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Ottoman architecture

Ottoman architecture is an architectural style or tradition that developed under the Ottoman Empire over a long period,[1] undergoing some significant changes during its history.[2] It first emerged in northwestern Anatolia in the late 13th century[3] and developed from earlier Seljuk Turkish architecture, with influences from Byzantine and Iranian architecture along with other architectural traditions in the Middle East.[4] Early Ottoman architecture experimented with multiple building types over the course of the 13th to 15th centuries, progressively evolving into the classical Ottoman style of the 16th and 17th centuries. This style was a mixture of native Turkish tradition and influences from the Hagia Sophia, resulting in monumental mosque buildings focused around a high central dome with a varying number of semi-domes.[5][6][7] The most important architect of the classical period is Mimar Sinan, whose major works include the Şehzade Mosque, Süleymaniye Mosque, and Selimiye Mosque.[7][8] The second half of the 16th century also saw the apogee of certain decorative arts, most notably in the use of Iznik tiles.[9]

Blue Mosque in Istanbul, an example of the classical style of Ottoman architecture, showing Byzantine influence.

Beginning in the 18th century, Ottoman architecture was opened to external influences, particularly Baroque architecture in Western Europe. Changes appeared during the style of the Tulip Period, followed by the emergence of the Ottoman Baroque style in the 1740s.[10][11] The Nuruosmaniye Mosque is one of the most important examples of this period.[12][13] The 19th century saw more influences imported from Western Europe, brought in by architects such as those from the Balyan family.[14] Empire style and Neoclassical motifs were introduced and a trend towards eclecticism was evident in many types of buildings, such as the Dolmabaçe Palace.[15] The last decades of the Ottoman Empire saw the development of a new architectural style called neo-Ottoman or Ottoman revivalism, also known as the First National Architectural Movement, by architects such as Mimar Kemaleddin and Vedat Tek.[16][14]

Ottoman dynastic patronage was concentrated in the historic capitals of Bursa, Edirne, and Istanbul (Constantinople), as well as in several other important administrative centers such as Amasya and Manisa. It was in these centers that most important developments in Ottoman architecture occurred and that the most monumental Ottoman architecture can be found.[17] Major religious monuments were typically architectural complexes, known as a külliye, that had multiple components providing different services or amenities. In addition to a mosque, these could include a madrasa, a hammam, an imaret, a sebil, a market, a caravanserai, a primary school, or others.[18] Ottoman constructions were still abundant in Anatolia and in the Balkans (Rumelia), but in the more distant Middle Eastern and North African provinces older Islamic architectural styles continued to hold strong influence and were sometimes blended with Ottoman styles.[19][20]

Early Ottoman period edit

Early developments edit

The first Ottomans were established in northwest Anatolia near the borders of the Byzantine Empire. Their position at this frontier encouraged influences from Byzantine architecture and other ancient remains in the region, and there were examples of similar architectural experimentation by the other local dynasties of the region.[21] One of the early Ottoman stylistic distinctions that emerged was a tradition of designing more complete façades in front of mosques, especially in the form of a portico with arches and columns.[21] Another early distinction was the reliance on domes.[22] The first Ottoman structures were built in Söğüt, the earliest Ottoman capital, and in nearby Bilecik, but they have not survived in their original form. They include a couple of small mosques and a mausoleum built in Ertuğrul's time (late 13th century).[23] Bursa was captured in 1326 by the Ottoman leader Orhan. It served as the Ottoman capital until 1402, becoming a major center of patronage and construction.[24] Orhan also captured İznik in 1331, turning it into another early center of Ottoman art.[25] In this early period there were generally three types of mosques: the single-domed mosque, the T-plan mosque, and the multi-unit or multi-dome mosque.[22]

Single-domed mosques edit

The Hacı Özbek Mosque (1333) in İznik is the oldest Ottoman mosque with an inscription that documents its construction.[21] It is also the first example of an Ottoman single-domed mosque, consisting of a square chamber covered by a dome.[26] It is built in alternating layers of brick and cut stone, a technique which was likely copied from Byzantine examples and recurred in other Ottoman structures.[27] The dome is covered in terracotta tiles, which was also a custom of early Ottoman architecture before later Ottoman domes were covered in lead.[27] Other structures from the time of Orhan were built at İznik, Bilecik, and in Bursa.[28] Single-domed mosques continued to be built after this, such as the example of the Green Mosque in Iznik (1378–1391), which was built by an Ottoman pasha. The Green Mosque of İznik is the first Ottoman mosque for which the name of the architect (Hacı bin Musa) is known.[29] The main dome covers a square space, and as a result the transition between the round base of the dome and the square chamber below is achieved through a series of triangular carvings known as "Turkish triangles", a type of pendentive which was common in Anatolian Seljuk and early Ottoman architecture.[18][30][31] An example of a single-domed mosque with a much larger dome can be found in the Yildirim Bayezid I Mosque in Mudurnu, which dates from around 1389. The ambitious dome, with a diameter of 20 meters, was comparable to much later Ottoman mosques but it had to be built closer to the ground in order to be stable. Instead of Turkish triangles the transition is made through squinches that start low along the walls.[32]

"T-plan" mosques or zaviyes edit

 
Example of a "T-plan" layout: the floor plan of the Green Mosque in Bursa

In 1334–1335 Orhan built a mosque outside the Yenişehir Gate in İznik which no longer stands but has been excavated and studied by archeologists. It is significant as the earliest known example of a type of building called a zaviye (a cognate of Arabic zawiya), "T-plan" mosque, or "Bursa-type" mosque.[33] This type of building is characterized by a central courtyard, typically covered by a dome, with iwans (domed or vaulted halls that are open to the courtyard) on three sides, one of which is oriented towards the qibla (direction of prayer) and contains the mihrab (wall niche symbolizing the qibla). The front façade usually incorporated a portico along its entire width. The iwans on the side and the other various rooms attached to these buildings may have served to house Sufi students and traveling dervishes, since the Sufi brotherhoods were one of the main supporters of the early Ottomans.[34] Variations of this floor plan were the most common type of major religious structure sponsored by the early Ottoman elites. The "Bursa-type" label comes from the fact that multiple examples of this kind were built in and around Bursa, including the Orhan Gazi Mosque (1339), the Hüdavendigar (Murad I) Mosque (1366–1385), the Yildirim Bayezid I Mosque (completed in 1395), and the Green Mosque built by Mehmed I.[35][28][18] The Green Mosque, begun in 1412 and completed in 1424,[36] is notable for its extensive tile decoration in the cuerda seca technique. It is the first instance of lavish tile decoration in Ottoman architecture.[36] These mosques were all part of larger religious complexes (külliyes) that included other structures offering services such as madrasas (Islamic colleges), hammams (public bathhouses), and imarets (charitable kitchens).[18]

Notable examples of T-plan buildings beyond Bursa include the Firuz Bey Mosque in Milas, built in 1394 by a local Ottoman governor,[37][38] and the Nilüfer Hatun Imaret in Iznik, originally a zaviye built in 1388 to honor Murad I's mother.[39] The Firuz Bey Mosque is notable for being built in stone and featuring carved decoration of high quality.[37][40] Two other T-plan examples, the Beylerbeyi Mosque in Edirne (1428–1429) and the Yahşi Bey Mosque in Izmir (circa 1441–1442), are both significant as later T-plan structures with more complex decorative roof systems. In both buildings the usual side iwans are replaced by separate halls accessed through doorways from the central space. As a result, prayers were probably only held in the qibla-oriented iwan, demonstrating how zaviye buildings were often not designed as simple mosques but had more complex functions instead. In both buildings the qibla iwan is semi-octagonal in shape and is covered by a semi-dome. Large muqarnas carvings, grooving, or other geometrical carvings decorate the domes and semi-domes.[41]

Multi-dome buildings edit

The most unusual mosque of this period is the congregational mosque known as the Grand Mosque of Bursa or Ulu Cami. The mosque was commissioned by Bayezid I and funded by the booty from his victory at the Battle of Nicopolis in 1396. It was finished a few years later in 1399–1400.[42] It is a multi-dome mosque, consisting of a large hypostyle hall divided into twenty equal bays in a rectangular four-by-five grid, each covered by a dome supported by stone piers. The dome over the middle bay of the second row has an oculus and its floor is occupied by a fountain, serving a role similar to the sahn (courtyard) in the mosques of other regions.[42] The minbar (pulpit) of the mosque is among the finest examples of early Ottoman wooden minbars made with the kündekari technique, in which pieces of wood are fitted together without nails or glue. Its surfaces are decorated with inscriptions, floral (arabesque) motifs, and geometric motifs.[43]

After Bayezid I suffered a disastrous defeat in 1402 at the Battle of Ankara against Timur, the capital was moved to Edirne in Thrace. Another multi-dome congregational mosque was begun here by Suleyman Çelebi in 1403 and finished by Mehmed I in 1414. It is known today as the Old Mosque (Eski Cami). It is slightly smaller than the Bursa Grand Mosque, consisting of a square floor plan divided into nine domed bays supported by four piers.[42][44] This was the last major multi-dome mosque built by the Ottomans (with some exceptions such as the later Piyale Pasha Mosque). In later periods, the multi-dome building type was adapted for use in non-religious buildings instead.[45] One example of this is the bedesten – a kind of market hall at the center of a bazaar – which Bayezid I built in Bursa during his reign.[46] A similar bedesten was built in Edirne by Mehmed I between 1413 and 1421.[46]

Murad II and the Üç Şerefeli Mosque edit

The period of Murad II (between 1421 and 1451) saw the continuation of some traditions and the introduction of new innovations. Although the capital was at Edirne, Murad II had his funerary complex (the Muradiye Complex) built in Bursa between 1424 and 1426.[47] It included a mosque (heavily restored in the 19th century), a madrasa, an imaret, and a mausoleum. Its cemetery developed into a royal necropolis when later mausoleums were built here, although Murad II was the only sultan buried here.[48][49] Murad II's mausoleum is unique among royal Ottoman tombs as its central dome has an opening to the sky and his son's mausoleum was built directly adjacent to it, as per the sultan's last wishes.[48][50] The madrasa of the complex is one of the most architecturally accomplished of this period and one of the few of its kind from this period to survive.[48][51] It has a square courtyard with a central fountain (shadirvan) surrounded by a domed portico, behind which are vaulted rooms. On the southeast side of the courtyard is a large domed classroom (dershane), whose entrance façade (facing the courtyard) features some tile decoration.[48] In Edirne Murad II built another zaviye for Sufis in 1435, now known as the Murad II Mosque. It repeats the Bursa-type plan and also features rich tile decoration similar to the Green Mosque in Bursa, as well as new blue-and-white tiles with Chinese influences.[52][53]

The most important mosque of this period is the Üç Şerefeli Mosque, begun by Murad II in 1437 and finished in 1447.[54][55] It has a very different design from earlier mosques. The floor plan is nearly square but is divided between a rectangular courtyard and a rectangular prayer hall. The courtyard has a central fountain and is surrounded by a portico of arches and domes, with a decorated central portal leading into the courtyard from the outside and another one leading from the courtyard into the prayer hall. The prayer hall is centered around a huge dome which covers most of the middle part of the hall, while the sides of the hall are covered by pairs of smaller domes. The central dome, 24 meters in diameter (or 27 meters according to Kuban[56]), is much larger than any other Ottoman dome built before this.[57] On the outside, this results in an early example of the "cascade of domes" visual effect seen in later Ottoman mosques, although the overall arrangement here is described by Sheila Blair and Jonathan Bloom as not yet successful compared to later examples.[54] The mosque has a total of four minarets, arranged around the four corners of the courtyard. Its southwestern minaret was the tallest Ottoman minaret built up to that time and features three balconies, from which the mosque's name derives.[58]

The overall form of the Üç Şerefeli Mosque, with its central-dome prayer hall, arcaded court with fountain, minarets, and tall entrance portals, foreshadowed the features of later Ottoman mosque architecture.[54] It has been described as a "crossroads of Ottoman architecture",[54] marking the culmination of architectural experimentation with different spatial arrangements during the period of the Beyliks and the early Ottomans.[54][55][57] Kuban describes it as the "last stage in Early Ottoman architecture", while the central dome plan and the "modular" character of its design signaled the direction of future Ottoman architecture in Istanbul.[59]

Mehmed II and early Ottoman Istanbul edit

 
Rumeli Hisarı on the Bosphorus shore

Mehmed II succeeded his father temporarily in 1444 and definitively in 1451. He is also known as "Fatih" or the Conqueror after his conquest of Constantinople in 1453, which brought the remains of the Byzantine Empire to an end. Mehmed was strongly interested in Turkish, Persian, and European cultures and sponsored artists and writers at his court.[60] Before the 1453 conquest his capital remained at Edirne, where he completed a new palace for himself in 1452–53.[60] He made extensive preparations for the siege, including the construction of a large fortress known as Rumeli Hisarı on the western shore of the Bosphorus, begun in 1451-52 and completed shortly before the siege in 1453.[61] This was located across from an older fortress on the eastern shore known as Anadolu Hisarı, built by Bayezid I in the 1390s for an earlier siege, and was designed to cut off communications to the city through the Bosphorus.[62] Rumeli Hisarı remains one of the most impressive medieval Ottoman fortifications. It consists of three large round towers connected by curtain walls, with an irregular layout adapted to the topography of the site. A small mosque was built inside the fortified enclosure. The towers once had conical roofs, but these disappeared in the 19th century.[61]

After the conquest of Constantinople (now known as Istanbul), one of Mehmed's first constructions in the city was a palace, known as the Old Palace (Eski Saray), built in 1455 on the site of what is now the main campus of Istanbul University.[60] At the same time Mehmed built another fortress, Yedikule ("Seven Towers"), at the south end of the city's land walls in order to house and protect the treasury. It was completed in 1457–1458. Unlike Rumeli Hisarı, it has a regular layout in the shape of a five-pointed star, possibly of Italian inspiration.[63][60] In order to revitalize commerce, Mehmed built the first bedesten in Istanbul between 1456 and 1461, variously known as the Inner Bedesten (Iç Bedesten), Old Bedesten (Eski Bedesten or Bedesten-i Atik), or the Jewellers' Bedesten (Cevahir Bedesteni).[64][65] A second bedesten, the Sandal Bedesten, also known as the Small Bedesten (Küçük Bedesten) or New Bedesten (Bedesten-i Cedid), was built by Mehmed about a dozen years later.[64][66] These two bedestens, each consisting of a large multi-dome hall, form the original core of what is now the Grand Bazaar, which grew around them over the following generations.[64][66] The nearby Tahtakale Hammam, the oldest hammam (public bathhouse) of the city, also dates from around this time.[67] The only other documented hammams in the city which date from the time of Mehmet II are the Mahmut Pasha Hamam (part of the Mahmut Pasha Mosque's complex) built in 1466[67][68] and the Gedik Ahmet Pasha Hamam built around 1475.[62]

In 1459 Mehmed II began construction of a second palace, known as the New Palace (Yeni Saray) and later as the Topkapi Palace ("Cannon-Gate Palace"), on the site of the former acropolis of Byzantium, a hill overlooking the Bosphorus.[69] The palace was mostly laid out between 1459 and 1465.[62] Initially it remained mostly an administrative palace, while the residence of the sultan remained at the Old Palace. It only became a royal residence in the 16th century, when the harem section was constructed.[62] The palace has been repeatedly modified over subsequent centuries by different rulers, with the palace today now representing an accumulation of different styles and periods. Its overall layout appears highly irregular, consisting of several courtyards and enclosures within a precinct delimited by an outer wall. The seemingly irregular layout of the palace was in fact a reflection of a clear hierarchical organization of functions and private residences, with the innermost areas reserved for the privacy of the sultan and his innermost circle.[69] Among the structures today that date from Mehmet's time is the Fatih Kiosk or Pavilion of Mehmed II, located on the east side of the Third Court and built in 1462–1463.[70] It consists of a series of domed chambers preceded by an arcaded portico on the palace-facing side. It stands on top of a heavy substructure built into the hillside overlooking the Bosphorus. This lower level also originally served as a treasury. The presence of strongly-built foundation walls and substructures like this was a common characteristic of Ottoman construction in this palace as well as other architectural complexes.[71] Bab-ı Hümayun, the main outer entrance to the palace grounds, dates from Mehmet II's time according to an inscription that gives the date 1478–1479, but it was covered in new marble during the 19th century.[72][73] Kuban also argues that the Babüsselam (Gate of Salution), the gate to the Second Court flanked by two towers, dates to the time Mehmed II.[74] Within the outer gardens of the palace, Mehmed II commissioned three pavilions built in three different styles. One pavilion was in Ottoman style, another in Greek style, and a third one in a Persian style.[69][73] Of these, only the Persian pavilion, known as the Tiled Kiosk (Çinili Köşk), has survived. It was completed in September or October 1472 and its name derives from its rich tile decoration, including the first appearance of Iranian-inspired banna'i tilework in Istanbul. The vaulting and cruciform layout of the building's interior is also based on Iranian precedents, while the exterior is fronted by a tall portico. Although not much is known about the builders, they were likely of Iranian origin, as historical documents indicate the presence of tilecutters from Khorasan.[69]

 
16th-century illustration showing the original Fatih Mosque (top)

Mehmed's largest contribution to religious architecture was the Fatih Mosque complex in Istanbul, built from 1463 to 1470. It was part of a very large külliye which also included a tabhane (guesthouse for travelers), an imaret, a darüşşifa (hospital), a caravanserai (hostel for traveling merchants), a mektep (primary school), a library, a hammam, shops, a cemetery with the founder's mausoleum, and eight madrasas along with their annexes.[75][62] Not all of these structures have survived to the present day. The buildings largely ignored any existing topography and were arranged in a strongly symmetrical layout on a vast square terrace with the monumental mosque at its center.[76] The architect of the mosque complex was Usta Sinan, known as Sinan the Elder.[77] It was located on the Fourth Hill of Istanbul, which was until then occupied by the ruined Byzantine Church of the Holy Apostles.[77] Unfortunately, much of the mosque was destroyed by an earthquake in 1766, causing it to be largely rebuilt by Mustafa III in a significantly altered form shortly afterwards. Only the walls and porticos of the mosque's courtyard and the marble entrance to the prayer hall have survived overall from the original mosque.[78][79][80] The form of the rest of the mosque has had to be reconstructed by scholars using historical sources and illustrations.[77][80] The design likely reflected the combination of the Byzantine church tradition (especially the Hagia Sophia) with the Ottoman tradition that had evolved since the early imperial mosques of Bursa and Edirne.[76][81] Drawing on the ideas established by the earlier Üç Şerefeli Mosque, the mosque consisted of a rectangular courtyard with a surrounding gallery leading to a domed prayer hall. The prayer hall consisted of a large central dome with a semi-dome behind it (on the qibla side) and flanked by a row of three smaller domes on either side.[76]

The reign of Bayezid II edit

 
Bayezid II Mosque in Istanbul

After Mehmed II, the reign of Bayezid II (1481–1512) is again marked by extensive architectural patronage, of which the two most outstanding and influential examples are the Bayezid II Complex in Edirne and the Bayezid II Mosque in Istanbul.[82] While it was a period of further experimentation, the Mosque of Bayezid II in Amasya, completed in 1486, was still based on the Bursa-type plan, representing the last and largest imperial mosque in this style.[7] Doğan Kuban regards the constructions of Bayzezid II as also constituting deliberate attempts at urban planning, extending the legacy of the Fatih Mosque complex in Istanbul.[83]

The Bayezid II Complex in Edirne is a complex (külliye) of buildings including a mosque, a darüşşifa, an imaret, a madrasa, a tımarhane (asylum for the mentally ill), two tabhanes, a bakery, latrines, and other services, all linked together on the same site. It was commissioned by Bayezid II in 1484 and completed in 1488 under the direction of the architect Hayrettin.[84][85] The various structures of the complex have relatively simple but strictly geometrical floor plans, built of stone with lead-covered roofs, with only sparse decoration in the form of alternating coloured stone around windows and arches.[86][7] This has been described as an "Ottoman classical architectural aesthetic at an early stage in its development".[7] The mosque lies at the heart of the complex. It has an austere square prayer hall covered by a large high dome. The hall is preceded by a rectangular courtyard with a fountain and a surrounding arcade. The darüşşifa, whose function was the main motivation behind Bayezid's construction of the complex, has two inner courtyards that lead to a structure with a hexagonal floor plan featuring small domed rooms arranged around a larger central dome.[87]

The Bayezid II Mosque in Istanbul was built between 1500 and 1505 under the direction of the architect Ya'qub or Yakubshah (although Hayrettin is also mentioned in documents).[88][7][89] It too was part of a larger complex, which included a madrasa (serving today as a Museum of Turkish Calligraphy Art), a monumental hammam (the Bayezid II Hamam), hospices, an imaret, a caravanserai, and a cemetery around the sultan's mausoleum.[90][91] The mosque itself, the largest building, once again consists of a courtyard leading to the square prayer hall. However, the prayer hall now makes use of two semi-domes aligned with the main central dome, while the side aisles are each covered by four smaller domes. Compared to earlier mosques, this results in a much more sophisticated "cascade of domes" effect for the building's exterior profile, likely reflecting influences from the Hagia Sophia and the original (now disappeared) Fatih Mosque.[92] The mosque is the culmination of this period of architectural exploration under Bayezid II and the last step towards the classical Ottoman style.[93][94] The deliberate arrangement of established Ottoman architectural elements into a strongly symmetrical design is one aspect which denotes this evolution.[94]

Classical period edit

The start of the classical period is strongly associated with the works of Mimar Sinan.[95][96] During this period the bureaucracy of the Ottoman state, whose foundations were laid in Istanbul by Mehmet II, became increasingly elaborate and the profession of the architect became further institutionalized.[7] The long reign of Suleiman the Magnificent is also recognized as the apogee of Ottoman political and cultural development, with extensive patronage in art and architecture by the sultan, his family, and his high-ranking officials.[7] The master architect of the classical period, Mimar Sinan, served as the chief court architect (mimarbaşi) from 1538 until his death in 1588.[97] Sinan credited himself with the design of over 300 buildings,[98] though another estimate of his works puts it at nearly 500.[99] He is credited with designing buildings as far as Buda (present-day Budapest) and Mecca.[100] Sinan was probably not present to directly supervise projects far from the capital, so in these cases his designs were most likely executed by his assistants or by local architects.[101][102] In this period Ottoman architecture, especially under the work and influence of Sinan, saw a new unification and harmonization of the various architectural elements and influences that Ottoman architecture had previously absorbed but which had not yet been harmonized into a collective whole.[95] Ottoman architecture used a limited set of general forms – such as domes, semi-domes, and arcaded porticos – which were repeated in every structure and could be combined in a limited number of ways.[60] The ingenuity of successful architects such as Sinan lay in the careful and calculated attempts to solve problems of space, proportion, and harmony.[60] This period is also notable for the development of Iznik tile decoration in Ottoman monuments, with the artistic peak of this medium beginning in the second half of the 16th century.[103][104]

Earliest buildings of Suleiman's reign edit

Between the reigns of Bayezid II and Suleiman I, the reign of Selim I saw relatively little building activity. The Yavuz Selim Mosque complex in Istanbul, dedicated to Selim and containing his tomb, was completed after his death by Suleiman in 1522. It was quite possibly founded by Suleiman too, though the exact foundation date is not known.[105][92] The mosque is modelled on the Mosque of Bayezid II in Edirne, consisting of one large single-domed chamber.[106] The mosque is sometimes attributed to Sinan but it was not designed by him and the architect in charge is not known.[106][107][108] Other notable architectural complexes before Sinan's architect career, at the end of Selim I's reign or in Suleiman's early reign, are the Hafsa Sultan or Sultaniye Mosque in Manisa (circa 1522), the Fatih Pasha Mosque in Diyarbakir (completed in 1520 or 1523), and the Çoban Mustafa Pasha Complex in Gebze (1523–1524).[109][110]

Prior to being appointed chief court architect, Sinan was a military engineer who assisted the army on campaigns. His first major non-military project was the Hüsrev Pasha Mosque complex in Aleppo, one of the first major Ottoman monuments in that city. Its mosque and madrasa were completed in 1536–1537, though the completion of the overall complex is dated by an inscription to 1545, by which point Sinan had already moved on to Istanbul.[28] After his appointment to chief court architect in 1538, Sinan's first commission for Suleiman's family was the Haseki Hürrem Complex in Istanbul, dated to 1538–1539.[92][62] He also built the Tomb of Hayrettin Barbaros in the Beşiktaş neighbourhood in 1541.[111][112]

The Şehzade Mosque and other early works of Sinan edit

 
Floor plan and elevation of the Şehzade Mosque (drawings by Cornelius Gurlitt)

Sinan's first major commission was the Şehzade Mosque complex, which Suleiman dedicated to Şehzade Mehmed, his son who died in 1543.[112] The mosque complex was built between 1545 and 1548.[92] Like all imperial külliyes, it included multiple buildings, of which the mosque was the most prominent element. The mosque has a rectangular floor plan divided into two equal squares, with one square occupied by the courtyard and the other occupied by the prayer hall. Two minarets stand on either side at the junction of these two squares.[92] The prayer hall consists of a central dome surrounded by semi-domes on four sides, with smaller domes occupying the corners. Smaller semi-domes also fill the space between the corner domes and the main semi-domes.

