2. Sultan Ahmed Mosque
Also known as Blue
Mosque
One of the treasures
of Istanbul
Built in 1969,
opened in 1617
3. Historical Background
The mosque construction was
in charge by the royal architect,
Sedefhar Mehmet Aga
The mosque is currently one of
the most impressive
monuments in the world
4. Sultan Ahmed I
After the Peace of Zsitvatorok
(1606) and the unfavourable
result of the wars with Persia,
Sultan Ahmed I decided to build
a huge mosque in Istanbul. His
predecessors had paid for their
mosques with their spoil of war,
Sultan Ahmed I had to withdraw
the funds from the treasury.This
provoked the anger of the
Ottoman ulema.
5. Hagia Sophia
Hippodrome of Constantinople
The mosque was to be built on the
site of the palace of the Byzantine
emperors, facing the Hagia Sophia
and the hippodrome. Large parts of
the southern side of the mosque rest
on the foundation and vaults of the
Great Palace. Construction started
in August 1609 when the sultan
himself came to break the first sod.
7. Exterior
The facade of the spacious
forecourt was built in the
same manner as the facade
of the Suleymaniye Mosque.
The court is about as large
as the mosque itself.
8. The Sultan Ahmed Mosque is
first one of the two mosques
in Turkey that has six
minarets.
Four minarets stand at the corners of the Blue
Mosque. Each of these has three balconies
with stalactite corbels, while the two others
at the end of the forecourt only have two
balconies.
9. A heavy iron chain hangs in the upper part of the court
entrance on the western side of the Mosque. It was done
as a symbolic gesture, to ensure the humility of the ruler
in the face of the divine.
10. Interior
The prayer hall itself is punctuated with several architectural
features including the sultan’s platform and an arcaded
gallery running along the interior walls except on the quibla
wall facing Mecca.
11. The lower level of the mosque is lined with more than
20,000 handmade ceramic tiles.The tiles on the back
balcony wall are restorated tiles from the harem in the
Topkapı Palace, when it was damaged by fire in 1574.
12. The upper levels of the
Mosque interior is
dominated by blue
paint. More than 200
stained glass windows
with intricate designs
admit natural light. On
the chandeliers, ostrich
eggs are found.
The decorations including verses from the Qur'an,
many of them made by Seyyid Kasim Gubari.
13. The floors inside are covered
with carpets.
Each semi dome has 14
windows and the central dome
28 windows.The coloured
glass for the windows was a
gift from the Signoria of Venice
to the sultan.
14. The mihrab of the mosque
is made of finely carved
and sculptured marble, with
a stalactite niche and a
double inscriptive panel
above it.To the right of the
mihrab is the richly
decorated minber.
15. The royal kiosk is
situated at the south-east
corner comprises a
platform, a loggia and
two small retiring rooms.
This royal loge is
supported by ten
marble columns.
16. The many lamps inside the
Blue Mosque were once
covered with gold and gems.
Among the glass bowls each
one could find ostrich eggs
and crystal balls.
The great tablets on the walls
are inscribed with the names
of the caliphs and verses from
the Quran
22. Tilework and Stained Glass
The intensity of the tiles is accentuated by the play of
natural light from more than 200 windows that pierce the
drums of the central dome, each of the half-domes, and
the side walls.These windows originally contained
Venetian stained glass.
23. Legacy
The Sultan Ahmet Mosque is
particularly remarkable in that
it was conceived and built
during a time of relative
decline. In the past, grand
mosques were constructed as
markers of prosperity and
political strength.
24. Things to take note before visiting:
1) Avoid visiting a mosque at pray time (Especially
Midday praying on Friday) or within a half hour
after the ezan is chanted from the Mosque
minarets.
2) Before step in to Mosque, take off your shoes and
put in plastic bags provided at the entrance.
3) When you are inside the mosque, remain quiet
and don't use flash photography.