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Istanbul -- the mosques Sinan didn't build

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  • Istanbul -- the mosques Sinan didn't build

    Sunday's Zaman , Turkey
    Sept 13 2009

    Ä°stanbul -- the mosques Sinan didn't build


    So great is the hold on the imagination of the great Ottoman architect
    Sinan that it's sometimes easy to run away with the idea that most of
    Ä°stanbul's great mosques were his handiwork.

    But however prolific an architect he was, Sinan was responsible for
    only 24 of the mosques, and even some of those that most dominate the
    skyline were actually designed by other hands.
    When the Ottomans rode into Constantinople on May 29, 1453 they were a
    Muslim army occupying what had been a Christian city, so one of the
    most pressing tasks facing them was to establish a network of places
    to pray. The easiest way to do this was to adapt the existing churches
    into mosques; a mere three days after the conquest, Sultan Mehmet II
    was able to attend Friday prayers in what had been the church of Hagia
    Sophia but had been hastily converted into a mosque. Other churches
    were soon adapted to serve the needs of their new congregations with
    the addition of mihrabs and minarets, but within just a few years, the
    first purpose-designed mosques, often following designs developed in
    Bursa, the original Ottoman capital, were starting to spring up.

    These early Ä°stanbul mosques are often overlooked because they
    lack the size and splendor of their newer counterparts. However, some
    are fine buildings in their own right that deserve more attention than
    they receive. Take the Murat PaÅ?a Camii at YusufpaÅ?a,
    for example. Built in 1473, just 20 years after the conquest, it's
    squeezed into a piece of land between the tramway and the metro, which
    means that most passers-by are in too much of a hurry even to glance
    at its attractive brick-and-stone-striped facade. Or the
    Ä°Å?hakpaÅ?a Camii on Aybıyık Caddesi
    right in the heart of tourist Ä°stanbul. Built in 1482, it's
    stuck on a busy corner behind a high wall, missed by most people in
    their rush to reach Topkapı Sarayı despite its
    impressive age.

    Mahmut PaÅ?a Camii

    Tucked away out of sight near the Grand Bazaar is the Mahmut
    PaÅ?a Camii that dates back to 1462. It's well worth visiting
    not just because it was built less than 10 years after the conquest
    but because the tiled tomb of the great Grand Vizier Mahmut
    PaÅ?a behind it is a one-off in Ä°stanbul that looks as if
    it has somehow strayed here from Central Asia. More conspicuous is the
    Firuz AÄ?a Camii on busy Divan Yolu close to the Sultanahmet
    tram stop, which was built in 1491. With its triple-arched portico and
    single dome and minaret, it's an exquisite example of the Bursa
    architectural style prevailing before grand courtyards and multiple
    minarets became fashionable.

    But the first of the really important mosques was, of course, the
    Fatih Camii, named after Sultan Mehmet II, who instructed that work
    should begin on replacing the huge Church of the Holy Apostles that
    had stood on the site almost as soon as he had found his way around
    his new capital. The mosque was the work of a much less well known
    Sinan, Atik Sinan, about whose life we know almost nothing. As the
    almost certainly apocryphal story goes, he was rewarded for his
    efforts by having his hands chopped off in 1471 when the sultan
    realized that the dome of Hagia Sophia still outstripped that of his
    new mosque. He was buried in the grounds of the Kumrulu Mosque in
    Karagümrük.

    The Fatih Camii is an enormous complex, currently undergoing
    restoration, and is virtually enclosed by medreses (theological
    schools) and other outbuildings that testify to its role as the local
    social center. It was badly damaged by an earthquake in 1766 and had
    to be extensively rebuilt, which leaves the Beyazıt Camii
    beside the Grand Bazaar as the oldest of the early imperial mosques
    that is still virtually unchanged. This mosque was built between 1501
    and 1506 by Yakub-Å?ah ibn Sultan-Å?ah, a little known but
    probably Turkish architect who appears to have taken Hagia Sophia (Aya
    Sofya) as his model. Like the Fatih Camii, it was built on a huge
    scale, and like the Fatih Camii it was given a marvelous porticoed
    courtyard, a feature that Mimar Sinan went on to perfect in the
    Å?ehzadebaÅ?ı Camii and others of his masterpieces.