This design represents the culmination of the previous domed and semi-domed buildings in Ottoman architecture, bringing complete symmetry to the dome layout.[113] An early version of this design, on a smaller scale, had been used before Sinan as early as 1520 or 1523 in the Fatih Pasha Mosque in Diyarbakir.[114][115] While a cross-like layout had symbolic meaning in Christian architecture, in Ottoman architecture this was purely focused on heightening and emphasizing the central dome.[116] Sinan's early innovations are also evident in the way he organized the structural supports of the dome. Instead of having the dome rest on thick walls all around it (as was previously common), he concentrated the load-bearing supports into a limited number of buttresses along the outer walls of the mosque and in four pillars inside the mosque itself at the corners of the dome. This allowed for the walls in between the buttresses to be thinner, which in turn allowed for more windows to bring in more light.[117] Sinan also moved the outer walls inward, near the inner edge of the buttresses, so that the latter were less visible inside the mosque.[117] On the outside, he added domed porticos along the lateral façades of the building which further obscured the buttresses and gave the exterior a greater sense of monumentality.[117][118] Even the four pillars inside the mosque were given irregular shapes to give them a less heavy-handed appearance.[119]

The basic design of the Şehzade Mosque, with its symmetrical dome and four semi-dome layout, proved popular with later architects and was repeated in classical Ottoman mosques after Sinan (e.g. the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque, the New Mosque at Eminönü, and the 18th-century reconstruction of the Fatih Mosque).[120][121] It is even found in the 19th-century Muhammad Ali Mosque in Cairo.[122][123] Despite this legacy and the symmetry of its design, Sinan considered the Sehzade Mosque his "apprentice" work and was not satisfied with it.[92][124][125] During the rest of his career he did not repeat its layout in any of his other works. He instead experimented with other designs that seemed to aim for a completely unified interior space and for ways to emphasize the visitor's perception of the main dome upon entering a mosque. One of the results of this logic was that any space that did not belong the central domed space was reduced to a minimum, subordinate role, if not altogether absent.[126]

Around the same time as the Şehzade Mosque construction Sinan also built the Mihrimah Sultan Mosque (also known as the Iskele Mosque) for one of Suleiman's daughters, Mihrimah Sultan. It was completed in 1547–1548 and is located in Üsküdar, across the Bosphorus.[127][128] It is notable for its wide "double porch", with an inner portico surrounded by an outer portico at the end of a sloped roof. This feature proved popular for certain patrons and was repeated by Sinan in several other mosques.[129] One example is the Rüstem Pasha Mosque in Tekirdağ (1552–1553).[130][131] Another example is the Sulaymaniyya Takiyya in Damascus, the western part of which (the mosque and a hospice) was built in 1554–1559.[132][133][134][135] This complex is also an important example of a Sinan-designed mosque far from Istanbul, and has local Syrian influences such as the use of ablaq masonry.[133] For Rüstem Pasha, Suleiman's grand vizier and son-in-law, Sinan also built the Rüstem Pasha Madrasa in Istanbul (1550), with an octagonal floor plan, and several caravanserais including the Rüstem Pasha Han in Galata (1550), the Rüstem Pasha Han in Ereğli (1552), the Rüstem Pasha Han in Edirne (1554), and the Taş Han in Erzurum (between 1544 and 1561).[136][137][138] In Istanbul Sinan also built the Haseki Hürrem Hamam near Hagia Sophia in 1556–1557, one of the most famous hammams he designed, which includes two equally-sized sections for men and women.[139][140][141] Between 1554 and 1564 he was also charged with upgrading the water supply system of the city, for which he built several impressive aqueducts in the Belgrad Forest and expanded on the older Byzantine water supply system.[142][143] One of Sinan's assistants, Hayruddin, was responsible for building the Stari Most, a single-span bridge in Mostar (present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina) that is considered one of the most impressive Ottoman monuments in the Balkans.[144] It was originally built between 1557 and 1566.[145][146]

The Süleymaniye complex and after edit

In 1550 Sinan began construction for the Süleymaniye complex, a monumental religious and charitable complex dedicated to Suleiman. Construction finished in 1557. Following the example of the earlier Fatih complex, it consists of many buildings arranged around the main mosque in the center, on a planned site occupying the summit of a hill in Istanbul. The buildings included the mosque itself, four general madrasas, a madrasa specialized for medicine, a madrasa specialized for hadiths (darülhadis), a mektep (Qur'anic school for children), a darüşşifa (hospital), a caravanserai, a tabhane (guesthouse), an imaret (public kitchen), a hammam, rows of shops, and a cemetery with two mausoleums.[147][148] In order to adapt the hilltop site, Sinan had to begin by laying solid foundations and retaining walls to form a wide terrace. The overall layout of buildings is less rigidly symmetrical than the Fatih complex, as Sinan opted to integrate it more flexibly into the existing urban fabric.[147] Thanks to its refined architecture, its scale, its dominant position on the city skyline, and its role as a symbol of Suleiman's powerful reign, the Süleymaniye Mosque complex is one of the most important symbols of Ottoman architecture and is often considered by scholars to be the most magnificent mosque in Istanbul.[149][150][22][151]

The mosque itself has a form similar to that of the earlier Bayezid II Mosque: a central dome preceded and followed by semi-domes, with smaller domes covering the sides. The reuse of an older mosque layout is something Sinan did not normally do. Doğan Kuban has suggested that it may have been due to a request from Suleiman.[152] In particular, the building replicates the central dome layout of the Hagia Sophia and this may be interpreted as a desire by Suleiman to emulate the structure of the Hagia Sophia, demonstrating how this ancient monument continued to hold tremendous symbolic power in Ottoman culture.[152] Nonetheless, Sinan employed innovations similar to those he used previously in the Şehzade Mosque: he concentrated the load-bearing supports into a limited number of columns and pillars, which allowed for more windows in the walls and minimized the physical separations within the interior of the prayer hall.[153][154] The exterior façades of the mosque are characterized by ground-level porticos, wide arches in which sets of windows are framed, and domes and semi-domes that progressively culminate upwards – in a roughly pyramidal fashion – to the large central dome.[153][155]

After designing the Süleymaniye complex, Sinan appears to have focused on experimenting with the single-domed space.[126] In the 1550s and 1560s he experimented with an "octagonal baldaquin" design for the main dome, in which the dome rests on an octagonal drum supported by a system of eight pillars or buttresses. This can be seen in the early Hadim Ibrahim Pasha Mosque (1551) and the later Rüstem Pasha Mosque (1561), both in Istanbul.[156] The Rüstem Pasha Mosque, one of the most notable mosques in the city, is raised on top of an artificial platform whose substructure is occupied by shops and a vaulted warehouse that provided revenues for the mosque's upkeep.[157] Most famously, the mosque's exterior portico and the walls of its interior are covered in a wide array of Iznik tiles, unprecedented in Ottoman architecture.[157] Sinan usually kept decoration limited and subordinate to the overall architecture, so this exception is possibly the result of a request by the wealthy patron, grand vizier Rüstem Pasha.[103]

In Lüleburgaz, Sinan designed his first mosque with a "square baldaquin" structure, where the dome rests on a support system with a square layout (without the semi-domes of the Şehzade Mosque design).[158] The mosque was part of a religious and commercial complex built for vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha begun in 1559–1560[159] and completed in 1565–1566[159] or in 1569–1571.[28][160] The complex was designed to act as a staging post (or menzil) for travelers and traders and it included a mosque, a madrasa, a caravanserai, a hammam, and a mektep (primary school), all of which is centered around a market street (arasta).[159] Similar complexes were built on many trade routes across the empire in this era.[161] Not long after this Mihrimah Sultan sponsored a second mosque, the Mihrimah Sultan Mosque in the Edirnekapı area of Istanbul, built between 1562 and 1565. Here Sinan employed a larger square baldaquin structure with a dome resting on four corner buttresses, filliing the walls between the buttresses with a multitude of windows which introduced an unusual amount of light into the interior.[151][18][162]

For much of his career Sinan also experimented with variations of a "hexagonal baldaquin" design, a design that was uncommon in world architecture.[163] He used this model in the Sinan Pasha Mosque (1553–1555) in Beşiktaş, the Kara Ahmed Pasha Mosque (1554) in western Istanbul, the Molla Çelebi Mosque (circa 1561–1562) in Beyoğlu, the Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Mosque (1571) in the Kadırga neighbourhood, and the Atik Valide Mosque (1583) in Üsküdar.[164] The Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Mosque in Kadırga is one of the most accomplished designs of his late career and with this type of configuration.[164] In this mosque he completely integrated the supporting columns of the hexagonal baldaquin into the outer walls for the first time, thus creating a unified interior space.[165] The mosque's interior is also notable for the revetment of Iznik tiles on the wall around the mihrab and on the pendentives of the main dome, creating one of the best compositions of tilework decoration in this period.[165]

The Selimiye Mosque and Sinan's late works edit

Sinan's crowning masterpiece is the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne, which was begun in 1568 and completed in 1574 (or possibly 1575).[166][167] It forms the major element of another imperial complex of buildings. The mosque building consists of two equal parts: a rectangular courtyard and a rectangular prayer hall. The prayer hall's interior is notable for being completely dominated by a single massive dome, whose view is unimpeded by the structural elements seen in other large domed mosques before this.[168] This design is the culmination of Sinan's spatial experiments, making use of the octagonal baldaquin as the most effective method of integrating the round dome with the rectangular hall below by minimizing the space occupied by the supporting elements of the dome.[169][170] The dome is supported on eight massive pillars which are partly freestanding but closely integrated with the outer walls. Additional outer buttresses are concealed in the walls of the mosque, allowing the walls in between to be pierced with a large number of windows.[171] Four semi-dome squinches occupy the corners but they are much smaller in proportion to the main dome. Sinan also made good use of the spaces between the pillars and buttresses by filling them with an elevated gallery on the inside and arched porticos on the outside.[172] The elevated galleries inside helped to eliminate what little ground-level space existed beyond the central domed baldaquin structure, ensuring that the dome therefore dominated the view from anywhere a visitor could stand.[172] Sinan's biographies praise the dome for its size and height, which is approximately the same diameter as the Hagia Sophia's main dome and slightly higher; the first time that this had been achieved in Ottoman architecture.[171] The mihrab, carved in marble, is set within a recessed and slightly elevated apse projecting outward from the rest of the mosque, allowing it to be illuminated by windows on three sides.[172] The walls on either side of the mihrab are decorated with excellent Iznik tiles,[173] as is the sultan's private balcony for prayers in the mosque's eastern corner.[174] The minbar of the mosque is among the finest examples of the stone minbars which by then had become common in Ottoman architecture. The stone surfaces are decorated with arches, pierced geometric motifs, and carved arabesques.[175]

In the precincts of Hagia Sophia Sinan built the Tomb of Selim II, one of the largest Ottoman domed mausoleums, in 1576–1577.[176] In Topkapı Palace one of his most notable works, the Chamber or Pavilion of Murad III, was built in 1578.[177] In 1580 he built the Şemsi Pasha Complex, a small mosque, tomb, and medrese complex on the waterside of Üsküdar which is considered one of the best small mosques he designed.[178][179][180] In 1580–1581 he built the Kılıç Ali Pasha Complex in the Tophane neighbourhood. Notably, this mosque is a miniature version of the Hagia Sophia. It is once again possible that this unusual copying of an earlier monument was a request by the patron, Kılıç Ali Pasha.[181][182]

Sinan's last large-scale commission was the Atik Valide Mosque, founded by Nurbanu Sultan on the southern edge of Üsküdar.[183] It was the largest külliye and mosque complex Sinan built after the Süleymaniye. It was completed in 1583, when Nurbanu died, but Sinan probably began work on it in the 1570s.[178][184] It consists of numerous structure across a sprawling site. Unlike the earlier Fatih and Süleymaniye complexes, and despite the large available space, there was no attempt at creating a unified or symmetrical design across the entire complex. This may suggest that Sinan did not regard this characteristic as necessary to the design of an ideal mosque complex.[185]

Among Sinan's last works before his death are the Murad III Mosque in Manisa, built between 1583 and 1585 under the supervision of his assistants Mahmud and Mehmed Agha,[186] as well as the modest Ramazan Efendi Mosque in Istanbul, built in 1586.[187][102] Upon his death in 1588, Sinan was buried in a tomb he designed for himself at a street corner next to the Süleymaniye complex in Istanbul.[186]

Classical architecture after Sinan edit

After Sinan, the classical style became less creative and more repetitive by comparison with earlier periods.[60] Davud Agha succeeded Sinan as chief architect. Among his most notable works, all in Istanbul, are the Cerrahpaşa Mosque (1593), the Koca Sinan Pasha Complex on Divanyolu (1593), the Gazanfer Ağa Medrese complex (1596), and the Tomb of Murad III (completed in 1599).[62][188][189] Some scholars argue that the Nışançı Mehmed Pasha Mosque (1584–1589), whose architect is unknown, should be attributed to him based on its date and style.[190][191][192] Its design is considered highly accomplished and it may be one of the first mosques to be fronted by a garden courtyard.[192][191][62] Davud Agha was one of the few architects of this period to display great potential and to create designs that went beyond Sinan's designs, but unfortunately he died of the plague right before the end of the 16th century.[193] After this, the two largest mosques built in the 17th century were both modelled on the form of the older Şehzade Mosque: the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque and the New Mosque in Eminönü.[194]

The Sultan Ahmed I Mosque, also known as the Blue Mosque, was begun in 1609 and completed in 1617.[195] It was designed by Sinan's apprentice, Mehmed Agha.[196] The mosque's size, location, and decoration suggest it was intended to be a rival to the nearby Hagia Sophia.[197] The larger complex includes a market, madrasa, and the Tomb of Ahmed I, while other structures have not survived.[198] In the mosque's prayer hall the central dome is flanked by four semi-domes just like the Şehzade Mosque, with additional smaller semi-domes opening from each larger semi-dome.[199] The four pillars supporting the central dome are massive and more imposing than in Sinan's mosques.[200][201] The lower walls are lavishly decorated with Iznik tiles: historical archives record that over 20,000 tiles were purchased for the purpose.[202] On the outside, Mehmed Agha opted to achieve a "softer" profile with the cascade of domes and the various curving elements, differing from the more dramatic juxtaposition of domes and vertical elements seen in earlier classical mosques by Sinan.[203][204] It is also the only Ottoman mosque to have as many as six minarets.[151] After the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque, no further great imperial mosques dedicated to a sultan were built in Istanbul until the mid-18th century. Mosques continued to be built and dedicated to other dynastic family members, but the tradition of sultans building their own monumental mosques lapsed.[205]

Some of the best examples of early 17th-century Ottoman architecture are the Revan Kiosk (1635) and Baghdad Kiosk (1639) in Topkapı Palace, built by Murad IV to commemorate his victories against the Safavids.[206] Both are small pavilions raised on platforms overlooking the palace gardens. Both are harmoniously decorated on the inside and outside with predominantly blue and white tiles and richly-inlaid window shutters.[206]

The New Mosque or Yeni Valide Mosque at Eminönü was initially begun by architect Davud Agha in 1597, sponsored by Safiye Sultan. However, Davud Agha's death a year or two after, followed by the death of Safiye Sultan in 1603, caused construction to be abandoned.[207][208] It was only resumed on the initiative of Hatice Turhan Sultan in 1661 and finished in 1663. The complex includes the mosque, a mausoleum for Hatice Turhan, a private pavilion for the sultan and the royal family, and a covered market known as the Egyptian Market (Mısır Çarşısı; known today as the Spice Bazaar). Its courtyard and interior are richly decorated with Iznik or Kütahya tiles, as well as with stone-carved muqarnas and vegetal rumi motifs.[207][208] The similarly named Yeni Valide Mosque complex, built in 1708–1711 in Üsküdar, was one of the last major monuments built in the classical style in Istanbul before the rise of the Tulip Period style.[209][210]

Tulip Period and early 18th century edit

From the 18th century onward European influences were introduced into Ottoman architecture as the Ottoman Empire itself became more open to outside influences. The term “Baroque” is sometimes applied more widely to Ottoman art and architecture across the 18th century including the Tulip Period.[211][151] In more specific terms, however, the period after the 17th century is marked by several different styles.[212][18] The beginning of Ahmed III's reign in 1703 saw the royal court return to Istanbul after a long period of residence in Edirne in the late 17th century.[212] Ünver Rüstem states that constructions from the first years of Ahmed III's reign demonstrate that the new "Tulip Period" style was already in existence by then.[213] The historical period known as the “Tulip Period” or "Tulip Era" is considered to have begun in 1718, after the Treaty of Passarowitz, and lasted until the Patrona Halil revolts of 1730, when Ahmed III was overthrown. The treaty formalized Ottoman territorial losses but also initiated a period of peace. It inaugurated a new era of growing cross-cultural exchange and curiosity between the Ottoman Empire and Western Europe.[214] The period saw significant influence from the French Rococo style (part of the wider Baroque style) that emerged around this time under the reign of Louis XV.[215] In 1720 an Ottoman embassy led by Yirmisekiz Çelebi Mehmed Efendi was sent to Paris and when it returned in 1721 it brought back reports and illustrations of the French Baroque style which made a strong impression in the sultan's court.[216][151][215][217] In addition to European influences, the decoration of the Tulip Period was also influenced by Safavid art and architecture to the east.[218][219]

Palace architecture of Ahmed III edit

 
The Fruit Room in the Harem of Topkapı Palace (1705)

In 1705, soon after Ahmed III returned the royal court to Istanbul, a new dining room was added to the Harem of Topkapi Palace next to the Chamber of Murad III and the Chamber of Ahmed I.[220] Known today as the "Fruit Room", the room is notable for its imagery of flower vases and fruit bowls painted onto wooden panels. While floral motifs were well-established in Ottoman art and decoration before this, these paintings distinguished themselves from earlier examples by their naturalism. This reflected an influence from the modes of representation in contemporary European art.[221] Ahmed III also built a library in the Third Court of Topkapı Palace (inside the Enderun School) which was completed in 1719, right before Yirmisekiz's embassy to Paris.[222][223] It is built in the late classical style, but some of its details foreshadow an end to the classical style, such as the absence of pendentives in the corners of the domes and the style of the windows.[224] The construction of stand-alone library structures was itself a new trend influenced by European ideas, as the Ottomans traditionally did not build libraries except as secondary elements attached to religious complexes. The Köprülü Library built in 1678 was the first of its kind, while other early examples date from the reign of Ahmed III.[225]

 
Illustration in the Zenanname showing women at the Sadâbâd gardens, with the canal and pavilions in the background

One of the most important creations of the Tulip Period was the Sadâbâd Palace, a new summer palace designed and built by Damat Ibrahim Pasha in 1722–1723 for Ahmed III.[226][227] It was located at Kâğıthane, a rural area on the outskirts of the city with small rivers that flow into the Golden Horn inlet. The palace grounds included a long marble-lined canal, the Cedval-i Sim, around which were gardens, pavilions, and palace apartments in a landscaped setting. This overall design probably emulated French pleasure palaces as a result of Yirmisekiz's reports about Paris and Versailles.[216][228] The main palace building belonging to the sultan himself consisted of a single block, which may be the first time that an Ottoman palace was designed like this, in contrast with the multiple pavilions and courtyards of the Topkapı Palace.[229] In addition to his own palace, however, the sultan encouraged members of his court to build their own separate pavilions along the canal. The regular inhabitants of Istanbul also used the surrounding area as a recreational ground for excursions and picnics.[227] This was a new practice in Ottoman culture that brought the public within close proximity of the ruler's abode for the first time and it was noted by contemporary art and literature such as in the poems of Nedîm and in the Zenanname (Book of Women") by Enderûnlu Fâzıl.[227]

