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BLUE MOSQUE

Also known as the ''Sultan Ahmed
Mosque'' is the national mosque of Turkey, and is a historical
mosque in Istanbul, the largest city in Turkey and the capital of
the Ottoman Empire (from 1453 to 1923). The mosque is one of several
mosques known as the Blue Mosque for the blue tiles adorning the
walls of its interior. It was built between 1609 and 1616, during
the rule of Ahmed I. Like many other mosques, it also comprises a
tomb of the founder, a madrasah and a hospice. The Sultan Ahmed
Mosque has become one of the greatest tourist attractions of
Istanbul.
After the humiliating Peace of Zsitvatorok and the unfavourable
result of the wars with Persia, Sultan Ahmed I decided to build a
large mosque in Istanbul to placate Allah. This would be the first
imperial mosque in more than forty years. Whereas his predecessors
had paid for their mosques with their war booty, Sultan Ahmed I had
to withdraw the funds from the treasury, because he had not won any
notable victories. This provoked the anger of the ulema, the Muslim
legal scholars.
The mosque was to be built on the site of the palace of the
Byzantine emperors, facing the Hagia Sophia (at that time the most
venerated mosque in Istanbul) and the hippodrome, a site of great
symbolic significance. Large parts of the southern side of the
mosque rest on the foundations, the vaults and the undercrofts of
the Great Palace. Several palaces, already built on the same spot,
had to be bought (at considerable price) and pulled down, especially
the palace of Sokollu Mehmet Paşa, and large parts of the Sphendone
(curved tribune with U-shaped structure of the hippodrome).
Construction of the mosque started in August 1609 when the sultan
himself came to break the first sod. It was his intention that this
would become the first mosque of his empire. He appointed his royal
architect Sedefhar Mehmet Ağa, a pupil and senior assistant of the
famous architect Sinan as the architect in charge of the
construction. The organization of the work was described in
meticulous detail in eight volumes, now in the library of the
Topkapı Palace. The opening ceremonies were held in 1617 (although
the gate of the mosque records 1616) and the sultan was able to pray
in the royal box (hünkâr mahfil). But the building wasn't finished
yet in this last year of his reign, as the last accounts were signed
by his successor Mustafa I. Known as the Blue Mosque, Sultan Ahmet
Mosque is one of the most impressive monuments in the world. It is
one of the elements included in the complex built by Ahmed I to
compete with Ayasofya.
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