosque (Turkish: Nuruosmaniye Camii) is an Ottoman mosque located in the Çemberlitaş neighbourhood of Fatih district in Istanbul, Turkey.

Architecture

It is considered one of the finest examples of mosques in Ottoman Baroque style. It was built by architects Mustafa Ağa and a Greek minority architect, Simeon Kalfa on one of the seven hills of Istanbul. It was commissioned from the order of Sultan Mahmut I beginning in 1748 and completed by his brother and successor Sultan Osman III in 1755. The architects adopted Baroque architectural elements, the mosque is also distinctive with the absence of an ablution fountain (Turkish: şadırvan). It was named Nuruosmaniye Mosque, meaning "The light of Osman", after Osman III, but also because of its many windows which lets a lot of light inside the mosque's hall.[1] Nuruosmaniye Mosque is located near the entrance to the Kapalıçarşı (Grand Bazaar), Column of Constantine and the historical Gazi Atik Ali Pasha Mosque.

The prayer hall is covered by a single dome 25 m in diameter, it has two minarets with two balconies. The colonnaded portico has a half circle plan, unique for Ottoman mosques. The height of the dome is 43,50 m from the floor level. In the backgarden there is a Türbe (tomb). The mosque is part of a larger complex (Külliye) consisting of a sebil (fountain), medrese, (Islamic school) consisting of 20 domed rooms and one large classroom (dershane), imaret, and the library, which today is part of the Süleymaniye library and contains personal collections of Mahmud I and Osman III with a total of 7,600 volumes of whom 5052 are manuscripts.

Gallery

See also

References

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External links

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