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Süleymaniye Mosque

The Süleymaniye Mosque (Turkish: Süleymaniye Camii, pronounced [sylejˈmaːnije]) is an Ottoman imperial mosque located on the Third Hill of Istanbul, Turkey. The mosque was commissioned by Suleiman the Magnificent (r. 1520–1566) and designed by the imperial architect Mimar Sinan. An inscription specifies the foundation date as 1550 and the inauguration date as 1557, although work on the complex probably continued for a few years after this.[1]

Süleymaniye Mosque
Süleymaniye Camii
Religion
AffiliationIslam
Location
LocationIstanbul, Turkey
Location in the Fatih district of Istanbul
Geographic coordinates41°00′58″N 28°57′50″E / 41.01611°N 28.96389°E / 41.01611; 28.96389
Architecture
Architect(s)Mimar Sinan
TypeMosque
StyleOttoman architecture (Classical)
Groundbreaking1550
Completed1557
Specifications
Height (max)53 m (174 ft)
Dome dia. (inner)26 m (85 ft)
Minaret(s)4
Minaret height76 m (249 ft)
Part ofHistoric Areas of Istanbul
CriteriaCultural: i, ii, iii, iv
Reference356
Inscription1985 (9th Session)

The Süleymaniye Mosque is one of the best-known sights of Istanbul and from its location on the Third Hill it commands an extensive view of the city around the Golden Horn. It is considered a masterpiece of Ottoman architecture and one of Mimar Sinan's greatest works.[2][3][4][5] It is the largest Ottoman-era mosque in the city.[6][4]

Like other Ottoman imperial foundations, the mosque is part of a larger külliye (religious and charitable complex) which included madrasas, a public kitchen, and a hospital, among others. Behind the qibla wall of the mosque is an enclosed cemetery containing the separate octagonal mausoleums of Suleiman the Magnificent and his wife Hurrem Sultan (Roxelana).

History edit

Construction edit

Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent chose the architect Mimar Sinan to create a mosque in memory of his son Şehzade (Crown Prince) Mehmed. Suleiman was so impressed with the ensuing Şehzade Mosque (Şehzade Cami) that he asked Sinan to design a mosque for himself too. This mosque would represent the pre-eminence of the Ottoman Empire.[7]

The mosque was built on the site of the old Ottoman palace (Eski Saray) which was still in use at the time and had to be demolished.[8] The Arabic inscription above the entrance to prayer hall gives a foundation date of 1550 and an inauguration date of 1557. In reality, the planning of the mosque began before 1550 and parts of the complex were not completed until after 1557. The final construction expenses were recorded in 1559, relating to some of the madrasas and to the mausoleum of Suleiman's wife, Hürrem Sultan (d. 1558).[1] The mausoleum for Suleiman himself was built after his death on the orders of his son and successor, Selim II, between 1566 and 1568.[1]

 
Interior of the mosque in a 19th-century photograph

Marble spolia from various sites in Constantinople and other parts of the empire were reportedly gathered and shipped to the construction site. Petrus Gyllius, a contemporary observer, wrote about seeing one of the four enormous porphyry columns destined for the mosque's interior being cut down to size and about marble columns being taken from the Hippodrome.[9][10]

In designing the Süleymaniye Mosque, Sinan took inspiration from the Hagia Sophia and the Bayezid II Mosque.[11] Suleiman's intention was to build a mosque that would surpass all others built by his predecessors.[9] Suleiman appears to have represented himself at times as a "second Solomon" and his construction projects in both Jerusalem and Constantinople (Istanbul) appear to reflect this.[12][13] Architecturally, Suleiman's mausoleum (built behind the mosque) references the Dome of the Rock, which was built on the site of the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem. According to popular tradition, Justinian I boasted upon the completion of the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople: "Solomon, I have surpassed thee!" Suleiman's mosque, in turn, references the Hagia Sophia in its layout.[14]

Damages and restorations edit

 
View of the mosque on the skyline of historic Istanbul

The Süleymaniye was damaged in the great fire of 1660 and was restored by Sultan Mehmed IV.[15] Part of the dome collapsed during the earthquake of 1766. Subsequent repairs damaged what was left of Sinan's original decoration (recent cleaning has shown that he experimented with blue, before making red the dominant colour of the dome).[16]

During World War I the courtyard was used as a weapons depot, and when some of the ammunition ignited, the mosque suffered another fire. Not until 1956 was it fully restored again. The mosque was restored again between 2007 and 2010.[17] Parts of the surrounding complex continued to be restored in the decade following.

Architecture edit

Courtyard edit

Like the other imperial mosques in Istanbul, the entrance to the mosque is preceded by a forecourt with a central fountain. The main front gate, on the northwest side of the mosque, projects outward from and above the walls on either side. The entrance portal consists of a recess covered by a triangular vault sculpted with muqarnas, with slender pilasters on either side.[18] Above the muqarnas canopy is an inscription featuring the Sunni version of the shahada (profession of faith).[19] The windows on either side of the portal mark the presence of interior rooms which housed the muvakkithane (chamber of the timekeeper).[18]

The courtyard, measuring around 47 by 57 metres (154 by 187 feet),[20] is of exceptional grandeur with a colonnaded peristyle supported by tall columns of marble, granite and porphyry. The columns are topped by classic Ottoman "stalactite" capitals (carved with muqarnas).[18] On the southeast side of the courtyard, the portico preceding the prayer hall is higher than those on the other three sides, giving this façade a greater monumentality. The three center arches of the northwest portico, corresponding to the front entrance, are also higher than the other arches around them. According to Godfrey Goodwin, reconciling these elements of different heights along the peristyle was Sinan's main aesthetic difficulty.[18] The facade of the prayer hall is also decorated with rectangular Iznik tile window lunettes.[21] It was the first building in which the Iznik tiles included the brightly coloured tomato-red clay under the glaze.[22]

The mosque is equipped with water taps outside the courtyard, between the side entrances of the prayer hall, which are used for performing ablutions. As a result, the drinking fountain in the center of the courtyard is purely decorative. It is a rectangular marble enclosure with a ceiling. The fountain was designed so that water sprayed from the ceiling into the basin below, an unusual feature noted by some 16th-century writers.[23]

Behind the southeast portico, the main entrance to the prayer hall is set within a recess with a complex muqarnas canopy.[10] This is preceded by a dome with a more distinctive design than the other domes of the peristyle. The entrance portal features a foundation inscription carved onto three rectangular panels (two vertical panels on the side and an horizontal one on top). The text was composed by Ebussuud Efendi and its calligraphy, in thuluth script, was created by Hasan Çelebi, a student of Ahmed Karahisari. It states the sultan's name and titles, his genealogy, and a prayer for the continuation of the Ottoman dynasty.[19] The wooden doors of the entrance are made of carved wood,[24] including walnut, ebony, and olive wood, and they are inlaid with ivory and mother-of-pearl.[10][25]