During the Patrona Halil revolts of 1730 the pavilions and gardens of the upper elites were destroyed by mobs, but the sultan's palace itself survived.[230] It was repaired by Selim III (r. 1789–1807) and rebuilt by Mahmud II (r. 1808–1839), before being demolished by Abdülaziz (r. 1861–1876) and replaced with the Çağlayan Palace.[231] Ottoman wooden mansions continued to be built on the shores of the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus until the 20th century, although they continued to be based on traditional models of Ottoman domestic architecture.[231]

Tulip Period fountains and sebils edit

The culmination of the Tulip Period style is represented by a series of monumental stand-alone fountains that were mostly built between 1728 and 1732.[232][233] Water took on an enlarged role in architecture and the urban landscape of Istanbul during the Tulip Period. In the first half of the 18th century Istanbul's water supply infrastructure, including the aqueducts in Belgrade Forest, were renovated and expanded. In 1732 an important water distribution structure, the taksim, was first built on what is now Taksim Square.[234] The new fountains were unprecedented in Ottoman architecture. Previously, fountains and sebils only existed as minor elements of larger charitable complexes or as shadirvans inside mosque courtyards. The maidan fountain, or a stand-alone fountain at the center of a city square, was introduced for the first time in this period.[235] The first and most remarkable of these is the Ahmed III Fountain built in 1728 next to the Hagia Sophia and in front of the outer gate of Topkapı Palace.[232][236] It consists of a square structure with rounded corners, surmounted by a roof with five small domes and very wide eaves projecting out over the sides of the structure. Each of the four façades of the square structure features a wall fountain, while each of the four rounded corners is occupied by a sebil. Water was drawn from a cistern inside the structure.[232] The stone walls on the exterior are carved with very fine vegetal ornamentation and calligraphic inscriptions. Acanthus leaves and other motifs of Baroque Rococo appearance are carved under the projecting eaves of the roof.[237] Painting was applied to highlight some carved details, a practice that become common in the 18th century.[232] The "S" and "C" curves of Baroque architecture, which were to become popular in later years, also make an early appearance in some of the fountain's details.[238]

Another fountain was built by Ahmed III in the same year at Üsküdar, near the old Mihrimah Sultan Mosque. This fountain is a slightly simplified version of the other one and lacks the corner sebils, which are replaced with corner fountains instead.[238] A more ornate example, this time built by Mahmud I in 1732, is the Tophane Fountain built next to the old Kılıç Ali Pasha Mosque at Tophane.[239][232] Further northeast is the Hekimoglu Ali Pasha Fountain, also built in 1732, which has only two decorated façades with fountains.[240] Other important examples of fountains and sebils from the same year are the Saliha Sultan Sebil in the Azapkapi neighbourhood and the Bereketzade Fountain located near Galata Tower.[240]

Early 18th-century religious complexes edit

The Damat Ibrahim Pasha Complex, built by Ahmed III's grand vizier in 1720 and located near the Şehzade Mosque, is one of the most notable religious complexes built in this period. It functioned as a darülhadis (hadith school) and includes a library, a small mosque and classroom, student cells arranged around a courtyard, a cemetery near the street, and a sebil at the street corner.[241][240] The sebil features some of the best ornamentation of the period.[240] The same patron also built the Ibrahim Pasha Moque in his hometown of Nevşehir in 1726. The mosque is still mostly classical in form except in some details such as the unusually thin buttresses around the dome exterior.[242] The Tulip Period style also influenced the architecture of the Rızvaniye Mosque complex (1721–1722), one of the most famous religious complexes in Urfa, which was built next to the Balıklıgöl pool. The complex is known for the long decorative portico which stretches along the pool and opens onto the madrasa of the complex. The details most clearly belonging to the Tulip Period are the floral decoration in the mosque's doorway and its mihrab.[243]

The last major monument of the Tulip Period stage in Ottoman architecture is the Hekimoğlu Ali Pasha Mosque complex completed in 1734–1735 and sponsored by Hekimoğlu Ali Pasha.[244][245][246] This mosque reflects an overall classical form and is very similar to the nearby Cerrah Pasha Mosque (late 16th century), but the flexible placement of the various components of the complex around a garden enclosure is more reflective of the new changes in tastes. For example, the main gate of the complex is topped by a library, a feature which would have been unusual in earlier periods. It also has a very ornate sebil positioned at the street corner, next to the founder's tomb. The interior of the mosque is light and decorated with tiles from the Tekfursaray kilns, which were of lesser quality than those of the earlier Iznik period. One group of tiles is painted with an illustration of the Great Mosque of Mecca, a decorative feature of which there were multiple examples in this period.[244]

Baroque period edit

During the 1740s a new Ottoman or Turkish "Baroque" style emerged in its full expression and rapidly replaced the style of the Tulip Period.[247][212] This shift signaled the final end to the classical style.[248] The political and cultural conditions which led to the Ottoman Baroque trace their origins in part to the Tulip Period, when the Ottoman ruling class opened itself to Western influence.[212][249] After the Tulip Period, Ottoman architecture openly imitated European architecture, so that architectural and decorative trends in Europe were mirrored in the Ottoman Empire at the same time or after a short delay.[250] Changes were especially evident in the ornamentation and details of new buildings rather than in their overall forms, though new building types were eventually introduced from European influences as well.[151] The term "Turkish Rococo", or simply "Rococo",[248][28] is also used to describe the Ottoman Baroque, or parts of it, due to the similarities and influences from the French Rococo style in particular, but this terminology varies from author to author.[251]

First Baroque monuments edit

The first structures to exhibit the new Baroque style are several fountains and sebils built by elite patrons in Istanbul in 1741–1742: the fountain of Nisançı Ahmed Pasha added to the southwest wall of the Fatih Mosque cemetery, the Hacı Mehmet Emin Ağa Sebil near Dolmabahçe, and the Sa'deddin Efendi Sebil at the Karaca Ahmet Cemetery in Üsküdar.[252] The Baroque-style Cağaloğlu Hamam in Istanbul was also built in the same year and was sponsored by Mahmud I, demonstrating that even the sultan promoted the style.[253] The revenues of this hammam were earmarked for the Hagia Sophia (Ayasofya) Mosque, where Mahmud I built several new annexes and additions. These additions included a domed ablutions fountain in 1740–41 that is decorated with Baroque motifs but still maintains a traditional Ottoman form overall.[254][255] More indicative of the new style is the imaret that Mahmud I added in the northeastern corner of Hagia Sophia's precinct in 1743. The imaret has an extravagantly Baroque gate which is carved with high-relief vegetal scrolls and a spiralling "swan-neck" pediment, flanked by marble columns with Corinthian-like capitals, and surmounted by wide eaves.[256]

The Nuruosmaniye complex edit

 
Nuruosmaniye Mosque, Istanbul (completed in 1755)

The most important monument heralding the new Ottoman Baroque style is the Nuruosmaniye Mosque complex, begun by Mahmud I in October 1748 and completed by his successor, Osman III (to whom it is dedicated), in December 1755.[257] Kuban describes it as the "most important monumental construction after the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne", marking the integration of European culture into Ottoman architecture and the rejection of the classical Ottoman style.[13] It also marked the first time since the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque (early 17th century) that an Ottoman sultan built his own imperial mosque complex in Istanbul, thus inaugurating the return of this tradition.[258] Historical sources attest that the architect in charge was a Christian master carpenter named Simeon or Simon.[259][260][261]

The mosque consists of a square prayer hall surmounted by a large single dome with large pendentives. The dome is one of the largest in Istanbul,[262] measuring 25.75 meters in diameter.[263] From the outside, the dome sits above four huge arches (one for each side of the square) pierced with many windows that provide light to the interior. The closest precedent to this design in classical Ottoman architecture is the Mihrimah Sultan Mosque in the Edirnekapi neighbourhood.[264][265] The projecting apse which contains the mihrab is also comparable to the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne.[264] The details and decoration of the mosque are firmly Baroque. The curving pediments above the exterior arches have concave flourishes at their edges, while the windows, doorways, and arches of the mosque have mixtilinear (i.e. combination of different curves) or round profiles instead of pointed arch profiles.[266][267] Most of the entrance portals have pyramidal semi-vaults which, instead of the traditional muqarnas, are carved with many rows of acanthus-like friezes and other motifs – a composition that is neither Ottoman nor European in style.[268] Even more unusual is the form of the mosque's courtyard, which is semielliptical instead of the traditional rectangular form.[269] Inside, the mosque's prayer hall is flanked by symmetrical two-story galleries that extend outside the main perimeter of the hall. The corners of these galleries, on either side of the mihrab area, include space for the muezzins on one side and for the sultan's loge on the other, thus dispensing with the traditional müezzin mahfili platform in the middle of the mosque. This gallery arrangement leaves the central space unencumbered while still dissimulating the supporting piers of the dome.[270] The mosque's stone decoration also establishes a new style of capitals that distinguishes the Ottoman Baroque: a vase or inverse bell shape, either plain or decorated, usually with small but prominent volutes at its corners, similar to Ionic capitals.[271][272]

Like earlier imperial foundations, the mosque formed the center of a complex consisting of several buildings including a madrasa, an imaret, a library, a royal tomb, a sebil and fountain, and an imperial pavilion (Hünkâr Kasır), most of which are equally Baroque.[273][274] The sebil and fountain that flank the western gate of the complex have curved and flamboyant forms counterbalanced by the plain walls around them, which Goodwin calls the "epitome of the baroque" style for these features.[275] The library in the northeastern corner is distinguished by undulating curves and a roughly elliptical interior. The tomb, which houses the remains of Şehsuvar Sultan, has ornate moldings and concave cornices.[276] At the eastern corner of the mosque is an L-shaped structured which consists of a covered ramp leading to an imperial pavilion. This kind of feature first appeared in the 17th century with the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque and was further exemplified by the Hünkâr Kasrı of the New Mosque in Eminönü. At the Nuruosmaniye, however, this pavilion is more detailed, more prominent, and more deliberately integrated into the rest of the complex.[276][277] It was used as a private lounge or reception area (selamlık) for the sultan when visiting the mosque and gave him direct access to the sultan's loge inside the mosque.[278] Because such imperial pavilions were closer to the public eye than the imperial palace, they played a role in enhancing the sultan's public presence and in staging some public ceremonies.[279] Accordingly, the construction of imperial pavilions as part of imperial mosques aligned itself with the cultural shift taking place in the 18th century around the sultan's official displays of power, and such imperial pavilions became ever more prominent in later imperial mosques.[280]

The reigns of Mustafa III and Abdülahmid I edit

Mustafa III (r. 1757–1774), successor of Osman II and a son of Ahmed III, engaged in many building activities during his long reign.[281] His first foundation was the Ayazma Mosque in Üsküdar in honour of his mother. Construction began in 1757-58 and finished in 1760–61.[282][283] It is essentially a smaller version of the Nuruosmaniye Mosque, signalling the importance of the Nuruosmaniye as a new model to emulate.[284] It is richly decorated with Baroque carved stonework, especially in the mihrab and minbar.[285] While the mosque is smaller than the Nuruosmaniye, it is relatively tall for its proportions, enhancing its sense of height. This trend towards height was pursued in later mosques such as the Nusretiye Mosque.[286] The Ayazma Mosque differs from others mainly in the unique arrangement of its front façade, which consists of a five-arched portico reached by a wide semi-circular staircase.[287][284] This arrangement is similar to another contemporary mosque built in Aydın in 1756, the Cihanoğlu Mosque.[282] The latter is also an example of Baroque elements appearing outside Istanbul in the mid century.[288]

Mustafa III's own imperial mosque was built in the center of Istanbul and is known as the Laleli Mosque. Its construction began in 1760 and finished in 1764.[289][290] Its architect was Mehmed Tahir Agha.[290] Due to the sultan's personal wishes, its form is based on that of the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne, consisting of a main dome supported by eight piers and four corner semi-domes, thus differing significantly from the Nuruosmaniye's design.[291][292] However, unlike the Selimiye Mosque, the piers are more slender and are mostly integrated directly into the walls. The mosque's courtyard is rectangular again, leaving the Nuruosmaniye's semi-elliptical courtyard as an experiment that was not repeated. The decoration is also firmly Baroque, with Ionic-like capitals, round and mixtilinear arches, a mihrab similar to the Nuruosmaniye's, and other Baroque motifs.[293][272][294] The result is a mosque that incorporates the visual style of the Nuruosmaniye in a more restrained way and integrates it more closely with traditional Ottoman architecture.[295]

Mustafa III also reconstructed the Fatih Mosque after the 1766 earthquake that partially destroyed it. The new Fatih Mosque was completed in 1771 and it neither reproduced the appearance of the original 15th-century building nor followed the contemporary Baroque style. It was instead built in a classical Ottoman style modelled on the 16th-century Şehzade Mosque built by Sinan – whose design had in turn been repeated in major 17th-century mosques like the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque and the New Mosque. This probably indicates that contemporary builders saw the new Baroque style as inappropriate for the appearance of an ancient mosque embedded in the mythology of the city's 1453 conquest. At the same time, it showed that Sinan's architecture was associated with the Ottoman golden age and thus appeared as an appropriate model to imitate, despite the anachronism.[296] By contrast, however, the nearby tomb of Mehmed II, which was rebuilt at the same time, is in a fully Baroque style.[297]

During the reign of Abdulhamid I (r. 1774–1789) more foreign architects and artists arrived in Istanbul and the Baroque style was further consolidated.[298] Abdulhamid I built the Beylerbeyi Mosque (1777–1778) and Emirgan Mosque (1781–82), both located in suburbs of Istanbul on the shores of the Bosphorus, though both were modified by Mahmud II (r. 1808–1839).[299][300] The Beylerbeyi Mosque is notable for being oriented towards the water: while some Istanbul mosques had been built along the waterside before, the Beylerbeyi Mosque is the first one which was clearly designed to present its main façade towards the shoreline.[301][302] The mosque was intended to serve as the sultan's prayer space when he was residing in one of his palaces along the Bosphorus.[303] The prayer hall is a traditional single-domed space, but the mosque's most innovative and influential feature is the wide two-story pavilion structure that occupies its front façade, replacing the traditional courtyard or entrance portico. This is an evolution of the imperial pavilions which were attached to the side or back of earlier mosques, taking on a more residential function as a royal apartment and forming an integrated part of the mosque's appearance. This new configuration was repeated in the design of later imperial mosques.[304][305]

Abdülhamid built his tomb as part of a charitable complex, the Hamidiye Complex, constructed between 1775 and 1780 in the Eminönü neighbourhood.[306] The complex lacks a monumental congregational mosque and includes only a small mosque (mescit). Its main components were instead a madrasa and an imaret, along with the tomb itself and other minor structures. The design of the complex was notable for being completely integrated into the pre-existing urban fabric instead of being set apart in its own enclosure.[307] Across the street from the sultan's tomb was an ornate sebil, but this was relocated near the Zeynep Sultan Mosque after 1911 when the complex was partly demolished to widen the street.[306] The sebil is considered one of the finest examples of Baroque sebils.[281][298] Its surface shows a greater degree of three-dimensional sculpting, being profusely carved with scrolls, shells, foliage, and other Baroque moldings. The decoration also demonstrates a greater Rococo tendency, such as asymmetries in the details of the motifs. These trends came to characterize Ottoman Baroque architecture in the last quarter of the 18th century.[308]

Reign of Selim III edit

Selim III (r. 1789–1807) was responsible for rebuilding the Eyüp Sultan Mosque between 1798 and 1800.[309][310] This mosque is located next to the tomb of Abu Ayyub al-Ansari, an important Islamic religious site in the area of Istanbul originally built by Mehmed II. The new mosque made use of the classical Ottoman tradition by following the octagonal baldaquin design, similar to the Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Mosque in the Azapkapı neighbourhood, but much of its decoration is in the contemporary Baroque style.[309][311][312] Other important Baroque monuments were also built in the Eyüp neighbourhood around this time by Selim III's family. Before the reconstruction of the mosque, Mihrişah Sultan (Selim III's mother), built a charitable complex nearby in a vibrant Baroque style. Its construction took place between 1792 and 1796.[313] It consists of a large imaret (still functioning today) and a mektep (primary school), but from the street its most visible elements are the tomb and sebil.[314] This urban configuration is similar to the earlier Hamidiye Complex.[315] The façade of the complex, with its vibrantly Baroque sebil and tomb, is one of the most notable exterior façade designs in Ottoman Baroque architecture.[316] Further south, near the 16th-century Zal Mahmud Pasha Mosque, the Tomb of Şah Sultan (Selim III's sister) is another important example of a Baroque tomb from this era, built in 1800–1801.[317]

 
Tophane Barracks of Selim III (right), seen in an 1819 engraving by Melling

Selim III established a new Western-inspired building type in Ottoman architecture: the barracks. The first barracks of this new tradition, the Kalyoncu Barracks in Kasımpaşa, was built to house sailors and included an accompanying mosque. It was commissioned by admiral Cezayirli Hasan Pasha in 1783–84, under Abdülhamid I.[318][319] However, it was under Selim III that monumental barracks proliferated and became highly visible elements of the urban landscape.[320] Most of these early barracks were wooden buildings that were later rebuilt in the 19th century.[321] This new building type arose in conjunction with Selim III's reform attempts, the Nizam-I Cedid ("New Order"), which among other things created a new Western-style army. Selim III built a barracks building for his "New Artillery" regiment in Tophane, near the later site of the Nusretiye Mosque. This was destroyed by fire in 1823 and rebuilt by Mahmud II in 1824.[322] The largest barracks of the time, the Selimiye Barracks, was built in southern Üsküdar between 1800 and 1803,[323] but were burned down by revolting Janissaries in 1812.[324][322] They were rebuilt in stone by Mahmud II between 1825 and 1828 and further expanded to their current form by Abdulmecid between 1842 and 1853.[325][326]

The construction of the Selimiye Barracks was soon accompanied by the construction of the nearby Selimiye Mosque complex between 1801 and 1805.[327][325] Three men served as chief court architects during this period but the main architect may have been Foti Kalfa, a Christian master carpenter.[327] The complex included a mosque and its usual dependencies like a mektep and a hammam. More innovatively, it also included an array of factories, shops, and modern facilities such as a printing house, all arranged to form the nucleus of a new neighbourhood with a regular grid of streets.[327] The mosque is built in high-quality stone and in a fully Baroque style.[328] Its design illustrates the degree of influence exerted by the earlier Beylerbeyi Mosque, as it incorporates a wide imperial pavilion that stretches across its front façade. However, the design of the imperial pavilion was further refined: the two wings of the pavilion are raised on a marble arcade and there is space in the middle, between the two wings, where a staircase and entrance portico leads into the mosque, allowing for a more monumental entrance to be retained.[329] The prayer hall is once again a single-domed space but the side galleries that are usually present inside earlier mosques have in this case been moved completely outside the prayer hall, along the building's exterior. The building is also notable for high-quality stone decoration, with the exterior marked by stone moldings along its many edges and sculpted keystones for its arches.[330][331]

Palace architecture in the Baroque period edit

In Topkapı Palace the Ottoman sultans and their family continued to build new rooms or remodel old ones throughout the 18th century, introducing Baroque and Rococo decoration in the process. Some examples include the Baths of the Harem section, probably renovated by Mahmud I around 1744,[332][333] the Sofa Kiosk (Sofa Köşkü), restored in Rococo style by Mahmud I in 1752,[334][335][336] the decoration of the Imperial Hall (Hünkâr Sofası), renovated by either Osman III or Abdulhamid I,[337][338] the Kiosk of Osman III completed in 1754–55,[339][340] and the decoration of the Imperial Council (Divan) Hall redecorated in flamboyant Baroque style by Selim III in 1792 and by Mahmud II in 1819.[341]

As in the preceding centuries, other palaces were built around Istanbul by the sultan and his family. Previously, the traditional Ottoman palace configuration consisted of different buildings or pavilions arranged in a group, as was the case at Topkapı Palace, the Edirne Palace, the Kavak or Üsküdar Palace (at Salacak), the Tersane Palace, and others.[229] However, at some time during the 18th century there was a transition to palaces consisting of a single block or a single large building. This trend may have been popularized by the sisters of Selim III in the late 18th century.[342] One of his sisters, Hadice Sultan (d. 1822), had a grand shoreline palace at Defterdarburnu (near Ortaköy) on the Bopshorus.[343] Along with the palace of Beyhan and Esma Sultan on the Golden Horn, her palace may have been one of the first Ottoman palaces to consist of a single block stretching along the shoreline.[344] Most of these palaces have not survived to the present day. Among the rare surviving examples, Baroque decoration from this period can still be seen in the Aynalıkavak Pavilion (mentioned above), which was restored by Selim III and Mahmud II.[345]

Beyond Istanbul the greatest palaces were built by powerful local families, but they were often built in regional styles that did not follow the trends of the Ottoman capital.[346] The Azm Palace in Damascus, for example, was built around 1750 in a largely Damascene style.[346][347] The Azm family also had a major palace in Hama.[346] In eastern Anatolia, near present-day Doğubayazıt, the Ishak Pasha Palace is an exceptional and flamboyant piece of architecture that mixes various local traditions including Seljuk Turkish, Armenian, and Georgian. It was begun in the 17th century and generally completed by 1784.[348][349][350]

Late Baroque monuments under Mahmud II edit

The Tomb of Nakşidil Sultan (mother of Mahmud II), built in 1818 near the Fatih Mosque complex in Istanbul, is one of the finest Ottoman Baroque tombs and one of the best examples of late Baroque monuments.[351][352] It also incorporates some influence from the Empire style, which was being introduced in Istanbul around this time.[353] The tomb was designed by the Ottoman Armenian architect Krikor Balyan.[354]