    During the latter part of the 16th century, architecture in
    Ä°stanbul was utterly dominated by Koca Mimar Sinan. There are,
    however, one or two large mosques of that date that were not his
    handiwork; for example, the lovely NiÅ?ancı Mehmet
    PaÅ?a Mosque in Karagümrük looks like a Sinan
    building but appears instead to be the work of an unknown
    architect. There are also several surviving mosques that were the
    handiwork of Davut AÄ?a, who was a pupil of Sinan's. It was
    Davut AÄ?a, for example, who began work on the Yeni Camii at
    Eminönü in 1597, although work soon stopped again, and
    the mosque was not completed until 1663, by which time the architect
    in charge of things was Mustafa AÄ?a. Davut AÄ?a was also
    responsible for the lovely Cerrah PaÅ?a Camii, which he
    completed in 1593.

    Mehmet AÄ?a's masterpiece

    Of course the most famous mosque in all Ä°stanbul has to be the
    Sultanahmet Camii, better known to most visitors as the Blue
    Mosque. With its extraordinary six minarets and its wonderful cascade
    of silvery domes and semi-domes, this is a building which completely
    dominates the city skyline. It was the masterpiece of one Mehmet
    AÄ?a (c.1540-1617), another student of Sinan's, who designed it
    for the youthful Sultan Ahmet I between 1609 and 1616, reputedly
    bringing about the collapse of the Ä°znik tile business in the
    process since the tile makers, obliged to work for the sultan for
    minimal wages, soon made their escape to Kütahya.

    Skipping forward a century, we come to the period when the West
    started to assert its influence on Ä°stanbul and the mosques
    started to take on baroque flourishes, especially under the
    stewardship of Mehmet Tahir AÄ?a, whose work is on display in
    the Ayazma Camii in Ã`sküdar, in the Beylerbeyi Camii, and
    in the newly and beautifully restored Laleli Camii. The Laleli Camii
    still retains features of the older models in its stripy brickwork and
    sizeable courtyard, but within another 100 years the mosques had shed
    the bricks and courtyards, and acquired a new look in which lofty
    arched windows were the most conspicuous feature. Several of these
    grand 19th-century mosques were designed by the Balyans, a family of
    Turkish-Armenian architects who were also responsible for the
    Dolmabahçe Sarayı: Krikor Balyan designed the Nusretiye
    Camii at Tophane between 1822 and 1826, while his grandsons Hagop and
    Sarkis Balyan are thought to have been behind the Valide
    Sultan Camii, built in 1871 and currently undergoing restoration in
    Aksaray. Another grandson, Nikogos, drew up the designs for the
    Dolmabahçe Camii in 1853.

    Unfortunately since the 19th century, mosque architecture has gone
    into a sharp decline. The twin stars of the First National
    Architecture movement, Vedat Tek and Kemalettin Bey, tried their hands
    at mosque design, Tek behind the post office in Sirkeci and Kemalettin
    on the waterfront in Bebek, but neither of these buildings is
    especially original or distinctive. For that accolade one would have
    to head straight to the edge of the Karacaahmet Cemetery behind the
    HaydarpaÅ?a train station to visit the newly opened
    Å?akirin Camii, whose interior was designed by Zeynep
    FadıllıoÄ?lu, a woman better known for her work on
    high-society restaurants. With its sweeping Guggenheim-style dome, its
    arched mihrab of turquoise and gold and a chandelier of dripping
    plastic, it was always going to have the traditionalists raising
    eyebrows. But when most new mosque designs simply parody Sinan motifs
    in cheap concrete, it's surely a joy to be able to point to at least
    one 21st-century mosque that stands out as a true original.


    13 September 2009, Sunday
    PAT YALE Ä°STANBUL
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