Top 10 Remarkable Facts about Suleymaniye Mosque
The Süleymaniye Mosque is an Ottoman imperial mosque located on the Third Hill of Istanbul, Turkey.
The mosque was commissioned by Suleiman the Magnificent and designed by the imperial architect Mimar Sinan.
An inscription specifies the foundation date as 1550 and the inauguration date as 1557.
Behind the wall of the mosque is an enclosure containing the separate octagonal mausoleums of Suleiman the Magnificent and his wife Hurrem Sultan (Roxelana).
1. Suleymaniye was the largest mosque in Istanbul for 462 years
For 462 years, the Süleymaniye Mosque was the largest mosque in the city, until it was surpassed by the Çamlıca Mosque in 2019.
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.
2. The mosque was designed by a great architect known as Mimar Sinan
Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent chose the architect Mimar Sinan to create a mosque in memory of his son Åžehzade Mehmed.
Suleyman was so impressed with the ensuing Åžehzade Mosque (Åžehzade Cami) that he asked Sinan to design a mosque for himself too. This mosque would represent the pre-eminence of the Ottoman Empire.
In designing the Süleymaniye Mosque, Sinan took inspiration from the Hagia Sophia and the Bayezid II Mosque.
The mosque was built on the site of the old palace of Topkapi which was still in use at the time and had to be demolished.
3. Suleymaniye mosque was inaugurated in 1557
The Arabic inscription above the north portal of the mosque is carved in Thuluth script on three marble panels. It 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.
4. The design of the mosque made Suleyman think of himself as a second Solomon
The design of the Süleymaniye played on Süleyman’s self-conscious representation of himself as a ‘second Solomon.’
It referenced the Dome of the Rock, which was built on the site of the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem, as well as Justinian’s boast upon the completion of the Hagia Sophia: “Solomon, I have surpassed thee!”
The Süleymaniye asserted Süleyman’s historical importance although it was smaller in size than Hagia Sophia.
5. The mosque was damaged in the great fire of 1660
The Süleymaniye was damaged in the great fire of 1660 and was restored by Sultan Mehmed IV.
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).
6. It served as a weapons depot during world war 1 and caught fire again when some ammunition ignited
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. Parts of the surrounding complex continued to be restored in the decade following.
7. Its entrance is considered one of a kind
Like the other imperial mosques in Istanbul, the entrance to the mosque is preceded by a forecourt with a central fountain.
The courtyard is of exceptional grandeur with a colonnaded peristyle with columns of marble, granite and porphyry. The northwest facade of the mosque is decorated with rectangular Iznik tile window lunettes.
It was the first building in which the Iznik tiles included the brightly coloured tomato red clay under the glaze.
Four minarets occupy the four corners of the courtyard. They were added to mosques endowed by a sultan (princes and princesses could construct two minarets; others only one).
The minarets have a total of 10 galleries, which is said to reflect the fact that Suleiman I was the 10th Ottoman sultan.
8. When built, its dome was the highest one in the Ottoman empire
The main dome is 53 metres (174 feet) high and has a diameter of 26.5 metres (86.9 feet) which is exactly half the height.
When it was built, it was the highest dome in the Ottoman Empire, when measured from sea level, although it was still lower from its base and smaller in diameter than that of Hagia Sophia.
The dome is flanked by semi-domes, and to the north and south, there are arches with tympana-filled windows, supported by enormous porphyry monoliths.
Sinan embarked on a radical architectural innovation to mask the huge north-south buttresses needed to support these central piers – he incorporated the buttresses into the walls of the building, with half projecting inwards and half projecting outwards, and then hid the projections by building colonnaded galleries.
There is a single gallery inside the structure, and a two-story gallery outside.
9. Its interior decoration is quite unique
The interior decoration is restrained, with stained-glass windows restricted to the qibla wall. Iznik tile revetments are only used around the mihrab. The repeating rectangular tiles have a stencil-like floral pattern on white ground.
The flowers are mainly blue with turquoise, red and black but green is not used. On either side of the mihrab are large Iznik-tile calligraphic roundels with text from the Al-Fatiha surah of the Quran.
The white marble mihrab and mimbar are simple in design, and the woodwork is restrained, with simple designs in ivory and mother of pearl.
10. Religious inscriptions on the mosque demonstrate it as a place of sacredness
Religious inscriptions in parts of the mosque demonstrate its stature as a place of sacredness.
Quranic messages can be found incorporated throughout the building. For example, the side entrance of the mosque has an inscription reading, “Peace be unto thee! Thou art good, so enter ye to dwell therein”
On the Qibla wall, the stained-glass windows display the names of God (Allah), the Prophet Muhammad, and the caliphs.
They are there to represent Allah as the lawmaker, Muhammad as the preacher, and the four caliphs as the four pillars. of Islam.
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