The Nusretiye Mosque, Mahmud II's imperial mosque, was built between 1822 and 1826 at Tophane. Its name commemorates the "victory" which Mahmud II won by destroying the Janissaries in 1826, the year of the mosque's completion.[355][356] Mahmud II also built a new artillery barracks and parade ground near the mosque at the same time, replacing the barracks of Selim III which had been destroyed by the Janissaries, thus continuing Tophane's association with the age of reforms initiated by Selim III.[322][355] The mosque is the first major imperial work by Krikor Balyan.[355][357] It is sometimes described as belonging to the Empire style, but is considered by Godfrey Goodwin and Doğan Kuban as one of the last Baroque mosques.[355][358] John Freely describes it as a mix of Baroque and Empire styles,[359] while Ünver Rüstem describes the style as moving away from the Baroque and towards an Ottoman interpretation of Neoclassicism.[357] Goodwin also describes it as the last in a line of imperial mosques that started with the Nuruosmaniye.[355] Despite its relatively small size the mosque's tall proportions creates a sense of height, which may the culmination of a trend that began with the Ayazma Mosque.[360] From the outside, the mosque's most notable details are the extreme slenderness of its minarets[361][360] and its two Rococo sebils which have flamboyantly undulating surfaces.[360]

19th-century eclecticism and other styles edit

Empire style edit

During the reign of Mahmud II (r. 1808–1839) the Empire style, a Neoclassical style which originated in France under Napoleon, was introduced into Ottoman architecture.[362] This marked a trend towards increasingly direct imitation of Western styles, particularly from France.[353] The purest example of the Empire style in Istanbul is the Tomb of Mahmud II (1840), an imposing octagonal monument designed by Ohannes and Bogos Dadyan.[363][326] Other examples are the Cevri Kalfa School on Divanyolu street, dated to 1819,[364][365][326] and the tomb and library complex of Hüsrev Pasha in the Eyüp neighbourhood, dated to 1839.[366] The upper section of the Tower of Justice or Divan Tower in Topkapı Palace was also rebuilt in its current form under Mahmud II in 1820, adopting Renaissance and Palladian elements.[367][326] Empire style motifs, such as colonettes and composite capitals, continued to be widely used throughout the 19th century alongside other styles.[353]

The Hırka-i Şerif Mosque, built between 1847 and 1851 under Abdülmecid I (r. 1839–1861), is a unique religious building in Ottoman architecture which was designed to house the Holy Mantle (Hırka-i Şerif), a relic of the Prophet Muhammad.[368] (Another mantle and relic, the Hırka-i Saadet, is housed in Topkapı Palace.[369][370]) Because of this special function, the mosque has an unusual design. It was built and decorated in a purely Empire or Neoclassical style.[369][368] It is fronted by an imperial pavilion with a somber Neoclassical façade and slender minarets that look like Corinthian columns. This section leads to an octagonal mosque lit by large windows, with a mihrab and minbar fashioned of dark grey marble. The sacred relic is kept inside another smaller octagonal building directly behind the mosque.[369][368][371]

Eclecticism edit

The Tanzimat reforms began in 1839 under Abdülmecid I and sought to modernize the Ottoman Empire with Western-style reforms. In the architectural realm this period resulted in the dominance of European architects and Ottoman architects with European training.[372] Among these, the Balyans, an Ottoman Armenian family, succeeded in dominating imperial architecture for much of the century. They were joined by European architects such as the Fossati brothers, William James Smith, and Alexandre Vallaury.[373][374] After the early 19th century Ottoman architecture was characterized by an eclectic architecture which mixed or borrowed from multiple styles. The Balyans, for example, commonly combined Neoclassical or Beaux-arts architecture with highly eclectic decoration.[15] As more Europeans arrived in Istanbul, the neighbourhoods of Galata and Beyoğlu (or Pera) took on very European appearances.[375]

Eclecticism in palace architecture edit

The Dolmabahçe Palace was constructed for Sultan Abdülmecit between June 13, 1843, and June 7, 1856.[376] Construction was finished by 1853 or 1854, but the sultan did not move into the palace until 1856.[377][378][379][380] It replaced the Topkapı Palace as the official imperial residence of the sultan. It was built on a site along the Bosphorus that had been previously occupied by the old Beşiktaş Palace and its gardens, which had been used and expanded by various sultans since the 17th century until its demolition to make room for the current palace.[381] Dolmabahçe Palace was designed by Garabet Balyan, though his son Nikogos was known to collaborate with him and may have designed the Ceremonial Hall and the palace gates.[381][377][382][357] The palace consists mainly of a single building with monumental proportions. These characteristics represented a radical rejection of traditional Ottoman palace design.[18] The style of the palace is fundamentally Neoclassical but is characterized by a highly eclectic decoration that mixes Baroque motifs with other styles. The monumental gates that lead to the palace grounds are especially ornate and distinguished by highly sculptural and eclectic decoration in stone, marble, and plaster.[383][384] The decoration of the palace goes beyond the usual eclecticism seen in contemporary Western architecture, as it mixes multiple different styles in the same building. It lacks some consistency and unity as a result.[385][384] Aside from the European-inspired design, the organization of the palace still reflected a traditional Ottoman division between the selamlık (official section), which occupies the southwestern wing of the palace, and the harem (private section), which occupies the northeastern wing. The two wings of the palace are separated by the Ceremonial Hall, a grand domed hall. The different sections of the palace are also centred around cruciform halls, another feature retained from the Ottoman tradition.[386][387]

Many other palaces, residences, and pleasure pavilions were built in the 19th century, most of them in the Bosphorus suburbs of Istanbul. The small single-story Ihlamur Pavilion, built in 1849–1855, and the slightly larger two-story Küçüksu Pavilion, built in 1856, were both designed by Nikogos Balyan and feature very ornate façades.[388] They were originally used as recreational pavilions or resting areas and did not contain bedrooms, though bedrooms were later added to the Küçüksu Pavilion when it was used to house foreign dignitaries.[389] The Mecidiye Kiosk in the Fourth Court of Topkapı Palace is another small single-story structure in a similar style, designed by Sarkis Balyan and built in 1840.[390][391] The Beylerbeyi Palace, along the shore of the Bosphorus, was designed by Sarkis Balyan and his brother Agop Balyan in a Neoclassical style with eclectic and Orientalist interior decoration. It was completed in 1864–1865 and replaced an earlier structure by Krikor Balyan from the reign of Mahmud II. The palace was used as the sultan's summer residence and as a guest residence for foreign dignitaries. Like Dolmabahçe Palace, its interior is divided into selamlık and harem sections separated by a large central hall.[392][393] Soon after this the Çırağan Palace was commissioned by Sultan Abdülalziz (r. 1861–1876) and completed in 1872. Nikogos or Sarkis Balyan was probably responsible for the design.[394][371] It has a severe Neoclassical appearance except for the decoration, which is Orientalist and includes carved openwork in the windows.[395] The palace was destroyed by fire in 1910, leaving only the seaside façade standing which was later integrated into a hotel in 1987.[394]

One of the last major Ottoman imperial creations was the Yıldız Palace, a sprawling complex of buildings set amidst a large wooded park (Yıldız Park) on a hillside overlooking the Bosphorus. The area had been a private garden of the sultans since the 17th century and was known as the Çırağan garden during the Tulip Period. Selim III, Mahmud II, Abdülmecid and Abdülaziz each erected various pavilions here, but it was Abdülhamid II (r. 1876–1909) who transformed it into an imperial palace, residence, and seat of government.[396][397][398] After the massive single-block palace buildings like Dolmabahçe, the Yildiz Palace returned to the older tradition of creating many different structures with no overarching site plan. Unlike Topkapı Palace though, the structures are not linked together around courtyards and they instead resemble a kind of rural mountain village. Moreover, the palace and inner gardens were separated from the adjacent wooded park which was open to the public.[399] One part of the palace complex formed its own private harem section. The most imposing structure in the center of the palace is the Büyük Mabeyn Köşk erected by Abdülaziz and designed by Agop and Sarkis Balyan. It has a traditional divanhane layout typical of earlier Ottoman pavilions and a Neoclassical design with Orientalist decoration similar to the contemporary Çırağan Palace.[400] The many subsequent buildings built under Abdülhamid II are less monumental and many of them were designed by Raimond D'Aronco in an Art Nouveau style. One of the largest and most interesting is the Şale or Chalet Pavilion, so-called because it was built to resemble a Swiss mountain chalet in the Alps. The palace complex also included a theatre, a greenhouse, stables, and an official mosque, the Hamidiye Mosque.[401] Several other pavilions stand in the park outside the private palace enclosure such as the Malta Kiosk and the Çadır Kiosk, both designed by the Balyans under Sultan Abdülaziz.[397][402] The mosque, designed by Sarkis Balyan for Abdülhamid II and dated to 1886, has no resemblance at all to the traditional form of Ottoman mosques and looks more like a church.[403][394] It is decorated with neo-Gothic and Orientalist details, some of which recall the decoration of the earlier Çırağan Palace and the Pertevniyal Valide Mosque (discussed below).[403]

Eclecticism in mosque architecture edit

After the Nusretiye Mosque, one of the earliest mosques designed by the Balyan family is the Küçuk Mecidiye Mosque in Istanbul, near Yıldız, which was built in 1848.[404] At the same time as the Dolmabahçe Palace was being built, Garabet and Nikogos Balyan also built the nearby Dolmabahçe Mosque, commissioned by Bezmi'alem Valide Sultan in 1853 but finished after her death by her son Abdülmecit in 1855.[405][406] The mosque is Neoclassical in style[357] and distinguished by its minarets which are shaped like Corinthian columns up to their balcony levels.[377][357] It is a single-domed building fronted by a large and imposing imperial pavilion. The mosque's upper windows are arranged in a semi-circular wheel-like design under the arches that support the dome.[406][377] The Ortaköy Mosque (or Büyük Mecidiye Mosque), located further northeast on a small promontory along the Bosphorus shore, has a very similar design that is considered more successful.[407][387] The mosque was once again designed by Garabet Balyan and his son Nikogos and was built between 1854 and 1856[405] – although Goodwin and Kuban cite the year of construction as 1853.[368][384] The Balyans likely worked as a team in order to produce so many works in such a short period.[384] The mosque has a Baroque appearance in its use of strong curves but it features an eclectic mix of styles, except for the imperial pavilion in front which is entirely Neoclassical.[407][368] The mosque is covered in highly ornate and sculptural details that recall the style of the Ceremonial Hall and gates of the Dolmabahçe Palace.[384][368]

The Pertevniyal Valide Mosque in Istanbul was built in the Aksaray neighbourhood of Istanbul in 1871 in honour of Abdülaziz's mother.[408] It is usually attributed to the Italian architect Montani Efendi or to Agop Balyan, although it's possible that both were responsible for different aspects of the design.[409][410][408] The mosque is an intense mix of styles including Ottoman, Gothic, and Empire styles.[409][410] One notable change from previous mosques is the decrease in the imperial pavilion's size relative to the mosque, reversing the previous trend of the 18th-19th centuries.[409] The use of Ottoman revival features in this mosque is also an indication that the foundations for a future Ottoman revivalist movement were already being laid at this time.[411][408] Another eclectic-style mosque of the same period is the Aziziye Mosque in Konya, built in 1872. This is the only imperial mosque built in Anatolia during the late Ottoman period.[412][413]

New churches and synagogues edit

 
Stefan Sveti Church (1895–1898), the first steel building in Istanbul

The Tanzimat reforms also granted Christians and Jews the right to freely build new centers of worship, which resulted in the significant construction, renovation, and expansion of churches and synagogues. Most of these new constructions followed the same eclecticism that prevailed in the rest of Ottoman architecture of the 19th century.[414] Among the notable examples of Greek Orthodox churches is the Hagia Triada Church, a prominent building near Taksim Square in Beyoğlu which was built by the architect Vasilaki Ioannidi in 1880.[414] Another is the Hagia Kyriaki Church in the Kumkapı neighbourhood, which was built in 1895 by local architects for the Karaman Greek community. Hagia Kyriaki is one of the few modern mosques in Istanbul built in the Byzantine tradition, using a central-domed layout.[415] The Stefan Sveti Church (or Church of St. Stephen of the Bulgars) is a Bulgarian Orthodox church built between 1895 and 1898 in an eclectic style, located in the Balat neighbourhood. It was the first steel building in Istanbul, designed by architect Hovsep Aznavu. Its pieces were fabricated abroad and then assembled in Istanbul.[415] Among examples of 19th-century Armenian churches, the Surp Asdvadzadzin Church in Beşiktaş (not to be confused with the Surp Asdvadzadzin Patriarchal Church) was built in 1838 by Garabet Balyan. Its style deviated from traditional Armenian architecture in Istanbul and reflected instead the Neoclassical or Empire style that the Balyans used during the reign of Mahmud II, including an Ottoman-style dome.[416] The Surp Asdvadzadzin Church in Gaziantep (later converted to the Kurtuluş Mosque) was built between 1878 and 1893 in an eclectic style that references European styles as well as local influences such as ablaq masonry, demonstrating that eclecticism was present far outside Istanbul.[416] Later on, the largest and most famous Catholic church in Istanbul, the Church of St. Anthony in Beyoğlu, was built between 1906 and 1912 in a neo-Gothic style by architect Giulio Mongeri.[415]

In addition to places of worship, new educational institutions and colleges associated with churches were built.[417] In Fener, near the Greek Orthodox Patriarchal Church, the Phanar Greek Orthodox College (or Megalio Scholio in Greek) was built in 1881 to house a much older Greek educational institution.[418] The structure is one of the most dominating features of the skyline in this area. The architect Konstantinos Dimandis most likely designed it with a neo-Byzantine style in mind.[417]

The synagogues of Istanbul's longstanding Jewish community were comparatively unpretentious structures and few ancient synagogues have survived earthquakes and fires over the centuries.[415] One of the oldest, the Ahrida Synagogue in Balat, was rebuilt in its current form in 1709 and reflects the architecture of the Tulip Period, though it was restored and refurbished again in the 19th century.[419][420][421] Some notable 19th-century examples include the Italian Synagogue, built in the 1880s with a neo-Gothic façade, and the Ashkenazi Synagogue, inaugurated in 1900 with a European-style façade.[422][423][424]

New building types edit

Among the new types of monuments introduced to Ottoman architecture during this era, clock towers rose to prominence over the 19th century. One of the earliest towers, and the earliest Ottoman clock tower featuring a bell, was the clock tower built by Izzet Mehmed Pasha in Safranbolu in 1798.[425] Sometime between 1835 and 1839 Mahmud II erected the oldest clock tower in Istanbul, the Tophane Clock Tower near the Nusretiye Mosque, which was rebuilt in more monumental form by Abdülmecit in 1848 or 1849.[426][427][428] The largest and most impressive clock tower in Istanbul is the Dolmabahçe Clock Tower (near Dolmabahçe Palace), which was built by Abdülhamid II in 1890–1894. It mixes late Baroque decoration with the Neoclassical and eclectic style of the 19th century.[426] Both these towers, along with the Yıldız Clock Tower (1890),[429] Bursa Clock Tower (rebuilt in 1905),[430] and many others, are designed with a multi-level appearance.[374] Other towers across the empire varied considerably in style. The Adana Clock Tower (1882), by contrast with the Istanbul examples, is a severe brick structure resembling the medieval Italian towers of San Gimignano.[374][431] Other towers were built in a form resembling a minaret, such as the Çorum Clock Tower (1896).[374][432] In 1901 Sultan Abdülhamid II (r. 1876–1909) encouraged the construction of clock towers across the empire for the celebration of the 25th anniversary of his accession to the throne.[433][434] The Konak Clock Tower in Izmir is one example built that year. Eventually every sizeable Ottoman town was equipped with a clock tower.[374]