The side entrances of the mosque courtyard have inscriptions as well. The western gate to the courtyard has an inscription reading, "Peace be unto thee! Thou art good, so enter ye to dwell therein" (Quran 39:73). The other entrances of the mosque have similar inscriptions which compare its gates with the gates of paradise.[19]

Minarets edit

 
Detail of the minarets and their sculpted balconies

Four minarets occupy the four corners of the courtyard. The two taller ones have three balconies and rise to a high of 63.8 m (209 ft) without their lead caps and 76 m (249 ft) including the caps.[26] The balconies are supported by consoles carved with muqarnas and they have balustrades carved and pierced with geometric patterns.[26]

The use of four minarets at the corners of a mosque courtyard had been done previously at the Üç Şerefeli Mosque in Edirne,[27] although Sinan introduced a strict symmetry not present in the earlier example.[28] In the history of Ottoman architecture, this many minarets were only added to some mosques endowed by a sultan (princes and princesses could construct two minarets; others only one). The minarets have a total of ten balconies, which is said to reflect the fact that Suleiman I was the 10th Ottoman sultan.[29] By making the outer minarets shorter than the inner ones, Sinan also increased the overall visual impression of a structure rising towards the central dome.[27]

Prayer hall edit

Overall design edit

 
Elevation and plan of the mosque published by Cornelius Gurlitt in 1912

The interior of the mosque is almost a square, measuring 58.5 by 57.5 metres (192 by 189 feet), forming a single vast space dominated by its central dome.[30] The dome is 53 metres (174 feet) high and has a diameter of 26.5 metres (86.9 feet) which is exactly half the height. The square space directly below this dome occupies exactly half the total area of the prayer hall.[31] The layout emulates the dome design of the Hagia Sophia and also follows the layout of the earlier Bayezid II Mosque: the central dome is flanked by semi-domes both in front and behind, covering the main central space, while a row of smaller and lower domes covers each of the two lateral aisles on either side. Between these smaller domes and the main dome are large tympanas filled with windows. This repetition of an older building plan is uncharacteristic of Sinan and may have been the result of Suleiman's personal wishes.[32]

Sinan refined the design by repeating the innovations he had previously used in the Şehzade Mosque. The dome and semi-domes are supported by a limited number of load-bearing pillars and buttresses, allowing for more windows in the walls between them and minimizing any obstructive divisions within the prayer space. He dissimulated many of the load-bearing buttresses by incorporating them into the outer walls, where they project partly inwards and partly outwards so as to make them appear less massive from either side. He built colonnaded galleries between them both on the outside and on the inside, thus further obscuring their presence.[27][33] Because the supporting buttresses are dissimulated within the walls of the building, they do not dominate and obscure its profile as they do at the Hagia Sophia. Thus, on the outside, the arrangement of arches, turrets, and semi-domes forms a more harmonious, almost pyramid-like progression to the central dome, emphasizing the latter as the visual culmination of the structure.[27][28][34] The exception to this is the southeast wall (facing the cemetery), where the buttresses are fully situated on the outside in order to maintain a flat surface for the qibla wall on the inside.[35]

Sinan also introduced greater variety and detail to the mosque's design than in previous works. For example, in the domes covering the lateral aisles, he alternated between domes of different sizes, thus introducing a certain visual rhythm. The spaces in front of the side entrances of the prayer hall, between the pairs of massive buttresses at the corners of the building, are also covered by domes of alternating designs: a circular dome in the middle flanked by two smaller elliptical domes on the side.[36] Moreover, by adding these four side entrances at the corners – instead of two side entrances at the middle of the lateral walls, as was done in the Şehzade Mosque – Sinan found a better use for these corner areas that were typically neglected or omitted in other centrally-planned buildings.[37] On the outside, the two level-galleries have wide projecting eaves which shelter water taps used for ablutions, another innovation.[38][34]

Decoration edit

 
View of the mihrab (niche symbolizing the qibla) and the minbar (pulpit)

The interior decoration is restrained and this seems to have been deliberate on Sinan's part.[39][40] The documents of the mosque's waqf (religious endowment) explicitly claim that ostentatious ornamentation of gold or jewels was avoided in order to conform with the traditions of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[41] It's possible that Suleiman and Sinan regarded calligraphy as the primary form of decoration, in the spirit of a period when the Ottoman sultan championed a more austere Sunni orthodoxy.[42] The calligraphy of the mosque is almost entirely in monumental thuluth form and is attributed to Hasan Çelebi, whom Sinan may have favoured.[41]

 
Calligraphic decoration at the apex of the dome, surrounded by later Baroque painted decoration added by the Fossati brothers

Most or all of the mosque's original painted decoration has been destroyed in the course of later damages and repairs.[16] Very little is known directly about the original painted decoration.[42] The present-day painting of the central dome dates from a 19th-century restoration by the Fossati brothers, who chose to roughly imitate Ottoman Baroque decoration. Traces of the original decoration were found during 20th-century cleaning and suggest that blue colours were used before Sinan replaced them with predominantly red colours. The Fossati-era painting has been maintained in more recent restorations as it is now considered part of the mosque's history.[16] Elsewhere, the voussoirs of the mosque's stone arches are painted in red and white to imitate marble.[43] Except for the inscriptions carved in stone, most of the other calligraphy found throughout the mosque is painted and was thus likely restored in later periods. The restorations appear to have been careful and probably retain some aspects of the original compositions.[16]

The stonework of the mosque is of high quality. The columns have classic Ottoman "stalactite" or muqarnas-carved capitals.[44] On both the front and back sides of the four main pillars are tall and sharply-pointed muqarnas niches. Water faucets are also set into the pillars.[45]

The mihrab consists of the traditional niche with a muqarnas hood. This is framed inside a marble surface in the same shape as the central (northwest) gate of the mosque's courtyard (aligned on the same axis as the mihrab). The edges of this simple marble composition are sculpted into fluted columns that terminate at the top with crescent symbols, while an arabesque runs along the top edge in between.[16]

 
The muezzin mahfili (muezzin's platform)

Next to the mihrab is the minbar, which is crafted in traditional Ottoman form: a narrow staircase climbing from a portal to a canopy, with the sides forming a perfect equilateral triangle. The decoration is simplified in comparison with more ornate Ottoman examples, limited to the geometric patterning of the balustrades and the gilded stars on a blue ground covering the conical cap of the canopy.[16] Located nearby are a simple platform or balcony for the sultan (hünkar mahfili) and another platform for the muezzin (muezzin mahfili), all made of marble with only a few discrete embellishments.[16]

Iznik tile revetments are only used around the mihrab.[41] The repeating rectangular tiles have a stencil-like floral pattern on a white ground. The flowers are mainly blue with turquoise, red, and black, but green is not used.[46] On either side of the mihrab are large Iznik-tile calligraphic roundels with text from the Al-Fatiha surah of the Quran 1:1-7.[47]

