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RUSTEM PASA MOSQUE

The Rüstem Pasha Mosque was
designed by Ottoman imperial architect Mimar Sinan for Grand Vizier
Damat Rüstem Pasha (husband of one of the daughters of Suleiman the
Magnificent, Princess Mihrimah). Its building took place from 1561
to 1563.
The mosque was built on a high
terrace over a complex of vaulted shops, whose rents were intended
to financially support the mosque complex. Narrow, twisting interior
flights of steps in the corners give access to a spacious courtyard.
The mosque has a double porch with five domed bays, from which
projects a deep and low roof supported by a row of columns.
The Rüstem Pasha Mosque is famous
for its large quantities of exquisite İznik tiles, set in a very
wide variety of beautiful floral and geometric designs, which cover
not only the façade of the porch but also the mihrab, minbar, walls,
columns and on the façade of the porch outside. These tiles exhibit
the use of a tomato-red color characteristic of the early Iznik
period (1555-1620), and no other mosque in Istanbul makes such a
lavish use of these tiles
The plan of the building is
basically that of an octagon inscribed in a rectangle. The maindome
rests on four semi-domes; not on the axes but in the diagonals of
the building. The arches of the dome spring from four octagonal
pillars two on the north, two on the south and from piers
projecting from the east and west walls. To the north and south are
galleries supported by pillars and by small marble columns between
them.
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