ottoman, architecture, architectural, style, tradition, that, developed, under, ottoman, empire, over, long, period, undergoing, some, significant, changes, during, history, first, emerged, northwestern, anatolia, late, 13th, century, developed, from, earlier,. Ottoman architecture is an architectural style or tradition that developed under the Ottoman Empire over a long period 1 undergoing some significant changes during its history 2 It first emerged in northwestern Anatolia in the late 13th century 3 and developed from earlier Seljuk Turkish architecture with influences from Byzantine and Iranian architecture along with other architectural traditions in the Middle East 4 Early Ottoman architecture experimented with multiple building types over the course of the 13th to 15th centuries progressively evolving into the classical Ottoman style of the 16th and 17th centuries This style was a mixture of native Turkish tradition and influences from the Hagia Sophia resulting in monumental mosque buildings focused around a high central dome with a varying number of semi domes 5 6 7 The most important architect of the classical period is Mimar Sinan whose major works include the Sehzade Mosque Suleymaniye Mosque and Selimiye Mosque 7 8 The second half of the 16th century also saw the apogee of certain decorative arts most notably in the use of Iznik tiles 9 Blue Mosque in Istanbul an example of the classical style of Ottoman architecture showing Byzantine influence Beginning in the 18th century Ottoman architecture was opened to external influences particularly Baroque architecture in Western Europe Changes appeared during the style of the Tulip Period followed by the emergence of the Ottoman Baroque style in the 1740s 10 11 The Nuruosmaniye Mosque is one of the most important examples of this period 12 13 The 19th century saw more influences imported from Western Europe brought in by architects such as those from the Balyan family 14 Empire style and Neoclassical motifs were introduced and a trend towards eclecticism was evident in many types of buildings such as the Dolmabace Palace 15 The last decades of the Ottoman Empire saw the development of a new architectural style called neo Ottoman or Ottoman revivalism also known as the First National Architectural Movement by architects such as Mimar Kemaleddin and Vedat Tek 16 14 Ottoman dynastic patronage was concentrated in the historic capitals of Bursa Edirne and Istanbul Constantinople as well as in several other important administrative centers such as Amasya and Manisa It was in these centers that most important developments in Ottoman architecture occurred and that the most monumental Ottoman architecture can be found 17 Major religious monuments were typically architectural complexes known as a kulliye that had multiple components providing different services or amenities In addition to a mosque these could include a madrasa a hammam an imaret a sebil a market a caravanserai a primary school or others 18 Ottoman constructions were still abundant in Anatolia and in the Balkans Rumelia but in the more distant Middle Eastern and North African provinces older Islamic architectural styles continued to hold strong influence and were sometimes blended with Ottoman styles 19 20 Contents 1 Early Ottoman period 1 1 Early developments 1 1 1 Single domed mosques 1 1 2 T plan mosques or zaviyes 1 1 3 Multi dome buildings 1 2 Murad II and the Uc Serefeli Mosque 1 3 Mehmed II and early Ottoman Istanbul 1 4 The reign of Bayezid II 2 Classical period 2 1 Earliest buildings of Suleiman s reign 2 2 The Sehzade Mosque and other early works of Sinan 2 3 The Suleymaniye complex and after 2 4 The Selimiye Mosque and Sinan s late works 2 5 Classical architecture after Sinan 3 Tulip Period and early 18th century 3 1 Palace architecture of Ahmed III 3 2 Tulip Period fountains and sebils 3 3 Early 18th century religious complexes 4 Baroque period 4 1 First Baroque monuments 4 2 The Nuruosmaniye complex 4 3 The reigns of Mustafa III and Abdulahmid I 4 4 Reign of Selim III 4 5 Palace architecture in the Baroque period 4 6 Late Baroque monuments under Mahmud II 5 19th century eclecticism and other styles 5 1 Empire style 5 2 Eclecticism 5 2 1 Eclecticism in palace architecture 5 2 2 Eclecticism in mosque architecture 5 2 3 New churches and synagogues 5 2 4 New building types 5 3 Later trends Orientalism and Art Nouveau 5 4 Early scholarly interest in Ottoman architecture 6 First National Architectural Movement early 20th century 7 Tile decoration 7 1 Early Ottoman tilework 7 2 Classical Iznik tiles 7 3 Tekfursaray and Kutahya tiles 18th century 8 Paradise garden 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly Ottoman period editFurther information Early Ottoman architecture Early developments edit The first Ottomans were established in northwest Anatolia near the borders of the Byzantine Empire Their position at this frontier encouraged influences from Byzantine architecture and other ancient remains in the region and there were examples of similar architectural experimentation by the other local dynasties of the region 21 One of the early Ottoman stylistic distinctions that emerged was a tradition of designing more complete facades in front of mosques especially in the form of a portico with arches and columns 21 Another early distinction was the reliance on domes 22 The first Ottoman structures were built in Sogut the earliest Ottoman capital and in nearby Bilecik but they have not survived in their original form They include a couple of small mosques and a mausoleum built in Ertugrul s time late 13th century 23 Bursa was captured in 1326 by the Ottoman leader Orhan It served as the Ottoman capital until 1402 becoming a major center of patronage and construction 24 Orhan also captured Iznik in 1331 turning it into another early center of Ottoman art 25 In this early period there were generally three types of mosques the single domed mosque the T plan mosque and the multi unit or multi dome mosque 22 Single domed mosques edit The Haci Ozbek Mosque 1333 in Iznik is the oldest Ottoman mosque with an inscription that documents its construction 21 It is also the first example of an Ottoman single domed mosque consisting of a square chamber covered by a dome 26 It is built in alternating layers of brick and cut stone a technique which was likely copied from Byzantine examples and recurred in other Ottoman structures 27 The dome is covered in terracotta tiles which was also a custom of early Ottoman architecture before later Ottoman domes were covered in lead 27 Other structures from the time of Orhan were built at Iznik Bilecik and in Bursa 28 Single domed mosques continued to be built after this such as the example of the Green Mosque in Iznik 1378 1391 which was built by an Ottoman pasha The Green Mosque of Iznik is the first Ottoman mosque for which the name of the architect Haci bin Musa is known 29 The main dome covers a square space and as a result the transition between the round base of the dome and the square chamber below is achieved through a series of triangular carvings known as Turkish triangles a type of pendentive which was common in Anatolian Seljuk and early Ottoman architecture 18 30 31 An example of a single domed mosque with a much larger dome can be found in the Yildirim Bayezid I Mosque in Mudurnu which dates from around 1389 The ambitious dome with a diameter of 20 meters was comparable to much later Ottoman mosques but it had to be built closer to the ground in order to be stable Instead of Turkish triangles the transition is made through squinches that start low along the walls 32 Single domed mosques nbsp Haci Ozbek Mosque in Iznik 1333 one of the earliest surviving Ottoman mosques nbsp Green Mosque in Iznik 1378 1391 nbsp Green Mosque interior Turkish triangles form the transition from dome to square chamber 30 nbsp Interior of Yildirim Bayezid Mosque in Mudurnu circa 1389 T plan mosques or zaviyes edit nbsp Example of a T plan layout the floor plan of the Green Mosque in BursaIn 1334 1335 Orhan built a mosque outside the Yenisehir Gate in Iznik which no longer stands but has been excavated and studied by archeologists It is significant as the earliest known example of a type of building called a zaviye a cognate of Arabic zawiya T plan mosque or Bursa type mosque 33 This type of building is characterized by a central courtyard typically covered by a dome with iwans domed or vaulted halls that are open to the courtyard on three sides one of which is oriented towards the qibla direction of prayer and contains the mihrab wall niche symbolizing the qibla The front facade usually incorporated a portico along its entire width The iwans on the side and the other various rooms attached to these buildings may have served to house Sufi students and traveling dervishes since the Sufi brotherhoods were one of the main supporters of the early Ottomans 34 Variations of this floor plan were the most common type of major religious structure sponsored by the early Ottoman elites The Bursa type label comes from the fact that multiple examples of this kind were built in and around Bursa including the Orhan Gazi Mosque 1339 the Hudavendigar Murad I Mosque 1366 1385 the Yildirim Bayezid I Mosque completed in 1395 and the Green Mosque built by Mehmed I 35 28 18 The Green Mosque begun in 1412 and completed in 1424 36 is notable for its extensive tile decoration in the cuerda seca technique It is the first instance of lavish tile decoration in Ottoman architecture 36 These mosques were all part of larger religious complexes kulliyes that included other structures offering services such as madrasas Islamic colleges hammams public bathhouses and imarets charitable kitchens 18 Notable examples of T plan buildings beyond Bursa include the Firuz Bey Mosque in Milas built in 1394 by a local Ottoman governor 37 38 and the Nilufer Hatun Imaret in Iznik originally a zaviye built in 1388 to honor Murad I s mother 39 The Firuz Bey Mosque is notable for being built in stone and featuring carved decoration of high quality 37 40 Two other T plan examples the Beylerbeyi Mosque in Edirne 1428 1429 and the Yahsi Bey Mosque in Izmir circa 1441 1442 are both significant as later T plan structures with more complex decorative roof systems In both buildings the usual side iwans are replaced by separate halls accessed through doorways from the central space As a result prayers were probably only held in the qibla oriented iwan demonstrating how zaviye buildings were often not designed as simple mosques but had more complex functions instead In both buildings the qibla iwan is semi octagonal in shape and is covered by a semi dome Large muqarnas carvings grooving or other geometrical carvings decorate the domes and semi domes 41 T plan mosques and buildings nbsp Orhan Gazi Mosque in Bursa 1339 exterior and front portico nbsp Orhan Gazi Mosque interior prayer hall view towards the qibla nbsp Hudavendigar Mosque in Bursa 1366 1385 interior of the prayer hall nbsp Nilufer Hatun Imaret in Iznik 1388 nbsp Yildirim Bayezid I Mosque in Bursa 1395 exterior and portico nbsp Yildirim Bayezid I Mosque interior view towards the qibla iwan nbsp Firuz Bey Mosque in Milas 1394 exterior facade nbsp Green Mosque in Bursa 1412 1424 exterior facade and entrance portal nbsp Green Mosque interior nbsp Green Mosque mihrab and tile decoration nbsp Green Tomb in Bursa 1412 24 part of the Green Mosque complex nbsp Interior of the Green Tomb nbsp Beylerbeyi Mosque in Edirne 1428 1429 interior view of the qibla iwanMulti dome buildings edit The most unusual mosque of this period is the congregational mosque known as the Grand Mosque of Bursa or Ulu Cami The mosque was commissioned by Bayezid I and funded by the booty from his victory at the Battle of Nicopolis in 1396 It was finished a few years later in 1399 1400 42 It is a multi dome mosque consisting of a large hypostyle hall divided into twenty equal bays in a rectangular four by five grid each covered by a dome supported by stone piers The dome over the middle bay of the second row has an oculus and its floor is occupied by a fountain serving a role similar to the sahn courtyard in the mosques of other regions 42 The minbar pulpit of the mosque is among the finest examples of early Ottoman wooden minbars made with the kundekari technique in which pieces of wood are fitted together without nails or glue Its surfaces are decorated with inscriptions floral arabesque motifs and geometric motifs 43 After Bayezid I suffered a disastrous defeat in 1402 at the Battle of Ankara against Timur the capital was moved to Edirne in Thrace Another multi dome congregational mosque was begun here by Suleyman Celebi in 1403 and finished by Mehmed I in 1414 It is known today as the Old Mosque Eski Cami It is slightly smaller than the Bursa Grand Mosque consisting of a square floor plan divided into nine domed bays supported by four piers 42 44 This was the last major multi dome mosque built by the Ottomans with some exceptions such as the later Piyale Pasha Mosque In later periods the multi dome building type was adapted for use in non religious buildings instead 45 One example of this is the bedesten a kind of market hall at the center of a bazaar which Bayezid I built in Bursa during his reign 46 A similar bedesten was built in Edirne by Mehmed I between 1413 and 1421 46 Multi domed mosques and buildings nbsp Grand Mosque of Bursa 1396 1400 nbsp Interior of the Grand Mosque of Bursa nbsp Wooden minbar of the Grand Mosque of Bursa nbsp Old Mosque of Edirne 1403 1414 nbsp Interior of the Old Mosque of Edirne nbsp Interior of the Bedesten of Bursa with modern day shops nbsp Exterior view of the Bedesten of Edirne nbsp Koca Mahmut Pasa Camii build 1451 1494 SofiaMurad II and the Uc Serefeli Mosque edit The period of Murad II between 1421 and 1451 saw the continuation of some traditions and the introduction of new innovations Although the capital was at Edirne Murad II had his funerary complex the Muradiye Complex built in Bursa between 1424 and 1426 47 It included a mosque heavily restored in the 19th century a madrasa an imaret and a mausoleum Its cemetery developed into a royal necropolis when later mausoleums were built here although Murad II was the only sultan buried here 48 49 Murad II s mausoleum is unique among royal Ottoman tombs as its central dome has an opening to the sky and his son s mausoleum was built directly adjacent to it as per the sultan s last wishes 48 50 The madrasa of the complex is one of the most architecturally accomplished of this period and one of the few of its kind from this period to survive 48 51 It has a square courtyard with a central fountain shadirvan surrounded by a domed portico behind which are vaulted rooms On the southeast side of the courtyard is a large domed classroom dershane whose entrance facade facing the courtyard features some tile decoration 48 In Edirne Murad II built another zaviye for Sufis in 1435 now known as the Murad II Mosque It repeats the Bursa type plan and also features rich tile decoration similar to the Green Mosque in Bursa as well as new blue and white tiles with Chinese influences 52 53 The most important mosque of this period is the Uc Serefeli Mosque begun by Murad II in 1437 and finished in 1447 54 55 It has a very different design from earlier mosques The floor plan is nearly square but is divided between a rectangular courtyard and a rectangular prayer hall The courtyard has a central fountain and is surrounded by a portico of arches and domes with a decorated central portal leading into the courtyard from the outside and another one leading from the courtyard into the prayer hall The prayer hall is centered around a huge dome which covers most of the middle part of the hall while the sides of the hall are covered by pairs of smaller domes The central dome 24 meters in diameter or 27 meters according to Kuban 56 is much larger than any other Ottoman dome built before this 57 On the outside this results in an early example of the cascade of domes visual effect seen in later Ottoman mosques although the overall arrangement here is described by Sheila Blair and Jonathan Bloom as not yet successful compared to later examples 54 The mosque has a total of four minarets arranged around the four corners of the courtyard Its southwestern minaret was the tallest Ottoman minaret built up to that time and features three balconies from which the mosque s name derives 58 The overall form of the Uc Serefeli Mosque with its central dome prayer hall arcaded court with fountain minarets and tall entrance portals foreshadowed the features of later Ottoman mosque architecture 54 It has been described as a crossroads of Ottoman architecture 54 marking the culmination of architectural experimentation with different spatial arrangements during the period of the Beyliks and the early Ottomans 54 55 57 Kuban describes it as the last stage in Early Ottoman architecture while the central dome plan and the modular character of its design signaled the direction of future Ottoman architecture in Istanbul 59 Complexes of Murad II nbsp Tomb of Murad II at the Muradiye Complex in Bursa circa 1426 nbsp Entrance to the Murad II Medrese in Bursa circa 1426 nbsp Remains of tile and fresco decoration in the Murad II Mosque in Edirne circa 1435 nbsp Uc Serefeli Mosque in Edirne 1437 1447 exterior nbsp Uc Serefeli Mosque courtyard nbsp Uc Serefeli Mosque interiorMehmed II and early Ottoman Istanbul edit nbsp Rumeli Hisari on the Bosphorus shoreMehmed II succeeded his father temporarily in 1444 and definitively in 1451 He is also known as Fatih or the Conqueror after his conquest of Constantinople in 1453 which brought the remains of the Byzantine Empire to an end Mehmed was strongly interested in Turkish Persian and European cultures and sponsored artists and writers at his court 60 Before the 1453 conquest his capital remained at Edirne where he completed a new palace for himself in 1452 53 60 He made extensive preparations for the siege including the construction of a large fortress known as Rumeli Hisari on the western shore of the Bosphorus begun in 1451 52 and completed shortly before the siege in 1453 61 This was located across from an older fortress on the eastern shore known as Anadolu Hisari built by Bayezid I in the 1390s for an earlier siege and was designed to cut off communications to the city through the Bosphorus 62 Rumeli Hisari remains one of the most impressive medieval Ottoman fortifications It consists of three large round towers connected by curtain walls with an irregular layout adapted to the topography of the site A small mosque was built inside the fortified enclosure The towers once had conical roofs but these disappeared in the 19th century 61 After the conquest of Constantinople now known as Istanbul one of Mehmed s first constructions in the city was a palace known as the Old Palace Eski Saray built in 1455 on the site of what is now the main campus of Istanbul University 60 At the same time Mehmed built another fortress Yedikule Seven Towers at the south end of the city s land walls in order to house and protect the treasury It was completed in 1457 1458 Unlike Rumeli Hisari it has a regular layout in the shape of a five pointed star possibly of Italian inspiration 63 60 In order to revitalize commerce Mehmed built the first bedesten in Istanbul between 1456 and 1461 variously known as the Inner Bedesten Ic Bedesten Old Bedesten Eski Bedesten or Bedesten i Atik or the Jewellers Bedesten Cevahir Bedesteni 64 65 A second bedesten the Sandal Bedesten also known as the Small Bedesten Kucuk Bedesten or New Bedesten Bedesten i Cedid was built by Mehmed about a dozen years later 64 66 These two bedestens each consisting of a large multi dome hall form the original core of what is now the Grand Bazaar which grew around them over the following generations 64 66 The nearby Tahtakale Hammam the oldest hammam public bathhouse of the city also dates from around this time 67 The only other documented hammams in the city which date from the time of Mehmet II are the Mahmut Pasha Hamam part of the Mahmut Pasha Mosque s complex built in 1466 67 68 and the Gedik Ahmet Pasha Hamam built around 1475 62 Early Ottoman buildings in Istanbul under Mehmed II nbsp Yedikule Fortress in Istanbul circa 1458 nbsp Interior of the Sandal Bedesten in the Grand Bazaar Istanbul nbsp Interior of the Tahtakale Hamam dome is original but the balconies are modern nbsp Mahmut Pasha Hamam Istanbul 1466 nbsp Mahmut Pasha Hamam dome interiorIn 1459 Mehmed II began construction of a second palace known as the New Palace Yeni Saray and later as the Topkapi Palace Cannon Gate Palace on the site of the former acropolis of Byzantium a hill overlooking the Bosphorus 69 The palace was mostly laid out between 1459 and 1465 62 Initially it remained mostly an administrative palace while the residence of the sultan remained at the Old Palace It only became a royal residence in the 16th century when the harem section was constructed 62 The palace has been repeatedly modified over subsequent centuries by different rulers with the palace today now representing an accumulation of different styles and periods Its overall layout appears highly irregular consisting of several courtyards and enclosures within a precinct delimited by an outer wall The seemingly irregular layout of the palace was in fact a reflection of a clear hierarchical organization of functions and private residences with the innermost areas reserved for the privacy of the sultan and his innermost circle 69 Among the structures today that date from Mehmet s time is the Fatih Kiosk or Pavilion of Mehmed II located on the east side of the Third Court and built in 1462 1463 70 It consists of a series of domed chambers preceded by an arcaded portico on the palace facing side It stands on top of a heavy substructure built into the hillside overlooking the Bosphorus This lower level also originally served as a treasury The presence of strongly built foundation walls and substructures like this was a common characteristic of Ottoman construction in this palace as well as other architectural complexes 71 Bab i Humayun the main outer entrance to the palace grounds dates from Mehmet II s time according to an inscription that gives the date 1478 1479 but it was covered in new marble during the 19th century 72 73 Kuban also argues that the Babusselam Gate of Salution the gate to the Second Court flanked by two towers dates to the time Mehmed II 74 Within the outer gardens of the palace Mehmed II commissioned three pavilions built in three different styles One pavilion was in Ottoman style another in Greek style and a third one in a Persian style 69 73 Of these only the Persian pavilion known as the Tiled Kiosk Cinili Kosk has survived It was completed in September or October 1472 and its name derives from its rich tile decoration including the first appearance of Iranian inspired banna i tilework in Istanbul The vaulting and cruciform layout of the building s interior is also based on Iranian precedents while the exterior is fronted by a tall portico Although not much is known about the builders they were likely of Iranian origin as historical documents indicate the presence of tilecutters from Khorasan 69 Palace architecture of Mehmed II nbsp Bab i Humayun the outer gate to the Topkapi Palace 1478 1479 with later renovations nbsp Babusselam the gate to the Second Court in Topkapi Palace nbsp Fatih Kiosk in the Third Court of Topkapi Palace 1462 1463 nbsp Tiled Kiosk in the outer gardens of Topkapi Palace 1472 nbsp Tile decoration of the Tiled Kiosk nbsp 16th century illustration showing the original Fatih Mosque top Mehmed s largest contribution to religious architecture was the Fatih Mosque complex in Istanbul built from 1463 to 1470 It was part of a very large kulliye which also included a tabhane guesthouse for travelers an imaret a darussifa hospital a caravanserai hostel for traveling merchants a mektep primary school a library a hammam shops a cemetery with the founder s mausoleum and eight madrasas along with their annexes 75 62 Not all of these structures have survived to the present day The buildings largely ignored any existing topography and were arranged in a strongly symmetrical layout on a vast square terrace with the monumental mosque at its center 76 The architect of the mosque complex was Usta Sinan known as Sinan the Elder 77 It was located on the Fourth Hill of Istanbul which was until then occupied by the ruined Byzantine Church of the Holy Apostles 77 Unfortunately much of the mosque was destroyed by an earthquake in 1766 causing it to be largely rebuilt by Mustafa III in a significantly altered form shortly afterwards Only the walls and porticos of the mosque s courtyard and the marble entrance to the prayer hall have survived overall from the original mosque 78 79 80 The form of the rest of the mosque has had to be reconstructed by scholars using historical sources and illustrations 77 80 The design likely reflected the combination of the Byzantine church tradition especially the Hagia Sophia with the Ottoman tradition that had evolved since the early imperial mosques of Bursa and Edirne 76 81 Drawing on the ideas established by the earlier Uc Serefeli Mosque the mosque consisted of a rectangular courtyard with a surrounding gallery leading to a domed prayer hall The prayer hall consisted of a large central dome with a semi dome behind it on the qibla side and flanked by a row of three smaller domes on either side 76 The reign of Bayezid II edit nbsp Bayezid II Mosque in IstanbulAfter Mehmed II the reign of Bayezid II 1481 1512 is again marked by extensive architectural patronage of which the two most outstanding and influential examples are the Bayezid II Complex in Edirne and the Bayezid II Mosque in Istanbul 82 While it was a period of further experimentation the Mosque of Bayezid II in Amasya completed in 1486 was still based on the Bursa type plan representing the last and largest imperial mosque in this style 7 Dogan Kuban regards the constructions of Bayzezid II as also constituting deliberate attempts at urban planning extending the legacy of the Fatih Mosque complex in Istanbul 83 The Bayezid II Complex in Edirne is a complex kulliye of buildings including a mosque a darussifa an imaret a madrasa a timarhane asylum for the mentally ill two tabhanes a bakery latrines and other services all linked together on the same site It was commissioned by Bayezid II in 1484 and completed in 1488 under the direction of the architect Hayrettin 84 85 The various structures of the complex have relatively simple but strictly geometrical floor plans built of stone with lead covered roofs with only sparse decoration in the form of alternating coloured stone around windows and arches 86 7 This has been described as an Ottoman classical architectural aesthetic at an early stage in its development 7 The mosque lies at the heart of the complex It has an austere square prayer hall covered by a large high dome The hall is preceded by a rectangular courtyard with a fountain and a surrounding