 
One of the stained-glass windows on the qibla wall

The most elaborate stained-glass windows are found on the qibla wall, near the mihrab. They are generally believed to have been the work of Sarhos Ibrahim, but some of the present-day windows have likely been restored at later periods.[42] They are designed to display the names of God (Allah), the Islamic prophet Muhammad, and the four Rashidun caliphs.[48]

The names of God and Muhammad are repeated in inscriptions above the lower windows, emphasizing God as the source of Islamic law (Shari'a) and Muhammad as the preacher of that law. The names of the four caliphs are also repeated on the mosque's four main pillars, recalling the four pillars of Sunni theology.[48] The selection of these inscriptions, along with others across the mosque, emphasize the orthodox Sunni character of the mosque, reflecting in part the Ottoman rivalry with the contemporary Safavids, the main Shi'a dynasty to the east.[48]

Complex edit

Mausoleums edit

Behind the qibla wall (southeast wall) of the mosque is an enclosed cemetery which contains the separate mausoleums (türbe) of Sultan Suleiman I and his wife Hürrem Sultan (Roxelana).

The large octagonal mausoleum of Suleiman the Magnificent bears the date of 1566, the year of his death, but it was probably not completed until the following year.[49] It is one of the largest Ottoman mausoleums and its design has been compared to the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, on which it may have been modeled on the latter.[39][50] The mausoleum is surrounded by a peristyle (portico) with a projecting roof supported by 24 columns; the entrance faces towards the east rather than the usual north.[49] Beneath the portico on either side of the entrance are Iznik tiled panels.[51] These are the earliest known tiles decorated with the bright emerald green colour that would become a common feature of Iznik ceramics.[52] The dome, 14 meters in diameter, is the first major example of a double-shelled dome in Sinan's architecture.[50] The interior has a false dome supported on eight columns within the outer shell. There are 14 windows at ground level and an additional 24 windows with stained glass set in the tympana under the arches. The walls and pendentives are covered with polychrome Iznik tiles. Above the windows runs a band of inscriptive tiled panels.[53] The text quotes the Throne verse and the following two verses from the Quran 2:255-258.[51] In addition to the tomb of Suleiman the Magnificent, the mausoleum houses the tomb of his daughter Mihrimah Sultan and those of two later sultans: Suleiman II (ruled 1687–1691) and Ahmed II (ruled 1691–1695).[53][54]

Hurrem Sultan's octagonal mausoleum is dated 1558, the year of her death.[55] The 16-sided interior is decorated with Iznik tiles. The seven rectangular windows are surmounted by tiled lunettes and epigraphic panels. Between the windows are eight mihrab-like hooded niches.[51] The ceiling is now whitewashed but was probably once painted in bright colours.[53]

Other buildings edit

As with other imperial mosques in Istanbul, the Süleymaniye Mosque was designed as a külliye, or complex, with adjacent structures to service both religious and cultural needs. The mosque incorporates the everyday needs for an Islamic community such as prayer, education, health and much more.[8] Due to the sloping nature of the site around the mosque, many of the structures are built above massive substructures that created a more level ground.[56][57] Vaulted rooms existed in these substructures and were probably put to various uses.[56]

The original complex consisted of the mosque itself, four madrasas or religious colleges (medrese), a small primary school (mekteb), a medical school (darüttıb), a hospital (darüşşifa or timarhane), a public kitchen (imaret) that served food to the poor, a caravanserai or guesthouse (tabhane), public baths (hamam), a specialized school (darülhadis) for the learning of hadith, a small domed building for the employees of the cemetery (attached to the latter's southeast wall), and rows of small shops integrated into the outer edges and along the street on the southwest side of the mosque.[58] Many of these structures are still in existence. The former imaret has been converted into a restaurant.[59] The former hospital is now a printing factory owned by the Turkish Army.[citation needed] Just outside the complex walls, to the north is the tomb of architect Sinan.[60] It was completely restored in 1922.[61]

Most of the buildings are classical Ottoman courtyard structures consisting of a rectangular courtyard surrounded by a domed peristyle portico giving access to domed rooms.[58] In the madrasas, Sinan modified some details of the typical layout for functional reasons. The Salis Medrese and Rabı Medrese, located on the northeast side of the mosque where the ground slopes down towards the Golden Horn, have a "stepped" design in which the courtyard descends in three terraces connected by stairs while the domed rooms are built at progressively lower levels alongside it.[62] The current remains of the hadith school (darülhadis) have been crudely restored. It consists of a long line of small vaulted rooms on the eastern edge of the complex.[63] According to Doğan Kuban, the original school must have had a different appearance.[64] The triangular plaza between this structure and the courtyard was once used for weekly wrestling matches.[65]

The two other madrasas, on the southwest side, are known as the Sani Medrese and Evvel Medrese and have regular floor plans on flatter ground.[66] Of the medical school (darüttıb or Tıp Medrese[56]) next to these, not much has survived except for the rooms on the northeast side.[64] All three of these madrasas are fronted by shops on their northeast sides (the sides facing the mosque), which contributed revenues to the complex. This created a market street known as the Tiryaki Çarșısı, the "Antidote Market", due to the former presence of coffee houses and shops devoted to the smoking of hashish.[67][64] A small primary school (sibyan mekteb), consisting of two domed rooms, is attached to the eastern corner of the Evvel Medrese, though separated from the main building by a narrow garden.[68]

