Hagia Sophia-Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

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Hagia Sophia-Mosque Sheriff is among the most important monuments in the history of world architecture that have survived until today.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

Structure; It has an important place in the art world with its architecture, magnificence, size and functionality.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

This magnificent work is the largest church built by the Eastern Roman Empire in Istanbul and was built three times in the same place. It was called Megale Ekklesia (Great Church) when it was first built, and it was called Hagia Sophia (Sacred Wisdom) from the 5th century until the conquest of Istanbul. Megale Ekklesia, which was built by Emperor Konstantios in 360 and Emperor II. The church, which Theodosis rebuilt in 415, was destroyed in the popular uprisings.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

Today’s Hagia Sophia-Mosque Sheriff was built by Emperor Justinianos, two important architects of the time, Anthemios from Tralles (Aydın) and Isidoros from Miletos (Balat).

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

It is understood from the records that one hundred architects working with two chief architects and one hundred workers under each architect completed the construction of the building in a short period of 5 years and 10 months.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

The building, which was open to worship as a church for 916 years, was converted into a mosque when Fatih Sultan Mehmed conquered Istanbul in 1453.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

Right after the conquest, the building was strengthened and preserved in the best way and continued its existence as a mosque with the additions of the Ottoman Period.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

In the 16th and 17th centuries, mihrabs, pulpit, muezzin chambers, sermon pulpit and maksures were added to the mosque.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

The minarets, madrasah, primary school, timetable, fountain, fountains, sundials, board of trustees and Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque, which were built outside the building in different periods, were transformed into a complex structure during the Ottoman Period.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque was converted into a museum in 1934 and served as a museum until 2020. In 2020, it gained the status of a mosque again.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

Dome of Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

The most important feature of the Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque in its architecture is that its dome is larger than usual and dominates the middle space.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

While the mosque was being built, the architects used marble, stone and brick in the construction of the building; In order for the dome not to collapse easily in earthquakes, specially produced, light and strong bricks were used.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

Within the scope of the repairs made by the Swiss Fossati Brothers between 1847-1849 by the order of Sultan Abdulmecid (1839-1861), one of the most important calligraphers of the period, Kazasker Mustafa İzzet Efendi, was sent to the main dome with a diameter of 11,3 meters. The ‘th verse was written.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

Mosaics of Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

It is decorated with many mosaic ornaments with and without figures from different periods. The most important mosaic decoration examples that have survived from the period it was built are the mosaics without figures that can be seen in the nortex area.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

It is thought that all the figured mosaics in the building were removed during the descriptive period. With the end of this period in 843, the first figured mosaic made in the building is the Apse Mosaic.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

There are mosaics with figures made on different dates in many parts of the building, including the gallery floor, the Tympanon Wall, the narthex, the entrance to the vestibule, and the priest’s rooms.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

Mahmud I Library

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

One of the most important Ottoman additions in the building is the library built by Sultan Mahmud I in 1739. The library consists of the Reading Hall, the Treasury-i Qutb (the room where the books are preserved) and the corridor between these two sections.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

The Reading Room is separated from the main space of the building by a glass case supported by six lozenge-shaped columns and a bronze grid covering it. The two-winged doors that provide the entrance to the library are covered with a bronze grid decorated with flowers and curved branches, and it has two handles carved “Ya Fettah”. The walls of the reading room are decorated with tile inscriptions and script friezes. On the wall opposite the door, there is the monogram of Sultan Mahmud I from the porphyry bordered with green tiles.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

In the reading section of the library, there are wooden lecterns decorated with mother-of-pearl inlay technique in the form of a low, small table, some of which can be opened and closed, on which books are read and written, and there are two mother-of-pearl and ivory-covered Qur’an cases in which the Qur’an is preserved.

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff - Istanbul

Hagia Sophia-i Kebir Mosque Sheriff – Istanbul

Iznik, Kütahya and Tekfur Palace tiles from the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries were used together in the library. The 16th century Iznik tiles in the Treasury-i Qutb and the composition of the spring blooming branches of the same century in the corridor are the most beautiful examples of Turkish tile art. After the library was completed, Sultan Mahmud I sent the books in Galata Palace-ı Hümayun here; he also had the valuable books in the Topkapı Palace Treasure-i Hümayun sealed with his own seal and transported here. Approximately 5,000 manuscripts in the library were moved to the Süleymaniye Library in 1969.