arcade The darussifa whose function was the main motivation behind Bayezid s construction of the complex has two inner courtyards that lead to a structure with a hexagonal floor plan featuring small domed rooms arranged around a larger central dome 87 The Bayezid II Mosque in Istanbul was built between 1500 and 1505 under the direction of the architect Ya qub or Yakubshah although Hayrettin is also mentioned in documents 88 7 89 It too was part of a larger complex which included a madrasa serving today as a Museum of Turkish Calligraphy Art a monumental hammam the Bayezid II Hamam hospices an imaret a caravanserai and a cemetery around the sultan s mausoleum 90 91 The mosque itself the largest building once again consists of a courtyard leading to the square prayer hall However the prayer hall now makes use of two semi domes aligned with the main central dome while the side aisles are each covered by four smaller domes Compared to earlier mosques this results in a much more sophisticated cascade of domes effect for the building s exterior profile likely reflecting influences from the Hagia Sophia and the original now disappeared Fatih Mosque 92 The mosque is the culmination of this period of architectural exploration under Bayezid II and the last step towards the classical Ottoman style 93 94 The deliberate arrangement of established Ottoman architectural elements into a strongly symmetrical design is one aspect which denotes this evolution 94 Complexes of Bayezid II nbsp Bayezid II Mosque in Amasya 1486 nbsp Bayezid II Complex in Edirne 1484 1488 nbsp Interior of the mosque at the Bayezid II Complex in Edirne nbsp Inner courtyard of the darussifa at the Bayezid II Complex in Edirne nbsp Bayezid II Mosque in Istanbul 1500 1505 nbsp Bayezid II Mosque in Istanbul dome interiors nbsp Bayezid II Hamam part of the Bayezid II complex in IstanbulClassical period editFurther information Classical Ottoman architectureThe start of the classical period is strongly associated with the works of Mimar Sinan 95 96 During this period the bureaucracy of the Ottoman state whose foundations were laid in Istanbul by Mehmet II became increasingly elaborate and the profession of the architect became further institutionalized 7 The long reign of Suleiman the Magnificent is also recognized as the apogee of Ottoman political and cultural development with extensive patronage in art and architecture by the sultan his family and his high ranking officials 7 The master architect of the classical period Mimar Sinan served as the chief court architect mimarbasi from 1538 until his death in 1588 97 Sinan credited himself with the design of over 300 buildings 98 though another estimate of his works puts it at nearly 500 99 He is credited with designing buildings as far as Buda present day Budapest and Mecca 100 Sinan was probably not present to directly supervise projects far from the capital so in these cases his designs were most likely executed by his assistants or by local architects 101 102 In this period Ottoman architecture especially under the work and influence of Sinan saw a new unification and harmonization of the various architectural elements and influences that Ottoman architecture had previously absorbed but which had not yet been harmonized into a collective whole 95 Ottoman architecture used a limited set of general forms such as domes semi domes and arcaded porticos which were repeated in every structure and could be combined in a limited number of ways 60 The ingenuity of successful architects such as Sinan lay in the careful and calculated attempts to solve problems of space proportion and harmony 60 This period is also notable for the development of Iznik tile decoration in Ottoman monuments with the artistic peak of this medium beginning in the second half of the 16th century 103 104 Earliest buildings of Suleiman s reign edit Between the reigns of Bayezid II and Suleiman I the reign of Selim I saw relatively little building activity The Yavuz Selim Mosque complex in Istanbul dedicated to Selim and containing his tomb was completed after his death by Suleiman in 1522 It was quite possibly founded by Suleiman too though the exact foundation date is not known 105 92 The mosque is modelled on the Mosque of Bayezid II in Edirne consisting of one large single domed chamber 106 The mosque is sometimes attributed to Sinan but it was not designed by him and the architect in charge is not known 106 107 108 Other notable architectural complexes before Sinan s architect career at the end of Selim I s reign or in Suleiman s early reign are the Hafsa Sultan or Sultaniye Mosque in Manisa circa 1522 the Fatih Pasha Mosque in Diyarbakir completed in 1520 or 1523 and the Coban Mustafa Pasha Complex in Gebze 1523 1524 109 110 Prior to being appointed chief court architect Sinan was a military engineer who assisted the army on campaigns His first major non military project was the Husrev Pasha Mosque complex in Aleppo one of the first major Ottoman monuments in that city Its mosque and madrasa were completed in 1536 1537 though the completion of the overall complex is dated by an inscription to 1545 by which point Sinan had already moved on to Istanbul 28 After his appointment to chief court architect in 1538 Sinan s first commission for Suleiman s family was the Haseki Hurrem Complex in Istanbul dated to 1538 1539 92 62 He also built the Tomb of Hayrettin Barbaros in the Besiktas neighbourhood in 1541 111 112 Earliest buildings under Suleiman before 1545 nbsp Yavuz Selim I Mosque in Istanbul 1522 designed by unknown architect nbsp Yavuz Selim I Mosque interior nbsp Fatih Pasha Mosque in Diyarbakir 1520 or 1523 nbsp Fatih Pasha Mosque interior view of the dome nbsp Coban Mustafa Pasha Mosque in Gebze 1523 1524 nbsp Husrev Pasha Mosque in Aleppo 1536 1537 pictured before the recent damage of the Syrian civil war nbsp Haseki Hurrem Sultan Complex in Istanbul 1538 1539 designed by Sinan nbsp Tomb of Hayreddin Barbaros in Besiktas 1541 designed by SinanThe Sehzade Mosque and other early works of Sinan edit nbsp Floor plan and elevation of the Sehzade Mosque drawings by Cornelius Gurlitt Sinan s first major commission was the Sehzade Mosque complex which Suleiman dedicated to Sehzade Mehmed his son who died in 1543 112 The mosque complex was built between 1545 and 1548 92 Like all imperial kulliyes it included multiple buildings of which the mosque was the most prominent element The mosque has a rectangular floor plan divided into two equal squares with one square occupied by the courtyard and the other occupied by the prayer hall Two minarets stand on either side at the junction of these two squares 92 The prayer hall consists of a central dome surrounded by semi domes on four sides with smaller domes occupying the corners Smaller semi domes also fill the space between the corner domes and the main semi domes This design represents the culmination of the previous domed and semi domed buildings in Ottoman architecture bringing complete symmetry to the dome layout 113 An early version of this design on a smaller scale had been used before Sinan as early as 1520 or 1523 in the Fatih Pasha Mosque in Diyarbakir 114 115 While a cross like layout had symbolic meaning in Christian architecture in Ottoman architecture this was purely focused on heightening and emphasizing the central dome 116 Sinan s early innovations are also evident in the way he organized the structural supports of the dome Instead of having the dome rest on thick walls all around it as was previously common he concentrated the load bearing supports into a limited number of buttresses along the outer walls of the mosque and in four pillars inside the mosque itself at the corners of the dome This allowed for the walls in between the buttresses to be thinner which in turn allowed for more windows to bring in more light 117 Sinan also moved the outer walls inward near the inner edge of the buttresses so that the latter were less visible inside the mosque 117 On the outside he added domed porticos along the lateral facades of the building which further obscured the buttresses and gave the exterior a greater sense of monumentality 117 118 Even the four pillars inside the mosque were given irregular shapes to give them a less heavy handed appearance 119 The basic design of the Sehzade Mosque with its symmetrical dome and four semi dome layout proved popular with later architects and was repeated in classical Ottoman mosques after Sinan e g the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque the New Mosque at Eminonu and the 18th century reconstruction of the Fatih Mosque 120 121 It is even found in the 19th century Muhammad Ali Mosque in Cairo 122 123 Despite this legacy and the symmetry of its design Sinan considered the Sehzade Mosque his apprentice work and was not satisfied with it 92 124 125 During the rest of his career he did not repeat its layout in any of his other works He instead experimented with other designs that seemed to aim for a completely unified interior space and for ways to emphasize the visitor s perception of the main dome upon entering a mosque One of the results of this logic was that any space that did not belong the central domed space was reduced to a minimum subordinate role if not altogether absent 126 Sehzade Mosque complex in Istanbul 1545 1548 nbsp Sehzade Mosque nbsp Sehzade Mosque view of the exterior and one of the lateral porticos nbsp Sehzade Mosque interior nbsp Cemetery of the complex including the Tomb of Sehzade MehmedAround the same time as the Sehzade Mosque construction Sinan also built the Mihrimah Sultan Mosque also known as the Iskele Mosque for one of Suleiman s daughters Mihrimah Sultan It was completed in 1547 1548 and is located in Uskudar across the Bosphorus 127 128 It is notable for its wide double porch with an inner portico surrounded by an outer portico at the end of a sloped roof This feature proved popular for certain patrons and was repeated by Sinan in several other mosques 129 One example is the Rustem Pasha Mosque in Tekirdag 1552 1553 130 131 Another example is the Sulaymaniyya Takiyya in Damascus the western part of which the mosque and a hospice was built in 1554 1559 132 133 134 135 This complex is also an important example of a Sinan designed mosque far from Istanbul and has local Syrian influences such as the use of ablaq masonry 133 For Rustem Pasha Suleiman s grand vizier and son in law Sinan also built the Rustem Pasha Madrasa in Istanbul 1550 with an octagonal floor plan and several caravanserais including the Rustem Pasha Han in Galata 1550 the Rustem Pasha Han in Eregli 1552 the Rustem Pasha Han in Edirne 1554 and the Tas Han in Erzurum between 1544 and 1561 136 137 138 In Istanbul Sinan also built the Haseki Hurrem Hamam near Hagia Sophia in 1556 1557 one of the most famous hammams he designed which includes two equally sized sections for men and women 139 140 141 Between 1554 and 1564 he was also charged with upgrading the water supply system of the city for which he built several impressive aqueducts in the Belgrad Forest and expanded on the older Byzantine water supply system 142 143 One of Sinan s assistants Hayruddin was responsible for building the Stari Most a single span bridge in Mostar present day Bosnia and Herzegovina that is considered one of the most impressive Ottoman monuments in the Balkans 144 It was originally built between 1557 and 1566 145 146 Other works of the early Sinan period nbsp Mihrimah Sultan Mosque in Uskudar 1547 1548 nbsp Double porch in front of the Mihrimah Sultan Mosque nbsp Rustem Pasha Medrese in Istanbul 1550 nbsp Mosque of the Sulaymaniyya Takiyya in Damascus 1554 1559 nbsp Haseki Hurrem Hammam in Istanbul 1556 1557 nbsp Guzelce Aqueduct near Istanbul between 1554 and 1564 nbsp Stari Most in Mostar 1555 1566 built by Sinan s assistant Hayruddin nbsp Banya Bashi Mosque 1566 Sofia BulgariaThe Suleymaniye complex and after edit In 1550 Sinan began construction for the Suleymaniye complex a monumental religious and charitable complex dedicated to Suleiman Construction finished in 1557 Following the example of the earlier Fatih complex it consists of many buildings arranged around the main mosque in the center on a planned site occupying the summit of a hill in Istanbul The buildings included the mosque itself four general madrasas a madrasa specialized for medicine a madrasa specialized for hadiths darulhadis a mektep Qur anic school for children a darussifa hospital a caravanserai a tabhane guesthouse an imaret public kitchen a hammam rows of shops and a cemetery with two mausoleums 147 148 In order to adapt the hilltop site Sinan had to begin by laying solid foundations and retaining walls to form a wide terrace The overall layout of buildings is less rigidly symmetrical than the Fatih complex as Sinan opted to integrate it more flexibly into the existing urban fabric 147 Thanks to its refined architecture its scale its dominant position on the city skyline and its role as a symbol of Suleiman s powerful reign the Suleymaniye Mosque complex is one of the most important symbols of Ottoman architecture and is often considered by scholars to be the most magnificent mosque in Istanbul 149 150 22 151 The mosque itself has a form similar to that of the earlier Bayezid II Mosque a central dome preceded and followed by semi domes with smaller domes covering the sides The reuse of an older mosque layout is something Sinan did not normally do Dogan Kuban has suggested that it may have been due to a request from Suleiman 152 In particular the building replicates the central dome layout of the Hagia Sophia and this may be interpreted as a desire by Suleiman to emulate the structure of the Hagia Sophia demonstrating how this ancient monument continued to hold tremendous symbolic power in Ottoman culture 152 Nonetheless Sinan employed innovations similar to those he used previously in the Sehzade Mosque he concentrated the load bearing supports into a limited number of columns and pillars which allowed for more windows in the walls and minimized the physical separations within the interior of the prayer hall 153 154 The exterior facades of the mosque are characterized by ground level porticos wide arches in which sets of windows are framed and domes and semi domes that progressively culminate upwards in a roughly pyramidal fashion to the large central dome 153 155 Suleymaniye complex in Istanbul 1550 1557 nbsp Suleymaniye Mosque nbsp Suleymaniye Mosque courtyard nbsp Suleymaniye Mosque interior nbsp Tomb of Suleiman in the cemetery behind the Suleymaniye Mosque nbsp Interior of the Tomb of Suleiman nbsp Salis Medrese one of the madrasas in the Suleymaniye complexAfter designing the Suleymaniye complex Sinan appears to have focused on experimenting with the single domed space 126 In the 1550s and 1560s he experimented with an octagonal baldaquin design for the main dome in which the dome rests on an octagonal drum supported by a system of eight pillars or buttresses This can be seen in the early Hadim Ibrahim Pasha Mosque 1551 and the later Rustem Pasha Mosque 1561 both in Istanbul 156 The Rustem Pasha Mosque one of the most notable mosques in the city is raised on top of an artificial platform whose substructure is occupied by shops and a vaulted warehouse that provided revenues for the mosque s upkeep 157 Most famously the mosque s exterior portico and the walls of its interior are covered in a wide array of Iznik tiles unprecedented in Ottoman architecture 157 Sinan usually kept decoration limited and subordinate to the overall architecture so this exception is possibly the result of a request by the wealthy patron grand vizier Rustem Pasha 103 In Luleburgaz Sinan designed his first mosque with a square baldaquin structure where the dome rests on a support system with a square layout without the semi domes of the Sehzade Mosque design 158 The mosque was part of a religious and commercial complex built for vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha begun in 1559 1560 159 and completed in 1565 1566 159 or in 1569 1571 28 160 The complex was designed to act as a staging post or menzil for travelers and traders and it included a mosque a madrasa a caravanserai a hammam and a mektep primary school all of which is centered around a market street arasta 159 Similar complexes were built on many trade routes across the empire in this era 161 Not long after this Mihrimah Sultan sponsored a second mosque the Mihrimah Sultan Mosque in the Edirnekapi area of Istanbul built between 1562 and 1565 Here Sinan employed a larger square baldaquin structure with a dome resting on four corner buttresses filliing the walls between the buttresses with a multitude of windows which introduced an unusual amount of light into the interior 151 18 162 For much of his career Sinan also experimented with variations of a hexagonal baldaquin design a design that was uncommon in world architecture 163 He used this model in the Sinan Pasha Mosque 1553 1555 in Besiktas the Kara Ahmed Pasha Mosque 1554 in western Istanbul the Molla Celebi Mosque circa 1561 1562 in Beyoglu the Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Mosque 1571 in the Kadirga neighbourhood and the Atik Valide Mosque 1583 in Uskudar 164 The Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Mosque in Kadirga is one of the most accomplished designs of his late career and with this type of configuration 164 In this mosque he completely integrated the supporting columns of the hexagonal baldaquin into the outer walls for the first time thus creating a unified interior space 165 The mosque s interior is also notable for the revetment of Iznik tiles on the wall around the mihrab and on the pendentives of the main dome creating one of the best compositions of tilework decoration in this period 165 Hexagonal square and octagonal mosque designs by Sinan nbsp Hadim Ibrahim Mosque in Istanbul 1551 nbsp Sinan Pasha Mosque in Istanbul 1553 1555 nbsp Sinan Pasha Mosque view of the central dome looking towards the side nbsp Kara Ahmet Pasha Mosque in Istanbul 1554 nbsp Kara Ahmet Pasha Mosque interior nbsp Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Complex in Luleburgaz founded circa 1560 view of the mosque and madrasa courtyard nbsp Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Complex in Luleburgaz interior of the mosque nbsp Rustem Pasha Mosque in Istanbul circa 1561 nbsp Rustem Pasha Mosque interior with Iznik tile decoration nbsp Rustem Pasha Mosque interior view of the dome nbsp Mihrimah Sultan Mosque in Istanbul 1565 nbsp Mihrimah Sultan Mosque interior nbsp Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Mosque in Istanbul 1571 nbsp Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Mosque in Istanbul view of the interior and the mihrabThe Selimiye Mosque and Sinan s late works edit Sinan s crowning masterpiece is the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne which was begun in 1568 and completed in 1574 or possibly 1575 166 167 It forms the major element of another imperial complex of buildings The mosque building consists of two equal parts a rectangular courtyard and a rectangular prayer hall The prayer hall s interior is notable for being completely dominated by a single massive dome whose view is unimpeded by the structural elements seen in other large domed mosques before this 168 This design is the culmination of Sinan s spatial experiments making use of the octagonal baldaquin as the most effective method of integrating the round dome with the rectangular hall below by minimizing the space occupied by the supporting elements of the dome 169 170 The dome is supported on eight massive pillars which are partly freestanding but closely integrated with the outer walls Additional outer buttresses are concealed in the walls of the mosque allowing the walls in between to be pierced with a large number of windows 171 Four semi dome squinches occupy the corners but they are much smaller in proportion to the main dome Sinan also made good use of the spaces between the pillars and buttresses by filling them with an elevated gallery on the inside and arched porticos on the outside 172 The elevated galleries inside helped to eliminate what little ground level space existed beyond the central domed baldaquin structure ensuring that the dome therefore dominated the view from anywhere a visitor could stand 172 Sinan s biographies praise the dome for its size and height which is approximately the same diameter as the Hagia Sophia s main dome and slightly higher the first time that this had been achieved in Ottoman architecture 171 The mihrab carved in marble is set within a recessed and slightly elevated apse projecting outward from the rest of the mosque allowing it to be illuminated by windows on three sides 172 The walls on either side of the mihrab are decorated with excellent Iznik tiles 173 as is the sultan s private balcony for prayers in the mosque s eastern corner 174 The minbar of the mosque is among the finest examples of the stone minbars which by then had become common in Ottoman architecture The stone surfaces are decorated with arches pierced geometric motifs and carved arabesques 175 Selimiye Mosque in Edirne 1568 1574 nbsp Selimiye Mosque nbsp Buttresses and vertical progression on the exterior of the mosque nbsp Selimiye Mosque interior view of the dome nbsp Selimiye Mosque interior view of the dome detail nbsp Selimiye Mosque interior ground level view nbsp Sultan s loge inside the mosque nbsp Details of the stone minbar including pierced geometric decorationIn the precincts of Hagia Sophia Sinan built the Tomb of Selim II one of the largest Ottoman domed mausoleums in 1576 1577 176 In Topkapi Palace one of his most notable works the Chamber or Pavilion of Murad III was built in 1578 177 In 1580 he built the Semsi Pasha Complex a small mosque tomb and medrese complex on the waterside of Uskudar which is considered one of the best small mosques he designed 178 179 180 In 1580 1581 he built the Kilic Ali Pasha Complex in the Tophane neighbourhood Notably this mosque is a miniature version of the Hagia Sophia It is once again possible that this unusual copying of an earlier monument was a request by the patron Kilic Ali Pasha 181 182 Sinan s last large scale commission was the Atik Valide Mosque founded by Nurbanu Sultan on the southern edge of Uskudar 183 It was the largest kulliye and mosque complex Sinan built after the Suleymaniye It was completed in 1583 when Nurbanu died but Sinan probably began work on it in the 1570s 178 184 It consists of numerous structure across a sprawling site Unlike the earlier Fatih and Suleymaniye complexes and despite the large available space there was no attempt at creating a unified or symmetrical design across the entire complex This may suggest that Sinan did not regard this characteristic as necessary to the design of an ideal mosque complex 185 Among Sinan s last works before his death are the Murad III Mosque in Manisa built between 1583 and 1585 under the supervision of his assistants Mahmud and Mehmed Agha 186 as well as the modest Ramazan Efendi Mosque in Istanbul built in 1586 187 102 Upon his death in 1588 Sinan was buried in a tomb he designed for himself at a street corner next to the Suleymaniye complex in Istanbul 186 Late works of Sinan after 1574 nbsp Tomb of Selim II 1576 1577 nbsp Interior of the Tomb of Selim II nbsp Kilic Ali Pasha Mosque in Istanbul 1580 1581 nbsp Kilic Ali Pasha Mosque interior nbsp Chamber of Murad III in Topkapi Palace 1578 nbsp Semsi Pasa Complex in Istanbul 1580 on the shore of Uskudar nbsp Atik Valide Mosque in Istanbul completed in 1584 nbsp Atik Valide Mosque interior nbsp Murad III Mosque in Manisa 1585 nbsp Murad III Mosque interiorClassical architecture after Sinan edit After Sinan the classical style became less creative and more repetitive by comparison with earlier periods 60 Davud Agha succeeded Sinan as chief architect Among his most notable works all in Istanbul are the Cerrahpasa Mosque 1593 the Koca Sinan Pasha Complex on Divanyolu 1593 the Gazanfer Aga Medrese complex 1596 and the Tomb of Murad III completed in 1599 62 188 189 Some scholars argue that the Nisanci Mehmed Pasha Mosque 1584 1589 whose architect is unknown should be attributed to him based on its date and style 190 191 192 Its design is considered highly accomplished and it may be one of the first mosques to be fronted by a garden courtyard 192 191 62 Davud Agha was one of the few architects of this period to display great potential and to create designs that went beyond Sinan s designs but unfortunately he died of the plague right before the end of the 16th century 193 After this the two largest mosques built in the 17th century were both modelled on the form of the older Sehzade Mosque the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque and the New Mosque in Eminonu 194 The Sultan Ahmed I Mosque also known as the Blue Mosque was begun in 1609 and completed in 1617 195 It was designed by Sinan s apprentice Mehmed Agha 196 The mosque s size location and decoration suggest it was intended to be a rival to the nearby Hagia Sophia 197 The larger complex includes a market madrasa and the Tomb of Ahmed I while other structures have not survived 198 In the mosque s prayer hall the central dome is flanked by four semi domes just like the Sehzade Mosque with additional smaller semi domes opening from each larger semi dome 199 The four pillars supporting the central dome are massive and more imposing than in Sinan s mosques 200 201 The lower walls are lavishly decorated with Iznik tiles historical archives record that over 20 000 tiles were purchased for the purpose 202 On the outside Mehmed Agha opted to achieve a softer profile with the cascade of domes and the various curving elements differing from the more dramatic juxtaposition of domes and vertical elements seen in earlier classical mosques by Sinan 203 204 It is also the only Ottoman mosque to have as many as six minarets 151 After the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque no further great imperial mosques dedicated to a sultan were built in Istanbul until the mid 18th century Mosques continued to be built and dedicated to other dynastic family members but the tradition of sultans building their own monumental mosques lapsed 205 Some of the best examples of early 17th century Ottoman architecture are the Revan Kiosk 1635 and Baghdad Kiosk 1639 in Topkapi Palace built by Murad IV to commemorate his victories against the Safavids 206 Both are small pavilions raised on platforms overlooking the palace gardens Both are harmoniously decorated on the inside and outside with predominantly blue and white tiles and richly inlaid window shutters 206 The New Mosque or Yeni Valide Mosque at Eminonu was initially begun by architect Davud Agha in 1597 sponsored by Safiye Sultan However Davud Agha s death a year or two after followed by the death of Safiye Sultan in 1603 caused construction to be abandoned 207 208 It was only resumed on the initiative of Hatice Turhan Sultan in 1661 and finished in 1663 The complex includes the mosque a mausoleum