Burials edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Necipoğlu 2005, p. 208.
  2. ^ Bloom, Jonathan M.; Blair, Sheila S., eds. (2009). "Architecture; VI. c. 1250–c. 1500". The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. p. 163. ISBN 9780195309911.
  3. ^ Kuban 2010, p. 277.
  4. ^ a b Sumner-Boyd & Freely 2010, p. 199.
  5. ^ Gharipour, Mohammad, ed. (2019). Calligraphy and Architecture in the Muslim World. Edinburgh University Press. p. 246. ISBN 978-1-4744-6842-8.
  6. ^ Petersen, Andrew (2002). Dictionary of Islamic Architecture. Routledge. p. 260. ISBN 978-1-134-61366-3.
  7. ^ Gabr, Aly (2001). "Rediscovery: Mimar Sinan, Suleyman the Magnificent & the Suleymaniye". Medina Magazine.
  8. ^ a b Kuban, Dogan (1987). "Süleymaniye and Sixteenth-century Istanbul". Journal of the Islamic Environmental Design Research Centre 1-2: 4 – via archnet.org.
  9. ^ a b Necipoğlu 2005, p. 209.
  10. ^ a b c Goodwin 2003, p. 230.
  11. ^ Migeon, Gaston (2009). Art of Islam. Parkstone International. pp. lxxii.
  12. ^ Neci̇poğlu-Kafadar 1985, pp. 100–104.
  13. ^ Neci̇poğlu 2008, p. 61.
  14. ^ Neci̇poğlu-Kafadar 1985, pp. 100–101.
  15. ^ Baer 2004.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Goodwin 2003, p. 235.
  17. ^ A.A (9 November 2010). "Süleymaniye Camii restorasyonunda sona doğru". www.hurriyet.com.tr (in Turkish). Retrieved 2022-08-24.
  18. ^ a b c d Goodwin 2003, p. 228.
  19. ^ a b c Necipoğlu, Gülru (1985). "The Süleymaniye Complex in Istanbul: An Interpretation". Muqarnas. 3: 110.
  20. ^ Blair & Bloom 1995, p. 222.
  21. ^ Necipoğlu 2005, p. 217.
  22. ^ Denny 2004, p. 79.
  23. ^ Necipoğlu 2005, pp. 213–215.
  24. ^ Bloom, Jonathan M.; Blair, Sheila S., eds. (2009). "Istanbul". The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture. Oxford University Press. p. 325. ISBN 9780195309911.
  25. ^ Migeon, Gaston; Saladin, Henri (2012). Art of Islam. Parkstone International. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-78042-993-9.
  26. ^ a b Goodwin 2003, p. 226.
  27. ^ a b c d Blair & Bloom 1995, p. 222-224.
  28. ^ a b Goodwin 2003, p. 225.
  29. ^ Neci̇poğlu-Kafadar 1985, pp. 105–106.
  30. ^ Sumner-Boyd & Freely 2010, p. 200.
  31. ^ Goodwin 2003, p. 231.
  32. ^ Kuban 2010, p. 280-283.
  33. ^ Kuban 2010, p. 282-284.
  34. ^ a b Necipoğlu 2005, p. 213.
  35. ^ Goodwin 2003, pp. 225–226.
  36. ^ Goodwin 2003, pp. 227–228.
  37. ^ Goodwin 2003, pp. 232.
  38. ^ Goodwin 2003, p. 227.
  39. ^ a b Blair & Bloom 1995, p. 224.
  40. ^ Kuban 2010, pp. 289–290.
  41. ^ a b c Necipoğlu 2005, p. 216.
  42. ^ a b c Kuban 2010, p. 290.
  43. ^ Goodwin 2003, pp. 233–235.
  44. ^ Goodwin 2003, pp. 227, 233.
  45. ^ Goodwin 2003, p. 233.
  46. ^ Denny 2004, pp. 86, 209.
  47. ^ Necipoğlu 2005, p. 219 fig 183.
  48. ^ a b c Neci̇poğlu-Kafadar 1985, p. 110.
  49. ^ a b Goodwin 2003, pp. 237–238.
  50. ^ a b Kuban 2010, p. 293.
  51. ^ a b c Necipoğlu 2005, p. 220.
  52. ^ Atasoy & Raby 1989, p. 230.
  53. ^ a b c Goodwin 2003, p. 238.
  54. ^ Sumner-Boyd & Freely 2010, p. 202.
  55. ^ Goodwin 2003, p. 237.
  56. ^ a b c Goodwin 2003, pp. 217–219.
  57. ^ Kuban 2010, pp. 290–292.
  58. ^ a b Kuban 2010, pp. 279, 290–292.
  59. ^ Sumner-Boyd & Freely 2010, p. 207.
  60. ^ Necipoğlu 2005, pp. 150, 205 Fig. 167 (13).
  61. ^ Goodwin 2003, p. 222.
  62. ^ Kuban 2010, p. 291.
  63. ^ Goodwin 2003, pp. 223–224.
  64. ^ a b c Kuban 2010, p. 292.
  65. ^ Goodwin 2003, p. 223.
  66. ^ Kuban 2010, pp. 279, 290–291.
  67. ^ Goodwin 2003, p. 218.
  68. ^ Goodwin 2003, pp. 218–219.

Sources edit

  • Atasoy, Nurhan; Raby, Julian (1989). Petsopoulos, Yanni (ed.). Iznik: The Pottery of Ottoman Turkey. London: Alexandria Press. ISBN 978-1-85669-054-6.
  • Baer, Marc David (2004). "The great fire of 1660 and the Islamization of Christian and Jewish space in Istanbul". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 36 (2): 159–181. doi:10.1017/S002074380436201X. JSTOR 3880030. S2CID 161640738.
  • Blair, Sheila S.; Bloom, Jonathan M. (1995). The Art and Architecture of Islam 1250-1800. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300064650.
  • Denny, Walter B. (2004). Iznik: the Artistry of Ottoman Ceramics. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-51192-3.
  • Goodwin, Godfrey (2003) [1971]. A History of Ottoman Architecture. London: Thames & Hudson. pp. 215–239. ISBN 978-0-500-51192-3.
  • Neci̇poğlu-Kafadar, Gülru (1985). "The Süleymaniye Complex in Istanbul: an interpretation". Muqarnas. 3: 92–117. doi:10.2307/1523086. JSTOR 1523086.
  • Kuban, Doğan (2010). Ottoman Architecture. Translated by Mill, Adair. Antique Collectors' Club. ISBN 9781851496044.
  • Necipoğlu, Gülru (2005). The Age of Sinan: Architectural Culture in the Ottoman Empire. London: Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1-86189-253-9.
  • Neci̇poğlu, Gülru (2008). "The Dome of the Rock as Palimpsest: 'Abd al-Malik's Grand Narrative and Sultan Süleyman's Glosses". Muqarnas. 25: 17–105. doi:10.1163/22118993_02501004.
  • Sumner-Boyd, Hilary; Freely, John (2010). Strolling through Istanbul. London: Tauris Parke. pp. 199–208. ISBN 978-1-84885-154-2.

Further reading edit

  • Barkan, Ömer Lûtfi (1972–1979). Süleymaniye Cami ve İmareti İnşaatı (1550-1557) (in Turkish). Vol. (2 Volumes). Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi. OCLC 614354340.
  • Faroqhi, Suraiyah (2005). Subjects of the Sultan: Culture and Daily Life in the Ottoman Empire. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 1-85043-760-2.
  • Kolay, İlknur Aktuğ; Çeli̇k, Serpi̇l (2006). "Ottoman stone acquisition in the mid-sixteenth century: the Süleymani̇ye Complex in Istanbul". Muqarnas. 23: 251–272. JSTOR 25482444.
  • Morkoç, Selen B. (2008). "Reading architecture from the text: the Ottoman story of the four marble columns". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 67: 31–47. doi:10.1086/586669. S2CID 161434861.
  • Rogers, J.M. (2007). Sinan: Makers of Islamic Civilization. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84511-096-3.