for Hatice Turhan a private pavilion for the sultan and the royal family and a covered market known as the Egyptian Market Misir Carsisi known today as the Spice Bazaar Its courtyard and interior are richly decorated with Iznik or Kutahya tiles as well as with stone carved muqarnas and vegetal rumi motifs 207 208 The similarly named Yeni Valide Mosque complex built in 1708 1711 in Uskudar was one of the last major monuments built in the classical style in Istanbul before the rise of the Tulip Period style 209 210 Classical architecture after Sinan nbsp Nisanci Mehmed Pasha Mosque Istanbul circa 1589 nbsp Interior of Nisanci Mehmed Pasha Mosque nbsp Garden courtyard of the Nisanci Mehmed Pasha Mosque nbsp Cerrah Pasha Mosque Istanbul 1593 nbsp Interior of Cerrah Pasha Mosque nbsp Gazanfer Aga Medrese Istanbul 1596 nbsp Tomb of Murad III Istanbul 1599 nbsp Sultan Ahmed Mosque in Istanbul 1609 1617 nbsp Sultan Ahmed Mosque interior nbsp Baghdad Kiosk in Topkapi Palace 1639 nbsp Interior of the Baghdad Kiosk nbsp New Mosque Yeni Cami in Istanbul completed in 1663 nbsp New Mosque interior nbsp Egyptian Bazaar Spice Bazaar in Istanbul built as part of the New Mosque complex nbsp Yeni Valide Mosque complex in Uskudar 1708 1711 nbsp Yeni Valide Mosque CeilingTulip Period and early 18th century editFurther information Tulip Period architectureFrom the 18th century onward European influences were introduced into Ottoman architecture as the Ottoman Empire itself became more open to outside influences The term Baroque is sometimes applied more widely to Ottoman art and architecture across the 18th century including the Tulip Period 211 151 In more specific terms however the period after the 17th century is marked by several different styles 212 18 The beginning of Ahmed III s reign in 1703 saw the royal court return to Istanbul after a long period of residence in Edirne in the late 17th century 212 Unver Rustem states that constructions from the first years of Ahmed III s reign demonstrate that the new Tulip Period style was already in existence by then 213 The historical period known as the Tulip Period or Tulip Era is considered to have begun in 1718 after the Treaty of Passarowitz and lasted until the Patrona Halil revolts of 1730 when Ahmed III was overthrown The treaty formalized Ottoman territorial losses but also initiated a period of peace It inaugurated a new era of growing cross cultural exchange and curiosity between the Ottoman Empire and Western Europe 214 The period saw significant influence from the French Rococo style part of the wider Baroque style that emerged around this time under the reign of Louis XV 215 In 1720 an Ottoman embassy led by Yirmisekiz Celebi Mehmed Efendi was sent to Paris and when it returned in 1721 it brought back reports and illustrations of the French Baroque style which made a strong impression in the sultan s court 216 151 215 217 In addition to European influences the decoration of the Tulip Period was also influenced by Safavid art and architecture to the east 218 219 Palace architecture of Ahmed III edit nbsp The Fruit Room in the Harem of Topkapi Palace 1705 In 1705 soon after Ahmed III returned the royal court to Istanbul a new dining room was added to the Harem of Topkapi Palace next to the Chamber of Murad III and the Chamber of Ahmed I 220 Known today as the Fruit Room the room is notable for its imagery of flower vases and fruit bowls painted onto wooden panels While floral motifs were well established in Ottoman art and decoration before this these paintings distinguished themselves from earlier examples by their naturalism This reflected an influence from the modes of representation in contemporary European art 221 Ahmed III also built a library in the Third Court of Topkapi Palace inside the Enderun School which was completed in 1719 right before Yirmisekiz s embassy to Paris 222 223 It is built in the late classical style but some of its details foreshadow an end to the classical style such as the absence of pendentives in the corners of the domes and the style of the windows 224 The construction of stand alone library structures was itself a new trend influenced by European ideas as the Ottomans traditionally did not build libraries except as secondary elements attached to religious complexes The Koprulu Library built in 1678 was the first of its kind while other early examples date from the reign of Ahmed III 225 nbsp Illustration in the Zenanname showing women at the Sadabad gardens with the canal and pavilions in the backgroundOne of the most important creations of the Tulip Period was the Sadabad Palace a new summer palace designed and built by Damat Ibrahim Pasha in 1722 1723 for Ahmed III 226 227 It was located at Kagithane a rural area on the outskirts of the city with small rivers that flow into the Golden Horn inlet The palace grounds included a long marble lined canal the Cedval i Sim around which were gardens pavilions and palace apartments in a landscaped setting This overall design probably emulated French pleasure palaces as a result of Yirmisekiz s reports about Paris and Versailles 216 228 The main palace building belonging to the sultan himself consisted of a single block which may be the first time that an Ottoman palace was designed like this in contrast with the multiple pavilions and courtyards of the Topkapi Palace 229 In addition to his own palace however the sultan encouraged members of his court to build their own separate pavilions along the canal The regular inhabitants of Istanbul also used the surrounding area as a recreational ground for excursions and picnics 227 This was a new practice in Ottoman culture that brought the public within close proximity of the ruler s abode for the first time and it was noted by contemporary art and literature such as in the poems of Nedim and in the Zenanname Book of Women by Enderunlu Fazil 227 During the Patrona Halil revolts of 1730 the pavilions and gardens of the upper elites were destroyed by mobs but the sultan s palace itself survived 230 It was repaired by Selim III r 1789 1807 and rebuilt by Mahmud II r 1808 1839 before being demolished by Abdulaziz r 1861 1876 and replaced with the Caglayan Palace 231 Ottoman wooden mansions continued to be built on the shores of the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus until the 20th century although they continued to be based on traditional models of Ottoman domestic architecture 231 Tulip Period fountains and sebils edit The culmination of the Tulip Period style is represented by a series of monumental stand alone fountains that were mostly built between 1728 and 1732 232 233 Water took on an enlarged role in architecture and the urban landscape of Istanbul during the Tulip Period In the first half of the 18th century Istanbul s water supply infrastructure including the aqueducts in Belgrade Forest were renovated and expanded In 1732 an important water distribution structure the taksim was first built on what is now Taksim Square 234 The new fountains were unprecedented in Ottoman architecture Previously fountains and sebils only existed as minor elements of larger charitable complexes or as shadirvans inside mosque courtyards The maidan fountain or a stand alone fountain at the center of a city square was introduced for the first time in this period 235 The first and most remarkable of these is the Ahmed III Fountain built in 1728 next to the Hagia Sophia and in front of the outer gate of Topkapi Palace 232 236 It consists of a square structure with rounded corners surmounted by a roof with five small domes and very wide eaves projecting out over the sides of the structure Each of the four facades of the square structure features a wall fountain while each of the four rounded corners is occupied by a sebil Water was drawn from a cistern inside the structure 232 The stone walls on the exterior are carved with very fine vegetal ornamentation and calligraphic inscriptions Acanthus leaves and other motifs of Baroque Rococo appearance are carved under the projecting eaves of the roof 237 Painting was applied to highlight some carved details a practice that become common in the 18th century 232 The S and C curves of Baroque architecture which were to become popular in later years also make an early appearance in some of the fountain s details 238 Another fountain was built by Ahmed III in the same year at Uskudar near the old Mihrimah Sultan Mosque This fountain is a slightly simplified version of the other one and lacks the corner sebils which are replaced with corner fountains instead 238 A more ornate example this time built by Mahmud I in 1732 is the Tophane Fountain built next to the old Kilic Ali Pasha Mosque at Tophane 239 232 Further northeast is the Hekimoglu Ali Pasha Fountain also built in 1732 which has only two decorated facades with fountains 240 Other important examples of fountains and sebils from the same year are the Saliha Sultan Sebil in the Azapkapi neighbourhood and the Bereketzade Fountain located near Galata Tower 240 Tulip Period fountains and sebils nbsp Ahmed III Fountain near Hagia Sophia 1728 nbsp Ahmed III Fountain details nbsp Ahmed III Fountain in Uskudar 1728 nbsp Tophane Fountain of Mahmud I 1732 nbsp Hekimoglu Ali Pasha Fountain 1732 nbsp Bereketzade Fountain 1732 nbsp Saliha Sultan Sebil and Fountain 1732 Early 18th century religious complexes edit The Damat Ibrahim Pasha Complex built by Ahmed III s grand vizier in 1720 and located near the Sehzade Mosque is one of the most notable religious complexes built in this period It functioned as a darulhadis hadith school and includes a library a small mosque and classroom student cells arranged around a courtyard a cemetery near the street and a sebil at the street corner 241 240 The sebil features some of the best ornamentation of the period 240 The same patron also built the Ibrahim Pasha Moque in his hometown of Nevsehir in 1726 The mosque is still mostly classical in form except in some details such as the unusually thin buttresses around the dome exterior 242 The Tulip Period style also influenced the architecture of the Rizvaniye Mosque complex 1721 1722 one of the most famous religious complexes in Urfa which was built next to the Balikligol pool The complex is known for the long decorative portico which stretches along the pool and opens onto the madrasa of the complex The details most clearly belonging to the Tulip Period are the floral decoration in the mosque s doorway and its mihrab 243 The last major monument of the Tulip Period stage in Ottoman architecture is the Hekimoglu Ali Pasha Mosque complex completed in 1734 1735 and sponsored by Hekimoglu Ali Pasha 244 245 246 This mosque reflects an overall classical form and is very similar to the nearby Cerrah Pasha Mosque late 16th century but the flexible placement of the various components of the complex around a garden enclosure is more reflective of the new changes in tastes For example the main gate of the complex is topped by a library a feature which would have been unusual in earlier periods It also has a very ornate sebil positioned at the street corner next to the founder s tomb The interior of the mosque is light and decorated with tiles from the Tekfursaray kilns which were of lesser quality than those of the earlier Iznik period One group of tiles is painted with an illustration of the Great Mosque of Mecca a decorative feature of which there were multiple examples in this period 244 Early 18th century religious complexes nbsp Sebil of the Damat Ibrahim Pasha Complex in Istanbul 1720 nbsp Rizvaniye Mosque Complex in Urfa 1721 1722 nbsp Damat Ibrahim Pasha Moque in Nevsehir 1726 nbsp Hekimoglu Ali Pasha Mosque in Istanbul 1734 nbsp Library built above the gate of the Hekimoglu Ali Pasha Mosque complex nbsp Sebil of the Hekimoglu Ali Pasha Mosque complex nbsp Hekimoglu Ali Pasha Mosque interiorBaroque period editFurther information Ottoman Baroque architecture During the 1740s a new Ottoman or Turkish Baroque style emerged in its full expression and rapidly replaced the style of the Tulip Period 247 212 This shift signaled the final end to the classical style 248 The political and cultural conditions which led to the Ottoman Baroque trace their origins in part to the Tulip Period when the Ottoman ruling class opened itself to Western influence 212 249 After the Tulip Period Ottoman architecture openly imitated European architecture so that architectural and decorative trends in Europe were mirrored in the Ottoman Empire at the same time or after a short delay 250 Changes were especially evident in the ornamentation and details of new buildings rather than in their overall forms though new building types were eventually introduced from European influences as well 151 The term Turkish Rococo or simply Rococo 248 28 is also used to describe the Ottoman Baroque or parts of it due to the similarities and influences from the French Rococo style in particular but this terminology varies from author to author 251 First Baroque monuments editThe first structures to exhibit the new Baroque style are several fountains and sebils built by elite patrons in Istanbul in 1741 1742 the fountain of Nisanci Ahmed Pasha added to the southwest wall of the Fatih Mosque cemetery the Haci Mehmet Emin Aga Sebil near Dolmabahce and the Sa deddin Efendi Sebil at the Karaca Ahmet Cemetery in Uskudar 252 The Baroque style Cagaloglu Hamam in Istanbul was also built in the same year and was sponsored by Mahmud I demonstrating that even the sultan promoted the style 253 The revenues of this hammam were earmarked for the Hagia Sophia Ayasofya Mosque where Mahmud I built several new annexes and additions These additions included a domed ablutions fountain in 1740 41 that is decorated with Baroque motifs but still maintains a traditional Ottoman form overall 254 255 More indicative of the new style is the imaret that Mahmud I added in the northeastern corner of Hagia Sophia s precinct in 1743 The imaret has an extravagantly Baroque gate which is carved with high relief vegetal scrolls and a spiralling swan neck pediment flanked by marble columns with Corinthian like capitals and surmounted by wide eaves 256 Early Baroque monuments nbsp Entrance to the Fatih Mosque s cemetery with the Fountain of Nisanci Ahmed Pasha 1741 42 on the far left nbsp Haci Mehmet Emin Aga Sebil Istanbul 1741 42 nbsp Fountain of Mahmud I at Hagia Sophia Istanbul 1740 41 nbsp Gate to the imaret of Hagia Sophia Istanbul 1743 nbsp Besir Aga Mosque and sebil Istanbul 1745 nbsp Sebil of the Seyyid Hasan Pasha complex Istanbul 1745 13 The Nuruosmaniye complex edit nbsp Nuruosmaniye Mosque Istanbul completed in 1755 The most important monument heralding the new Ottoman Baroque style is the Nuruosmaniye Mosque complex begun by Mahmud I in October 1748 and completed by his successor Osman III to whom it is dedicated in December 1755 257 Kuban describes it as the most important monumental construction after the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne marking the integration of European culture into Ottoman architecture and the rejection of the classical Ottoman style 13 It also marked the first time since the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque early 17th century that an Ottoman sultan built his own imperial mosque complex in Istanbul thus inaugurating the return of this tradition 258 Historical sources attest that the architect in charge was a Christian master carpenter named Simeon or Simon 259 260 261 The mosque consists of a square prayer hall surmounted by a large single dome with large pendentives The dome is one of the largest in Istanbul 262 measuring 25 75 meters in diameter 263 From the outside the dome sits above four huge arches one for each side of the square pierced with many windows that provide light to the interior The closest precedent to this design in classical Ottoman architecture is the Mihrimah Sultan Mosque in the Edirnekapi neighbourhood 264 265 The projecting apse which contains the mihrab is also comparable to the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne 264 The details and decoration of the mosque are firmly Baroque The curving pediments above the exterior arches have concave flourishes at their edges while the windows doorways and arches of the mosque have mixtilinear i e combination of different curves or round profiles instead of pointed arch profiles 266 267 Most of the entrance portals have pyramidal semi vaults which instead of the traditional muqarnas are carved with many rows of acanthus like friezes and other motifs a composition that is neither Ottoman nor European in style 268 Even more unusual is the form of the mosque s courtyard which is semielliptical instead of the traditional rectangular form 269 Inside the mosque s prayer hall is flanked by symmetrical two story galleries that extend outside the main perimeter of the hall The corners of these galleries on either side of the mihrab area include space for the muezzins on one side and for the sultan s loge on the other thus dispensing with the traditional muezzin mahfili platform in the middle of the mosque This gallery arrangement leaves the central space unencumbered while still dissimulating the supporting piers of the dome 270 The mosque s stone decoration also establishes a new style of capitals that distinguishes the Ottoman Baroque a vase or inverse bell shape either plain or decorated usually with small but prominent volutes at its corners similar to Ionic capitals 271 272 Like earlier imperial foundations the mosque formed the center of a complex consisting of several buildings including a madrasa an imaret a library a royal tomb a sebil and fountain and an imperial pavilion Hunkar Kasir most of which are equally Baroque 273 274 The sebil and fountain that flank the western gate of the complex have curved and flamboyant forms counterbalanced by the plain walls around them which Goodwin calls the epitome of the baroque style for these features 275 The library in the northeastern corner is distinguished by undulating curves and a roughly elliptical interior The tomb which houses the remains of Sehsuvar Sultan has ornate moldings and concave cornices 276 At the eastern corner of the mosque is an L shaped structured which consists of a covered ramp leading to an imperial pavilion This kind of feature first appeared in the 17th century with the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque and was further exemplified by the Hunkar Kasri of the New Mosque in Eminonu At the Nuruosmaniye however this pavilion is more detailed more prominent and more deliberately integrated into the rest of the complex 276 277 It was used as a private lounge or reception area selamlik for the sultan when visiting the mosque and gave him direct access to the sultan s loge inside the mosque 278 Because such imperial pavilions were closer to the public eye than the imperial palace they played a role in enhancing the sultan s public presence and in staging some public ceremonies 279 Accordingly the construction of imperial pavilions as part of imperial mosques aligned itself with the cultural shift taking place in the 18th century around the sultan s official displays of power and such imperial pavilions became ever more prominent in later imperial mosques 280 Details of the Nuruosmaniye complex nbsp Mixtilinear arches in the lateral portico and windows of the mosque nbsp Semi vault above one of the mosque entrances with Baroque friezes replacing muqarnas nbsp Courtyard of the mosque nbsp Interior of the mosque nbsp Sebil of the complex nbsp Imperial pavilion a ramp on the right leads to a private lounge connected to the mosque on the left nbsp The tomb left and library right of the complexThe reigns of Mustafa III and Abdulahmid I edit Mustafa III r 1757 1774 successor of Osman II and a son of Ahmed III engaged in many building activities during his long reign 281 His first foundation was the Ayazma Mosque in Uskudar in honour of his mother Construction began in 1757 58 and finished in 1760 61 282 283 It is essentially a smaller version of the Nuruosmaniye Mosque signalling the importance of the Nuruosmaniye as a new model to emulate 284 It is richly decorated with Baroque carved stonework especially in the mihrab and minbar 285 While the mosque is smaller than the Nuruosmaniye it is relatively tall for its proportions enhancing its sense of height This trend towards height was pursued in later mosques such as the Nusretiye Mosque 286 The Ayazma Mosque differs from others mainly in the unique arrangement of its front facade which consists of a five arched portico reached by a wide semi circular staircase 287 284 This arrangement is similar to another contemporary mosque built in Aydin in 1756 the Cihanoglu Mosque 282 The latter is also an example of Baroque elements appearing outside Istanbul in the mid century 288 Mustafa III s own imperial mosque was built in the center of Istanbul and is known as the Laleli Mosque Its construction began in 1760 and finished in 1764 289 290 Its architect was Mehmed Tahir Agha 290 Due to the sultan s personal wishes its form is based on that of the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne consisting of a main dome supported by eight piers and four corner semi domes thus differing significantly from the Nuruosmaniye s design 291 292 However unlike the Selimiye Mosque the piers are more slender and are mostly integrated directly into the walls The mosque s courtyard is rectangular again leaving the Nuruosmaniye s semi elliptical courtyard as an experiment that was not repeated The decoration is also firmly Baroque with Ionic like capitals round and mixtilinear arches a mihrab similar to the Nuruosmaniye s and other Baroque motifs 293 272 294 The result is a mosque that incorporates the visual style of the Nuruosmaniye in a more restrained way and integrates it more closely with traditional Ottoman architecture 295 Mustafa III also reconstructed the Fatih Mosque after the 1766 earthquake that partially destroyed it The new Fatih Mosque was completed in 1771 and it neither reproduced the appearance of the original 15th century building nor followed the contemporary Baroque style It was instead built in a classical Ottoman style modelled on the 16th century Sehzade Mosque built by Sinan whose design had in turn been repeated in major 17th century mosques like the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque and the New Mosque This probably indicates that contemporary builders saw the new Baroque style as inappropriate for the appearance of an ancient mosque embedded in the mythology of the city s 1453 conquest At the same time it showed that Sinan s architecture was associated with the Ottoman golden age and thus appeared as an appropriate model to imitate despite the anachronism 296 By contrast however the nearby tomb of Mehmed II which was rebuilt at the same time is in a fully Baroque style 297 Architecture under Mustafa III nbsp Cihanoglu Mosque in Aydin 1756 nbsp Ayazma Mosque in Uskudar 1760 61 nbsp Laleli Mosque in Istanbul 1760 1764 nbsp Interior of the Laleli Mosque in Istanbul 1760 1764 nbsp Tomb and Sebil of the Laleli Mosque complex nbsp Fatih Mosque in Istanbul rebuilt by Mustafa III completed in 1771 nbsp Reconstructed tomb of Mehmed II behind the Fatih Mosque circa 1771 During the reign of Abdulhamid I r 1774 1789 more foreign architects and artists arrived in Istanbul and the Baroque style was further consolidated 298 Abdulhamid I built the Beylerbeyi Mosque 1777 1778 and Emirgan Mosque 1781 82 both located in suburbs of Istanbul on the shores of the Bosphorus though both were modified by Mahmud II r 1808 1839 299 300 The Beylerbeyi Mosque is notable for being oriented towards the water while some Istanbul mosques had been built along the waterside before the Beylerbeyi Mosque is the first one which was clearly designed to present its main facade towards the shoreline 301 302 The mosque was intended to serve as the sultan s prayer space when he was residing in one of his palaces along the Bosphorus 303 The prayer hall is a traditional single domed space but the mosque s most innovative and influential feature is the wide two story pavilion structure that occupies its front facade replacing the traditional courtyard or entrance portico This is an evolution of the imperial pavilions which were attached to the side or back of earlier mosques taking on a more residential function as a royal apartment and forming an integrated part of the mosque s appearance This new configuration was repeated in the design of later imperial mosques 304 305 Abdulhamid built his tomb as part of a charitable complex the Hamidiye Complex constructed between 1775 and 1780 in the Eminonu neighbourhood 306 The complex lacks a monumental congregational mosque and includes only a small mosque mescit Its main components were instead a madrasa and an imaret along with the tomb itself and other minor structures The design of the complex was notable for being completely integrated into the pre existing urban fabric instead of being set apart in its own enclosure 307 Across the street from the sultan s tomb was an ornate sebil but this was relocated near the Zeynep Sultan Mosque after 1911 when the complex was partly demolished to widen the street 306 The sebil is considered one of the finest examples of Baroque sebils 281 298 Its surface shows a greater degree of three dimensional sculpting being profusely carved with scrolls shells foliage and other Baroque moldings The decoration also demonstrates a greater Rococo tendency such as asymmetries in the details of the motifs These trends came to characterize Ottoman Baroque architecture in the last quarter of the 18th century 308 Architecture under Abdulhamid I nbsp Beylerbeyi Mosque on the Bosphorus near Istanbul circa 1778 with later renovations nbsp Tomb of Abdulhamid I in Istanbul circa 1780 nbsp Sebil of Abdulhamid I Istanbul circa 1780 Reign of Selim III edit Selim III r 1789 1807 was responsible for rebuilding the Eyup Sultan Mosque between 1798 and 1800 309 310 This mosque is located next to the tomb of Abu Ayyub al Ansari an important Islamic religious site in the area of Istanbul originally built by Mehmed II The new mosque made use of the classical Ottoman tradition by following the octagonal baldaquin design similar to the Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Mosque in the Azapkapi neighbourhood but much of its decoration is in the contemporary Baroque style 309 311 312 Other important Baroque monuments were also built in the Eyup neighbourhood around this time by Selim III s family Before the reconstruction of the mosque Mihrisah Sultan Selim III s mother built a charitable complex nearby in a vibrant Baroque style Its construction took place between 1792 and 1796 313 It consists of a large imaret still functioning today and a mektep primary school but from the street its most visible elements are the tomb and sebil 314 This urban configuration is similar to the earlier Hamidiye Complex 315 The facade of the complex with its vibrantly Baroque sebil and tomb is one of the most