External links edit

  • Süleymaniye Külliyesi, Archnet
  • Süleymaniye Mosque ve Mimar Sinan (in Turkish)
  • , Saudi Aramco World.
  • Photographs by Dick Osseman

süleymaniye, mosque, süleymaniye, redirects, here, other, uses, süleymaniye, disambiguation, turkish, süleymaniye, camii, pronounced, sylejˈmaːnije, ottoman, imperial, mosque, located, third, hill, istanbul, turkey, mosque, commissioned, suleiman, magnificent,. Suleymaniye redirects here For other uses see Suleymaniye disambiguation The Suleymaniye Mosque Turkish Suleymaniye Camii pronounced sylejˈmaːnije is an Ottoman imperial mosque located on the Third Hill of Istanbul Turkey The mosque was commissioned by Suleiman the Magnificent r 1520 1566 and designed by the imperial architect Mimar Sinan An inscription specifies the foundation date as 1550 and the inauguration date as 1557 although work on the complex probably continued for a few years after this 1 Suleymaniye MosqueSuleymaniye CamiiReligionAffiliationIslamLocationLocationIstanbul TurkeyLocation in the Fatih district of IstanbulGeographic coordinates41 00 58 N 28 57 50 E 41 01611 N 28 96389 E 41 01611 28 96389ArchitectureArchitect s Mimar SinanTypeMosqueStyleOttoman architecture Classical Groundbreaking1550Completed1557SpecificationsHeight max 53 m 174 ft Dome dia inner 26 m 85 ft Minaret s 4Minaret height76 m 249 ft UNESCO World Heritage SitePart ofHistoric Areas of IstanbulCriteriaCultural i ii iii ivReference356Inscription1985 9th Session The Suleymaniye Mosque is one of the best known sights of Istanbul and from its location on the Third Hill it commands an extensive view of the city around the Golden Horn It is considered a masterpiece of Ottoman architecture and one of Mimar Sinan s greatest works 2 3 4 5 It is the largest Ottoman era mosque in the city 6 4 Like other Ottoman imperial foundations the mosque is part of a larger kulliye religious and charitable complex which included madrasas a public kitchen and a hospital among others Behind the qibla wall of the mosque is an enclosed cemetery containing the separate octagonal mausoleums of Suleiman the Magnificent and his wife Hurrem Sultan Roxelana Contents 1 History 1 1 Construction 1 2 Damages and restorations 2 Architecture 2 1 Courtyard 2 2 Minarets 2 3 Prayer hall 2 3 1 Overall design 2 3 2 Decoration 3 Complex 3 1 Mausoleums 3 2 Other buildings 4 Burials 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editConstruction edit Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent chose the architect Mimar Sinan to create a mosque in memory of his son Sehzade Crown Prince Mehmed Suleiman was so impressed with the ensuing Sehzade Mosque Sehzade Cami that he asked Sinan to design a mosque for himself too This mosque would represent the pre eminence of the Ottoman Empire 7 The mosque was built on the site of the old Ottoman palace Eski Saray which was still in use at the time and had to be demolished 8 The Arabic inscription above the entrance to prayer hall gives a foundation date of 1550 and an inauguration date of 1557 In reality the planning of the mosque began before 1550 and parts of the complex were not completed until after 1557 The final construction expenses were recorded in 1559 relating to some of the madrasas and to the mausoleum of Suleiman s wife Hurrem Sultan d 1558 1 The mausoleum for Suleiman himself was built after his death on the orders of his son and successor Selim II between 1566 and 1568 1 nbsp Interior of the mosque in a 19th century photograph Marble spolia from various sites in Constantinople and other parts of the empire were reportedly gathered and shipped to the construction site Petrus Gyllius a contemporary observer wrote about seeing one of the four enormous porphyry columns destined for the mosque s interior being cut down to size and about marble columns being taken from the Hippodrome 9 10 In designing the Suleymaniye Mosque Sinan took inspiration from the Hagia Sophia and the Bayezid II Mosque 11 Suleiman s intention was to build a mosque that would surpass all others built by his predecessors 9 Suleiman appears to have represented himself at times as a second Solomon and his construction projects in both Jerusalem and Constantinople Istanbul appear to reflect this 12 13 Architecturally Suleiman s mausoleum built behind the mosque references the Dome of the Rock which was built on the site of the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem According to popular tradition Justinian I boasted upon the completion of the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople Solomon I have surpassed thee Suleiman s mosque in turn references the Hagia Sophia in its layout 14 Damages and restorations edit nbsp View of the mosque on the skyline of historic Istanbul The Suleymaniye was damaged in the great fire of 1660 and was restored by Sultan Mehmed IV 15 Part of the dome collapsed during the earthquake of 1766 Subsequent repairs damaged what was left of Sinan s original decoration recent cleaning has shown that he experimented with blue before making red the dominant colour of the dome 16 During World War I the courtyard was used as a weapons depot and when some of the ammunition ignited the mosque suffered another fire Not until 1956 was it fully restored again The mosque was restored again between 2007 and 2010 17 Parts of the surrounding complex continued to be restored in the decade following Architecture editCourtyard edit Like the other imperial mosques in Istanbul the entrance to the mosque is preceded by a forecourt with a central fountain The main front gate on the northwest side of the mosque projects outward from and above the walls on either side The entrance portal consists of a recess covered by a triangular vault sculpted with muqarnas with slender pilasters on either side 18 Above the muqarnas canopy is an inscription featuring the Sunni version of the shahada profession of faith 19 The windows on either side of the portal mark the presence of interior rooms which housed the muvakkithane chamber of the timekeeper 18 The courtyard measuring around 47 by 57 metres 154 by 187 feet 20 is of exceptional grandeur with a colonnaded peristyle supported by tall columns of marble granite and porphyry The columns are topped by classic Ottoman stalactite capitals carved with muqarnas 18 On the southeast side of the courtyard the portico preceding the prayer hall is higher than those on the other three sides giving this facade a greater monumentality The three center arches of the northwest portico corresponding to the front entrance are also higher than the other arches around them According to Godfrey Goodwin reconciling these elements of different heights along the peristyle was Sinan s main aesthetic difficulty 18 The facade of the prayer hall is also decorated with rectangular Iznik tile window lunettes 21 It was the first building in which the Iznik tiles included the brightly coloured tomato red clay under the glaze 22 The mosque is equipped with water taps outside the courtyard between the side entrances of the prayer hall which are used for performing ablutions As a result the drinking fountain in the center of the courtyard is purely decorative It is a rectangular marble enclosure with a ceiling The fountain was designed so that water sprayed from the ceiling into the basin below an unusual feature noted