notable exterior facade designs in Ottoman Baroque architecture 316 Further south near the 16th century Zal Mahmud Pasha Mosque the Tomb of Sah Sultan Selim III s sister is another important example of a Baroque tomb from this era built in 1800 1801 317 nbsp Tophane Barracks of Selim III right seen in an 1819 engraving by MellingSelim III established a new Western inspired building type in Ottoman architecture the barracks The first barracks of this new tradition the Kalyoncu Barracks in Kasimpasa was built to house sailors and included an accompanying mosque It was commissioned by admiral Cezayirli Hasan Pasha in 1783 84 under Abdulhamid I 318 319 However it was under Selim III that monumental barracks proliferated and became highly visible elements of the urban landscape 320 Most of these early barracks were wooden buildings that were later rebuilt in the 19th century 321 This new building type arose in conjunction with Selim III s reform attempts the Nizam I Cedid New Order which among other things created a new Western style army Selim III built a barracks building for his New Artillery regiment in Tophane near the later site of the Nusretiye Mosque This was destroyed by fire in 1823 and rebuilt by Mahmud II in 1824 322 The largest barracks of the time the Selimiye Barracks was built in southern Uskudar between 1800 and 1803 323 but were burned down by revolting Janissaries in 1812 324 322 They were rebuilt in stone by Mahmud II between 1825 and 1828 and further expanded to their current form by Abdulmecid between 1842 and 1853 325 326 The construction of the Selimiye Barracks was soon accompanied by the construction of the nearby Selimiye Mosque complex between 1801 and 1805 327 325 Three men served as chief court architects during this period but the main architect may have been Foti Kalfa a Christian master carpenter 327 The complex included a mosque and its usual dependencies like a mektep and a hammam More innovatively it also included an array of factories shops and modern facilities such as a printing house all arranged to form the nucleus of a new neighbourhood with a regular grid of streets 327 The mosque is built in high quality stone and in a fully Baroque style 328 Its design illustrates the degree of influence exerted by the earlier Beylerbeyi Mosque as it incorporates a wide imperial pavilion that stretches across its front facade However the design of the imperial pavilion was further refined the two wings of the pavilion are raised on a marble arcade and there is space in the middle between the two wings where a staircase and entrance portico leads into the mosque allowing for a more monumental entrance to be retained 329 The prayer hall is once again a single domed space but the side galleries that are usually present inside earlier mosques have in this case been moved completely outside the prayer hall along the building s exterior The building is also notable for high quality stone decoration with the exterior marked by stone moldings along its many edges and sculpted keystones for its arches 330 331 Architecture under Selim III nbsp Sebil of the Mihrisah Sultan Complex in Eyup Istanbul 1792 1796 nbsp Eyup Sultan Mosque in Istanbul rebuilt by Selim III 1798 1800 nbsp Tomb of Sah Sultan in Eyup Istanbul 1800 1801 nbsp Selimiye Barracks in Uskudar originally built by Selim III circa 1803 but rebuilt by Mahmud II nbsp Selimiye Mosque in Uskudar Istanbul 1801 1805 view of the front facade and entrance portico nbsp Selimiye Mosque side view with external gallery and part of the imperial pavilion right nbsp Interior of Selimiye MosquePalace architecture in the Baroque period edit In Topkapi Palace the Ottoman sultans and their family continued to build new rooms or remodel old ones throughout the 18th century introducing Baroque and Rococo decoration in the process Some examples include the Baths of the Harem section probably renovated by Mahmud I around 1744 332 333 the Sofa Kiosk Sofa Kosku restored in Rococo style by Mahmud I in 1752 334 335 336 the decoration of the Imperial Hall Hunkar Sofasi renovated by either Osman III or Abdulhamid I 337 338 the Kiosk of Osman III completed in 1754 55 339 340 and the decoration of the Imperial Council Divan Hall redecorated in flamboyant Baroque style by Selim III in 1792 and by Mahmud II in 1819 341 As in the preceding centuries other palaces were built around Istanbul by the sultan and his family Previously the traditional Ottoman palace configuration consisted of different buildings or pavilions arranged in a group as was the case at Topkapi Palace the Edirne Palace the Kavak or Uskudar Palace at Salacak the Tersane Palace and others 229 However at some time during the 18th century there was a transition to palaces consisting of a single block or a single large building This trend may have been popularized by the sisters of Selim III in the late 18th century 342 One of his sisters Hadice Sultan d 1822 had a grand shoreline palace at Defterdarburnu near Ortakoy on the Bopshorus 343 Along with the palace of Beyhan and Esma Sultan on the Golden Horn her palace may have been one of the first Ottoman palaces to consist of a single block stretching along the shoreline 344 Most of these palaces have not survived to the present day Among the rare surviving examples Baroque decoration from this period can still be seen in the Aynalikavak Pavilion mentioned above which was restored by Selim III and Mahmud II 345 Beyond Istanbul the greatest palaces were built by powerful local families but they were often built in regional styles that did not follow the trends of the Ottoman capital 346 The Azm Palace in Damascus for example was built around 1750 in a largely Damascene style 346 347 The Azm family also had a major palace in Hama 346 In eastern Anatolia near present day Dogubayazit the Ishak Pasha Palace is an exceptional and flamboyant piece of architecture that mixes various local traditions including Seljuk Turkish Armenian and Georgian It was begun in the 17th century and generally completed by 1784 348 349 350 18th century palace architecture nbsp Baths of the Sultan and Queen Mother Topkapi Palace renovated circa 1744 by Mahmud I nbsp Sofa Kiosk Topkapi Palace restored by Mahmud I in 1752 nbsp Interior of Sofa Kiosk restored by Mahmud I in 1752 nbsp Baroque decoration in the Imperial Hall in the Harem of Topkapi Palace 18th century nbsp Baroque decoration on the exterior of the Imperial Council Divan Hall in Topkapi Palace nbsp Engraving by Melling of Hadice Sultan s Palace on the Bosphorus Istanbul 18th century nbsp Azm Palace Damascus circa 1750 nbsp Ishak Pasha Palace near present day Dogubayazit completed around 1784 Late Baroque monuments under Mahmud II edit The Tomb of Naksidil Sultan mother of Mahmud II built in 1818 near the Fatih Mosque complex in Istanbul is one of the finest Ottoman Baroque tombs and one of the best examples of late Baroque monuments 351 352 It also incorporates some influence from the Empire style which was being introduced in Istanbul around this time 353 The tomb was designed by the Ottoman Armenian architect Krikor Balyan 354 The Nusretiye Mosque Mahmud II s imperial mosque was built between 1822 and 1826 at Tophane Its name commemorates the victory which Mahmud II won by destroying the Janissaries in 1826 the year of the mosque s completion 355 356 Mahmud II also built a new artillery barracks and parade ground near the mosque at the same time replacing the barracks of Selim III which had been destroyed by the Janissaries thus continuing Tophane s association with the age of reforms initiated by Selim III 322 355 The mosque is the first major imperial work by Krikor Balyan 355 357 It is sometimes described as belonging to the Empire style but is considered by Godfrey Goodwin and Dogan Kuban as one of the last Baroque mosques 355 358 John Freely describes it as a mix of Baroque and Empire styles 359 while Unver Rustem describes the style as moving away from the Baroque and towards an Ottoman interpretation of Neoclassicism 357 Goodwin also describes it as the last in a line of imperial mosques that started with the Nuruosmaniye 355 Despite its relatively small size the mosque s tall proportions creates a sense of height which may the culmination of a trend that began with the Ayazma Mosque 360 From the outside the mosque s most notable details are the extreme slenderness of its minarets 361 360 and its two Rococo sebils which have flamboyantly undulating surfaces 360 Baroque monuments under Mahmud II nbsp Tomb of Naksidil Sultan in Istanbul 1818 nbsp Nusretiye Mosque in Tophane Istanbul 1822 1824 nbsp Interior of the Nusretiye Mosque nbsp One of the sebils of the Nusretiye Mosque nbsp 1830s illustration of the Tophane Barracks built by Mahmud II with the Nusretiye Mosque behind 19th century eclecticism and other styles editEmpire style edit During the reign of Mahmud II r 1808 1839 the Empire style a Neoclassical style which originated in France under Napoleon was introduced into Ottoman architecture 362 This marked a trend towards increasingly direct imitation of Western styles particularly from France 353 The purest example of the Empire style in Istanbul is the Tomb of Mahmud II 1840 an imposing octagonal monument designed by Ohannes and Bogos Dadyan 363 326 Other examples are the Cevri Kalfa School on Divanyolu street dated to 1819 364 365 326 and the tomb and library complex of Husrev Pasha in the Eyup neighbourhood dated to 1839 366 The upper section of the Tower of Justice or Divan Tower in Topkapi Palace was also rebuilt in its current form under Mahmud II in 1820 adopting Renaissance and Palladian elements 367 326 Empire style motifs such as colonettes and composite capitals continued to be widely used throughout the 19th century alongside other styles 353 The Hirka i Serif Mosque built between 1847 and 1851 under Abdulmecid I r 1839 1861 is a unique religious building in Ottoman architecture which was designed to house the Holy Mantle Hirka i Serif a relic of the Prophet Muhammad 368 Another mantle and relic the Hirka i Saadet is housed in Topkapi Palace 369 370 Because of this special function the mosque has an unusual design It was built and decorated in a purely Empire or Neoclassical style 369 368 It is fronted by an imperial pavilion with a somber Neoclassical facade and slender minarets that look like Corinthian columns This section leads to an octagonal mosque lit by large windows with a mihrab and minbar fashioned of dark grey marble The sacred relic is kept inside another smaller octagonal building directly behind the mosque 369 368 371 Empire style nbsp Cevri Kalfa School in Istanbul 1819 nbsp Tower of Justice in Topkapi Palace 1820 nbsp Tomb of Husrev Pasha in Eyup Istanbul 1839 nbsp Tomb of Mahmud II in Istanbul 1840 nbsp Interior of the Tomb of Mahmud IIEclecticism edit The Tanzimat reforms began in 1839 under Abdulmecid I and sought to modernize the Ottoman Empire with Western style reforms In the architectural realm this period resulted in the dominance of European architects and Ottoman architects with European training 372 Among these the Balyans an Ottoman Armenian family succeeded in dominating imperial architecture for much of the century They were joined by European architects such as the Fossati brothers William James Smith and Alexandre Vallaury 373 374 After the early 19th century Ottoman architecture was characterized by an eclectic architecture which mixed or borrowed from multiple styles The Balyans for example commonly combined Neoclassical or Beaux arts architecture with highly eclectic decoration 15 As more Europeans arrived in Istanbul the neighbourhoods of Galata and Beyoglu or Pera took on very European appearances 375 Eclecticism in palace architecture edit The Dolmabahce Palace was constructed for Sultan Abdulmecit between June 13 1843 and June 7 1856 376 Construction was finished by 1853 or 1854 but the sultan did not move into the palace until 1856 377 378 379 380 It replaced the Topkapi Palace as the official imperial residence of the sultan It was built on a site along the Bosphorus that had been previously occupied by the old Besiktas Palace and its gardens which had been used and expanded by various sultans since the 17th century until its demolition to make room for the current palace 381 Dolmabahce Palace was designed by Garabet Balyan though his son Nikogos was known to collaborate with him and may have designed the Ceremonial Hall and the palace gates 381 377 382 357 The palace consists mainly of a single building with monumental proportions These characteristics represented a radical rejection of traditional Ottoman palace design 18 The style of the palace is fundamentally Neoclassical but is characterized by a highly eclectic decoration that mixes Baroque motifs with other styles The monumental gates that lead to the palace grounds are especially ornate and distinguished by highly sculptural and eclectic decoration in stone marble and plaster 383 384 The decoration of the palace goes beyond the usual eclecticism seen in contemporary Western architecture as it mixes multiple different styles in the same building It lacks some consistency and unity as a result 385 384 Aside from the European inspired design the organization of the palace still reflected a traditional Ottoman division between the selamlik official section which occupies the southwestern wing of the palace and the harem private section which occupies the northeastern wing The two wings of the palace are separated by the Ceremonial Hall a grand domed hall The different sections of the palace are also centred around cruciform halls another feature retained from the Ottoman tradition 386 387 Dolmabahce Palace 1843 1856 nbsp View of the Dolmabahce Palace from the Bosphorus nbsp Treasury Gate nbsp External facade of the selamlik nbsp Crystal Staircase in the selamlik section of the palace nbsp External facade of the Ceremonial Hall nbsp Interior of the Ceremonial HallMany other palaces residences and pleasure pavilions were built in the 19th century most of them in the Bosphorus suburbs of Istanbul The small single story Ihlamur Pavilion built in 1849 1855 and the slightly larger two story Kucuksu Pavilion built in 1856 were both designed by Nikogos Balyan and feature very ornate facades 388 They were originally used as recreational pavilions or resting areas and did not contain bedrooms though bedrooms were later added to the Kucuksu Pavilion when it was used to house foreign dignitaries 389 The Mecidiye Kiosk in the Fourth Court of Topkapi Palace is another small single story structure in a similar style designed by Sarkis Balyan and built in 1840 390 391 The Beylerbeyi Palace along the shore of the Bosphorus was designed by Sarkis Balyan and his brother Agop Balyan in a Neoclassical style with eclectic and Orientalist interior decoration It was completed in 1864 1865 and replaced an earlier structure by Krikor Balyan from the reign of Mahmud II The palace was used as the sultan s summer residence and as a guest residence for foreign dignitaries Like Dolmabahce Palace its interior is divided into selamlik and harem sections separated by a large central hall 392 393 Soon after this the Ciragan Palace was commissioned by Sultan Abdulalziz r 1861 1876 and completed in 1872 Nikogos or Sarkis Balyan was probably responsible for the design 394 371 It has a severe Neoclassical appearance except for the decoration which is Orientalist and includes carved openwork in the windows 395 The palace was destroyed by fire in 1910 leaving only the seaside facade standing which was later integrated into a hotel in 1987 394 Other 19th century palaces nbsp Mecidiye Kiosk in Topkapi Palace 1840 nbsp Ihlamur Pavilion Istanbul 1849 1855 nbsp Kucuksu Pavilion Istanbul 1856 nbsp Beylerbeyi Palace Istanbul completed 1864 1865 nbsp Interior of Beylerbeyi Palace nbsp Ciragan Palace Istanbul 1872 One of the last major Ottoman imperial creations was the Yildiz Palace a sprawling complex of buildings set amidst a large wooded park Yildiz Park on a hillside overlooking the Bosphorus The area had been a private garden of the sultans since the 17th century and was known as the Ciragan garden during the Tulip Period Selim III Mahmud II Abdulmecid and Abdulaziz each erected various pavilions here but it was Abdulhamid II r 1876 1909 who transformed it into an imperial palace residence and seat of government 396 397 398 After the massive single block palace buildings like Dolmabahce the Yildiz Palace returned to the older tradition of creating many different structures with no overarching site plan Unlike Topkapi Palace though the structures are not linked together around courtyards and they instead resemble a kind of rural mountain village Moreover the palace and inner gardens were separated from the adjacent wooded park which was open to the public 399 One part of the palace complex formed its own private harem section The most imposing structure in the center of the palace is the Buyuk Mabeyn Kosk erected by Abdulaziz and designed by Agop and Sarkis Balyan It has a traditional divanhane layout typical of earlier Ottoman pavilions and a Neoclassical design with Orientalist decoration similar to the contemporary Ciragan Palace 400 The many subsequent buildings built under Abdulhamid II are less monumental and many of them were designed by Raimond D Aronco in an Art Nouveau style One of the largest and most interesting is the Sale or Chalet Pavilion so called because it was built to resemble a Swiss mountain chalet in the Alps The palace complex also included a theatre a greenhouse stables and an official mosque the Hamidiye Mosque 401 Several other pavilions stand in the park outside the private palace enclosure such as the Malta Kiosk and the Cadir Kiosk both designed by the Balyans under Sultan Abdulaziz 397 402 The mosque designed by Sarkis Balyan for Abdulhamid II and dated to 1886 has no resemblance at all to the traditional form of Ottoman mosques and looks more like a church 403 394 It is decorated with neo Gothic and Orientalist details some of which recall the decoration of the earlier Ciragan Palace and the Pertevniyal Valide Mosque discussed below 403 Yildiz Palace complex nbsp Buyuk Mabeyn Kosku built during reign of Abdulaziz r 1861 1876 nbsp Chalet Pavilion built by Abdulhamid II multiple building phases nbsp The Mother of Pearl Hall inside the Chalet Pavilion nbsp Malta Kiosk in Yildiz Park nbsp Cadir Kiosk in Yildiz Park nbsp Hamidiye Mosque 1886 the official mosque of the palace nbsp Interior of Hamidiye Mosque view towards the rear and the imperial balconiesEclecticism in mosque architecture edit After the Nusretiye Mosque one of the earliest mosques designed by the Balyan family is the Kucuk Mecidiye Mosque in Istanbul near Yildiz which was built in 1848 404 At the same time as the Dolmabahce Palace was being built Garabet and Nikogos Balyan also built the nearby Dolmabahce Mosque commissioned by Bezmi alem Valide Sultan in 1853 but finished after her death by her son Abdulmecit in 1855 405 406 The mosque is Neoclassical in style 357 and distinguished by its minarets which are shaped like Corinthian columns up to their balcony levels 377 357 It is a single domed building fronted by a large and imposing imperial pavilion The mosque s upper windows are arranged in a semi circular wheel like design under the arches that support the dome 406 377 The Ortakoy Mosque or Buyuk Mecidiye Mosque located further northeast on a small promontory along the Bosphorus shore has a very similar design that is considered more successful 407 387 The mosque was once again designed by Garabet Balyan and his son Nikogos and was built between 1854 and 1856 405 although Goodwin and Kuban cite the year of construction as 1853 368 384 The Balyans likely worked as a team in order to produce so many works in such a short period 384 The mosque has a Baroque appearance in its use of strong curves but it features an eclectic mix of styles except for the imperial pavilion in front which is entirely Neoclassical 407 368 The mosque is covered in highly ornate and sculptural details that recall the style of the Ceremonial Hall and gates of the Dolmabahce Palace 384 368 The Pertevniyal Valide Mosque in Istanbul was built in the Aksaray neighbourhood of Istanbul in 1871 in honour of Abdulaziz s mother 408 It is usually attributed to the Italian architect Montani Efendi or to Agop Balyan although it s possible that both were responsible for different aspects of the design 409 410 408 The mosque is an intense mix of styles including Ottoman Gothic and Empire styles 409 410 One notable change from previous mosques is the decrease in the imperial pavilion s size relative to the mosque reversing the previous trend of the 18th 19th centuries 409 The use of Ottoman revival features in this mosque is also an indication that the foundations for a future Ottoman revivalist movement were already being laid at this time 411 408 Another eclectic style mosque of the same period is the Aziziye Mosque in Konya built in 1872 This is the only imperial mosque built in Anatolia during the late Ottoman period 412 413 Mosques in eclectic styles nbsp Kucuk Mecidiye Mosque Istanbul 1848 front view facing the imperial pavilion nbsp Kucuk Mecidiye Mosque interior nbsp Dolmabahce Mosque Istanbul 1853 1855 seen from the water nbsp Front view of the Dolmabahce Mosque and its imperial pavilion nbsp Dolmabahce Mosque interior nbsp Ortakoy Mosque Istanbul 1854 1856 nbsp Ortakoy Mosque entrance between the two wings of the imperial pavilion nbsp Interior of the Ortakoy Mosque nbsp Pertevniyal Valide Mosque Istanbul 1871 nbsp Interior of the Pertevniyal Valide Mosque nbsp Aziziye Mosque Konya 1872 New churches and synagogues edit nbsp Stefan Sveti Church 1895 1898 the first steel building in IstanbulThe Tanzimat reforms also granted Christians and Jews the right to freely build new centers of worship which resulted in the significant construction renovation and expansion of churches and synagogues Most of these new constructions followed the same eclecticism that prevailed in the rest of Ottoman architecture of the 19th century 414 Among the notable examples of Greek Orthodox churches is the Hagia Triada Church a prominent building near Taksim Square in Beyoglu which was built by the architect Vasilaki Ioannidi in 1880 414 Another is the Hagia Kyriaki Church in the Kumkapi neighbourhood which was built in 1895 by local architects for the Karaman Greek community Hagia Kyriaki is one of the few modern mosques in Istanbul built in the Byzantine tradition using a central domed layout 415 The Stefan Sveti Church or Church of St Stephen of the Bulgars is a Bulgarian Orthodox church built between 1895 and 1898 in an eclectic style located in the Balat neighbourhood It was the first steel building in Istanbul designed by architect Hovsep Aznavu Its pieces were fabricated abroad and then assembled in Istanbul 415 Among examples of 19th century Armenian churches the Surp Asdvadzadzin Church in Besiktas not to be confused with the Surp Asdvadzadzin Patriarchal Church was built in 1838 by Garabet Balyan Its style deviated from traditional Armenian architecture in Istanbul and reflected instead the Neoclassical or Empire style that the Balyans used during the reign of Mahmud II including an Ottoman style dome 416 The Surp Asdvadzadzin Church in Gaziantep later converted to the Kurtulus Mosque was built between 1878 and 1893 in an eclectic style that references European styles as well as local influences such as ablaq masonry demonstrating that eclecticism was present far outside Istanbul 416 Later on the largest and most famous Catholic church in Istanbul the Church of St Anthony in Beyoglu was built between 1906 and 1912 in a neo Gothic style by architect Giulio Mongeri 415 In addition to places of worship new educational institutions and colleges associated with churches were built 417 In Fener near the Greek Orthodox Patriarchal Church the Phanar Greek Orthodox College or Megalio Scholio in Greek was built in 1881 to house a much older Greek educational institution 418 The structure is one of the most dominating features of the skyline in this area The architect Konstantinos Dimandis most likely designed it with a neo Byzantine style in mind 417 The synagogues of Istanbul s longstanding Jewish community were comparatively unpretentious structures and few ancient synagogues have survived earthquakes and fires over the centuries 415 One of the oldest the Ahrida Synagogue in Balat was rebuilt in its current form in 1709 and reflects the architecture of the Tulip Period though it was restored and refurbished again in the 19th century 419 420 421 Some notable 19th century examples include the Italian Synagogue built in the 1880s with a neo Gothic facade and the Ashkenazi Synagogue inaugurated in 1900 with a European style facade 422 423 424 19th century churches and synagogues nbsp Surp Asdvadzadzin Church in Besiktas Istanbul 1838 nbsp Hagia Triada Church in Beyoglu Istanbul 1880 nbsp Italian Synagogue in Istanbul 1880s nbsp Phanar Greek Orthodox College building in Istanbul 1881 nbsp Surp Asdvadzadzin Church Kurtulus Mosque today in Gaziantep 1878 1893 nbsp Hagia Kyriaki Church in Kumkapi Istanbul 1895 nbsp Ashkenazi Synagogue in Istanbul 1900 nbsp Church of St Anthony in Beyoglu Istanbul 1906 1912 New building types edit Among the new types of monuments introduced to Ottoman architecture during this era clock towers rose to prominence over the 19th century One of the earliest towers and the earliest Ottoman clock tower featuring a bell was the clock tower built by Izzet Mehmed Pasha in Safranbolu in 1798 425 Sometime between 1835 and 1839 Mahmud II erected the oldest clock tower in Istanbul the Tophane Clock Tower near the Nusretiye Mosque which was rebuilt in more monumental form by Abdulmecit in 1848 or 1849 426 427 428 The largest and most impressive clock tower in Istanbul is the Dolmabahce Clock Tower near Dolmabahce Palace which was built by Abdulhamid II in 1890 1894 It mixes late Baroque decoration with the Neoclassical and eclectic style of the 19th century 426 Both these towers along with the Yildiz Clock Tower 1890 429 Bursa Clock Tower rebuilt in 1905 430 and many others are designed with a multi level appearance 374 Other towers across the empire varied considerably in style The Adana Clock Tower 1882 by contrast with the Istanbul examples is a severe brick structure resembling the medieval Italian towers of San Gimignano 374 431 Other towers were built in a form resembling a minaret such as the Corum Clock Tower 1896 374 432 In 1901 Sultan Abdulhamid II r 1876 1909 encouraged the construction of clock towers across the empire for the celebration of the 25th anniversary of his accession to the throne 433 434 The Konak Clock Tower in Izmir is one example built that year Eventually every sizeable Ottoman town was equipped with a clock tower 374 Ottoman clock towers nbsp Safranbolu Clock Tower 1798 nbsp Tophane Clock Tower in Istanbul circa 1848 span data h, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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