by some 16th century writers 23 Behind the southeast portico the main entrance to the prayer hall is set within a recess with a complex muqarnas canopy 10 This is preceded by a dome with a more distinctive design than the other domes of the peristyle The entrance portal features a foundation inscription carved onto three rectangular panels two vertical panels on the side and an horizontal one on top The text was composed by Ebussuud Efendi and its calligraphy in thuluth script was created by Hasan Celebi a student of Ahmed Karahisari It states the sultan s name and titles his genealogy and a prayer for the continuation of the Ottoman dynasty 19 The wooden doors of the entrance are made of carved wood 24 including walnut ebony and olive wood and they are inlaid with ivory and mother of pearl 10 25 The side entrances of the mosque courtyard have inscriptions as well The western gate to the courtyard has an inscription reading Peace be unto thee Thou art good so enter ye to dwell therein Quran 39 73 The other entrances of the mosque have similar inscriptions which compare its gates with the gates of paradise 19 nbsp The main entrance to the courtyard northwest side of the mosque nbsp Courtyard of the mosque with central fountain sadirvan looking towards the entrance nbsp Courtyard of the mosque looking towards the prayer hall nbsp One of the stalactite or muqarnas capitals in the courtyard nbsp Inside the central fountain of the courtyard where water originally sprayed down from the ceiling nbsp The entrance portal to the prayer hall from the courtyard Minarets edit nbsp Detail of the minarets and their sculpted balconies Four minarets occupy the four corners of the courtyard The two taller ones have three balconies and rise to a high of 63 8 m 209 ft without their lead caps and 76 m 249 ft including the caps 26 The balconies are supported by consoles carved with muqarnas and they have balustrades carved and pierced with geometric patterns 26 The use of four minarets at the corners of a mosque courtyard had been done previously at the Uc Serefeli Mosque in Edirne 27 although Sinan introduced a strict symmetry not present in the earlier example 28 In the history of Ottoman architecture this many minarets were only added to some mosques endowed by a sultan princes and princesses could construct two minarets others only one The minarets have a total of ten balconies which is said to reflect the fact that Suleiman I was the 10th Ottoman sultan 29 By making the outer minarets shorter than the inner ones Sinan also increased the overall visual impression of a structure rising towards the central dome 27 Prayer hall edit Overall design edit nbsp Elevation and plan of the mosque published by Cornelius Gurlitt in 1912 The interior of the mosque is almost a square measuring 58 5 by 57 5 metres 192 by 189 feet forming a single vast space dominated by its central dome 30 The dome is 53 metres 174 feet high and has a diameter of 26 5 metres 86 9 feet which is exactly half the height The square space directly below this dome occupies exactly half the total area of the prayer hall 31 The layout emulates the dome design of the Hagia Sophia and also follows the layout of the earlier Bayezid II Mosque the central dome is flanked by semi domes both in front and behind covering the main central space while a row of smaller and lower domes covers each of the two lateral aisles on either side Between these smaller domes and the main dome are large tympanas filled with windows This repetition of an older building plan is uncharacteristic of Sinan and may have been the result of Suleiman s personal wishes 32 Sinan refined the design by repeating the innovations he had previously used in the Sehzade Mosque The dome and semi domes are supported by a limited number of load bearing pillars and buttresses allowing for more windows in the walls between them and minimizing any obstructive divisions within the prayer space He dissimulated many of the load bearing buttresses by incorporating them into the outer walls where they project partly inwards and partly outwards so as to make them appear less massive from either side He built colonnaded galleries between them both on the outside and on the inside thus further obscuring their presence 27 33 Because the supporting buttresses are dissimulated within the walls of the building they do not dominate and obscure its profile as they do at the Hagia Sophia Thus on the outside the arrangement of arches turrets and semi domes forms a more harmonious almost pyramid like progression to the central dome emphasizing the latter as the visual culmination of the structure 27 28 34 The exception to this is the southeast wall facing the cemetery where the buttresses are fully situated on the outside in order to maintain a flat surface for the qibla wall on the inside 35 Sinan also introduced greater variety and detail to the mosque s design than in previous works For example in the domes covering the lateral aisles he alternated between domes of different sizes thus introducing a certain visual rhythm The spaces in front of the side entrances of the prayer hall between the pairs of massive buttresses at the corners of the building are also covered by domes of alternating designs a circular dome in the middle flanked by two smaller elliptical domes on the side 36 Moreover by adding these four side entrances at the corners instead of two side entrances at the middle of the lateral walls as was done in the Sehzade Mosque Sinan found a better use for these corner areas that were typically neglected or omitted in other centrally planned buildings 37 On the outside the two level galleries have wide projecting eaves which shelter water taps used for ablutions another innovation 38 34 nbsp View of the mosque s exterior northeast side nbsp Interior of the prayer hall looking towards the mihrab nbsp View of the semi domes around the central dome nbsp One of the side aisles of the mosque nbsp One of the arcaded galleries on the mosque s exterior and the water taps for ablutions Decoration edit nbsp View of the mihrab niche symbolizing the qibla and the minbar pulpit The interior decoration is restrained and this seems to have been deliberate on Sinan s part 39 40 The documents of the mosque s waqf religious endowment explicitly claim that ostentatious ornamentation of gold or jewels was avoided in order to conform with the traditions of the Islamic prophet Muhammad 41 It s possible that Suleiman and Sinan regarded calligraphy as the primary form of decoration in the spirit of a period when the Ottoman sultan championed a more austere Sunni orthodoxy 42 The calligraphy of the mosque is almost entirely in monumental thuluth form and is attributed to Hasan Celebi whom Sinan may have favoured 41 nbsp Calligraphic decoration at the apex of the dome surrounded by later Baroque painted decoration added by the Fossati brothers Most or all of the mosque s original painted decoration has been destroyed in the course of later damages and repairs 16 Very little is known directly about the original painted decoration 42 The present day painting of the central dome dates from a 19th century restoration by the Fossati brothers who chose to roughly imitate Ottoman Baroque decoration Traces of the original decoration were found during 20th century cleaning and suggest that blue colours were used before Sinan replaced them with predominantly red colours The Fossati era painting has been maintained in more recent restorations as it is now considered part of the mosque s history 16 Elsewhere the voussoirs of the mosque s stone arches are painted in red and white to imitate marble 43 Except for the inscriptions carved in stone most of the other calligraphy found throughout the mosque is painted and was thus likely restored in later periods The restorations appear to have been careful and probably retain some aspects of the original compositions 16 The stonework of the mosque is of high quality The columns have classic Ottoman stalactite or muqarnas carved capitals 44 On both the front and back sides of the four main pillars are tall and sharply pointed muqarnas niches Water faucets are also set into the pillars 45 The mihrab consists of the traditional niche with a muqarnas hood This is framed inside a marble surface in the same shape as the central northwest gate of the mosque s courtyard aligned on the same axis as the mihrab The edges of this simple marble composition are sculpted into fluted columns that terminate at the top with crescent symbols while an arabesque runs along the top edge in between 16 nbsp The muezzin mahfili muezzin s platform Next to the mihrab is the minbar which is crafted in traditional Ottoman form a narrow staircase climbing from a portal to a canopy with the sides forming a perfect equilateral triangle The decoration is simplified in comparison with more ornate Ottoman examples limited to the geometric patterning of the balustrades and the gilded stars on a blue ground covering the conical cap of the canopy 16 Located nearby are a simple platform or balcony for the sultan hunkar mahfili and another platform for the muezzin muezzin mahfili all made of marble with only a few discrete embellishments 16 Iznik tile revetments are only used around the mihrab 41 The repeating rectangular tiles have a stencil like floral pattern on a white ground The flowers are mainly blue with turquoise red and black but green is not used 46 On either side of the mihrab are large Iznik tile calligraphic roundels with text from the Al Fatiha surah of the Quran 1 1 7 47 nbsp One of the stained glass windows on the qibla wall The most elaborate stained glass windows are found on the qibla wall near the mihrab They are generally believed to have been the work of Sarhos Ibrahim but some of the present day windows have likely been restored at later periods 42 They are designed to display the names of God Allah the Islamic prophet Muhammad and the four Rashidun caliphs 48 The names of God and Muhammad are repeated in inscriptions above the lower windows emphasizing God as the source of Islamic law Shari a and Muhammad as the preacher of that law The names of the four caliphs are also repeated on the mosque s four main pillars recalling the four pillars of Sunni theology 48 The selection of these inscriptions along with others across the mosque emphasize the orthodox Sunni character of the mosque reflecting in part the Ottoman rivalry with the contemporary Safavids the main Shi a dynasty to the east 48 Complex editMausoleums edit Behind the qibla wall southeast wall of the mosque is an enclosed cemetery which contains the separate mausoleums turbe of Sultan Suleiman I and his wife Hurrem Sultan Roxelana The large octagonal mausoleum of Suleiman the Magnificent bears the date of 1566 the year of his death but it was probably not completed until the following year 49 It is one of the largest Ottoman mausoleums and its design has been compared to the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem on which it may have been modeled on the latter 39 50 The mausoleum is surrounded by a peristyle portico with a projecting roof supported by 24 columns the entrance faces towards the east rather than the usual north 49 Beneath the portico on either side of the entrance are Iznik tiled panels 51 These are the earliest known tiles decorated with the bright emerald green colour that would become a common feature of Iznik ceramics 52 The dome 14 meters in diameter is the first major example of a double shelled dome in Sinan s architecture 50 The interior has a false dome supported on eight columns within the outer shell There are 14 windows at ground level and an additional 24 windows with stained glass set in the tympana under the arches The walls and pendentives are covered with polychrome Iznik tiles Above the windows runs a band of inscriptive tiled panels 53 The text quotes the Throne verse and the following two verses from the Quran 2 255 258 51 In addition to the tomb of Suleiman the Magnificent the mausoleum houses the tomb of his daughter Mihrimah Sultan and those of two later sultans Suleiman II ruled 1687 1691 and Ahmed II ruled 1691 1695 53 54 Hurrem Sultan s octagonal mausoleum is dated 1558 the year of her death 55 The 16 sided interior is decorated with Iznik tiles The seven rectangular windows are surmounted by tiled lunettes and epigraphic panels Between the windows are eight mihrab like hooded niches 51 The ceiling is now whitewashed but was probably once painted in bright colours 53 nbsp The cemetery behind the mosque nbsp Mausoleum of Suleiman the Magnificent nbsp Detail of Iznil tiles under the portico of Suleiman s mausoleum nbsp Interior of Suleiman s mausoleum nbsp Mausoleum of Hurrem Sultan Roxelana nbsp Interior of Hurrem Sultan s mausoleum Other buildings edit As with other imperial mosques in Istanbul the Suleymaniye Mosque was designed as a kulliye or complex with adjacent structures to service both religious and cultural needs The mosque incorporates the everyday needs for an Islamic community such as prayer education health and much more 8 Due to the sloping nature of the site around the mosque many of the structures are built above massive substructures that created a more level ground 56 57 Vaulted rooms existed in these substructures and were probably put to various uses 56 The original complex consisted of the mosque itself four madrasas or religious colleges medrese a small primary school mekteb a medical school daruttib a hospital darussifa or timarhane a public kitchen imaret that served food to the poor a caravanserai or guesthouse tabhane public baths hamam a specialized school darulhadis for the learning of hadith a small domed building for the employees of the cemetery attached to the latter s southeast wall and rows of small shops integrated into the outer edges and along the street on the southwest side of the mosque 58 Many of these structures are still in existence The former imaret has been converted into a restaurant 59 The former hospital is now a printing factory owned by the Turkish Army citation needed Just outside the complex walls to the north is the tomb of architect Sinan 60 It was completely restored in 1922 61 Most of the buildings are classical Ottoman courtyard structures consisting of a rectangular courtyard surrounded by a domed peristyle portico giving access to domed rooms 58 In the madrasas Sinan modified some details of the typical layout for functional reasons The Salis Medrese and Rabi Medrese located on the northeast side of the mosque where the ground slopes down towards the Golden Horn have a stepped design in which the courtyard descends in three terraces connected by stairs while the domed rooms are built at progressively lower levels alongside it 62 The current remains of the hadith school darulhadis have been crudely restored It consists of a long line of small vaulted rooms on the eastern edge of the complex 63 According to Dogan Kuban the original school must have had a different appearance 64 The triangular plaza between this structure and the courtyard was once used for weekly wrestling matches 65 The two other madrasas on the southwest side are known as the Sani Medrese and Evvel Medrese and have regular floor plans on flatter ground 66 Of the medical school daruttib or Tip Medrese 56 next to these not much has survived except for the rooms on the northeast side 64 All three of these madrasas are fronted by shops on their northeast sides the sides facing the mosque which contributed revenues to the complex This created a market street known as the Tiryaki Carșisi the Antidote Market due to the former presence of coffee houses and shops devoted to the smoking of hashish 67 64 A small primary school sibyan mekteb consisting of two domed rooms is attached to the eastern corner of the Evvel Medrese though separated from the main building by a narrow garden 68 nbsp Exterior of the Suleymaniye Hamam bathhouse nbsp The sloped courtyard of the Salis Medrese one of the four madrasas of the complex nbsp Tomb of Mimar Sinan nbsp Interior of the tabhane or caravanserai guesthouse nbsp Interior of the imaret public kitchen nbsp Back side of the darussifa hospital with the substructure visible below nbsp The mekteb primary school attached to the corner of the Evvel Madrasa near the east end of the complexBurials editSuleiman I 1494 1566 Hurrem Sultan c 1502 1558 Suleiman s wife Mihrimah Sultan c 1522 1578 Suleiman and Hurrem s daughter Ahmed II 1642 43 1695 Rabia Sultan d 1712 Ahmed s consort citation needed Asiye Sultan 1694 1695 Ahmed and Rabia s daughter citation needed Suleiman II 1642 1691 Asub Sultan d 1690 Suleiman s mother citation needed See also edit nbsp Architecture portal nbsp Islam portal nbsp Turkey portal List of Friday mosques designed by Mimar Sinan List of mosques in Istanbul List of tallest structures built before the 20th centuryReferences edit a b c Necipoglu 2005 p 208 Bloom Jonathan M Blair Sheila S eds 2009 Architecture VI c 1250 c 1500 The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture Vol 1 Oxford University Press p 163 ISBN 9780195309911 Kuban 2010 p 277 a b Sumner Boyd amp Freely 2010 p 199 Gharipour Mohammad ed 2019 Calligraphy and Architecture in the Muslim World Edinburgh University Press p 246 ISBN 978 1 4744 6842 8 Petersen Andrew 2002 Dictionary of Islamic Architecture Routledge p 260 ISBN 978 1 134 61366 3 Gabr Aly 2001 Rediscovery Mimar Sinan Suleyman the Magnificent amp the Suleymaniye Medina Magazine a b Kuban Dogan 1987 Suleymaniye and Sixteenth century Istanbul Journal of the Islamic Environmental Design Research Centre 1 2 4 via archnet org a b Necipoglu 2005 p 209 a b c Goodwin 2003 p 230 Migeon Gaston 2009 Art of Islam Parkstone International pp lxxii Neci poglu Kafadar 1985 pp 100 104 Neci poglu 2008 p 61 Neci poglu Kafadar 1985 pp 100 101 Baer 2004 a b c d e f g Goodwin 2003 p 235 A A 9 November 2010 Suleymaniye Camii restorasyonunda sona dogru www hurriyet com tr in Turkish Retrieved 2022 08 24 a b c d Goodwin 2003 p 228 a b c Necipoglu Gulru 1985 The Suleymaniye Complex in Istanbul An Interpretation Muqarnas 3 110 Blair amp Bloom 1995 p 222 Necipoglu 2005 p 217 Denny 2004 p 79 Necipoglu 2005 pp 213 215 Bloom Jonathan M Blair Sheila S eds 2009 Istanbul The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture Oxford University Press p 325 ISBN 9780195309911 Migeon Gaston Saladin Henri 2012 Art of Islam Parkstone International p 87 ISBN 978 1 78042 993 9 a b Goodwin 2003 p 226 a b c d Blair amp Bloom 1995 p 222 224 a b Goodwin 2003 p 225 Neci poglu Kafadar 1985 pp 105 106 Sumner Boyd amp Freely 2010 p 200 Goodwin 2003 p 231 Kuban 2010 p 280 283 Kuban 2010 p 282 284 a b Necipoglu 2005 p 213 Goodwin 2003 pp 225 226 Goodwin 2003 pp 227 228 Goodwin 2003 pp 232 Goodwin 2003 p 227 a b Blair amp Bloom 1995 p 224 Kuban 2010 pp 289 290 a b c Necipoglu 2005 p 216 a b c Kuban 2010 p 290 Goodwin 2003 pp 233 235 Goodwin 2003 pp 227 233 Goodwin 2003 p 233 Denny 2004 pp 86 209 Necipoglu 2005 p 219 fig 183 a b c Neci poglu Kafadar 1985 p 110 a b Goodwin 2003 pp 237 238 a b Kuban 2010 p 293 a b c Necipoglu 2005 p 220 Atasoy amp Raby 1989 p 230 a b c Goodwin 2003 p 238 Sumner Boyd amp Freely 2010 p 202 Goodwin 2003 p 237 a b c Goodwin 2003 pp 217 219 Kuban 2010 pp 290 292 a b Kuban 2010 pp 279 290 292 Sumner Boyd amp Freely 2010 p 207 Necipoglu 2005 pp 150 205 Fig 167 13 Goodwin 2003 p 222 Kuban 2010 p 291 Goodwin 2003 pp 223 224 a b c Kuban 2010 p 292 Goodwin 2003 p 223 Kuban 2010 pp 279 290 291 Goodwin 2003 p 218 Goodwin 2003 pp 218 219 Sources editAtasoy Nurhan Raby Julian 1989 Petsopoulos Yanni ed Iznik The Pottery of Ottoman Turkey London Alexandria Press ISBN 978 1 85669 054 6 Baer Marc David 2004 The great fire of 1660 and the Islamization of Christian and Jewish space in Istanbul International Journal of Middle East Studies 36 2 159 181 doi 10 1017 S002074380436201X JSTOR 3880030 S2CID 161640738 Blair Sheila S Bloom Jonathan M 1995 The Art and Architecture of Islam 1250 1800 Yale University Press ISBN 9780300064650 Denny Walter B 2004 Iznik the Artistry of Ottoman Ceramics London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 51192 3 Goodwin Godfrey 2003 1971 A History of Ottoman Architecture London Thames amp Hudson pp 215 239 ISBN 978 0 500 51192 3 Neci poglu Kafadar Gulru 1985 The Suleymaniye Complex in Istanbul an interpretation Muqarnas 3 92 117 doi 10 2307 1523086 JSTOR 1523086 Kuban Dogan 2010 Ottoman Architecture Translated by Mill Adair Antique Collectors Club ISBN 9781851496044 Necipoglu Gulru 2005 The Age of Sinan Architectural Culture in the Ottoman Empire London Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 86189 253 9 Neci poglu Gulru 2008 The Dome of the Rock as Palimpsest Abd al Malik s Grand Narrative and Sultan Suleyman s Glosses Muqarnas 25 17 105 doi 10 1163 22118993 02501004 Sumner Boyd Hilary Freely John 2010 Strolling through Istanbul London Tauris Parke pp 199 208 ISBN 978 1 84885 154 2 Further reading editBarkan Omer Lutfi 1972 1979 Suleymaniye Cami ve Imareti Insaati 1550 1557 in Turkish Vol 2 Volumes Ankara Turk Tarih Kurumu Basimevi OCLC 614354340 Faroqhi Suraiyah 2005 Subjects of the Sultan Culture and Daily Life in the Ottoman Empire London I B Tauris ISBN 1 85043 760 2 Kolay Ilknur Aktug Celi k Serpi l 2006 Ottoman stone acquisition in the mid sixteenth century the Suleymani ye Complex in Istanbul Muqarnas 23 251 272 JSTOR 25482444 Morkoc Selen B 2008 Reading architecture from the text the Ottoman story of the four marble columns Journal of Near Eastern Studies 67 31 47 doi 10 1086 586669 S2CID 161434861 Rogers J M 2007 Sinan Makers of Islamic Civilization London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 096 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Suleymaniye Mosque category Suleymaniye Kulliyesi Archnet Suleymaniye Mosque ve Mimar Sinan in Turkish Suleymaniye Mosque Virtual Walking Tour Saudi Aramco World Photographs by Dick Osseman 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