The Yavuz Selim Mosque, also known as the Selim I Mosque and the Yavuz Sultan Selim Mosque (
Turkish: Yavuz Selim Camii) is a 16th-century
Ottoman imperial mosque located at the top of the 5th hill of
Istanbul,
Turkey, in the neighborhood of
Çukurbostan, overlooking the
Golden Horn. Its size and geographic position make it a familiar landmark on the Istanbul skyline.
History
The Yavuz Selim Mosque is the second oldest extant imperial mosque in Istanbul. It was commissioned by the Ottoman sultan
Suleiman the Magnificent in memory of his father
Selim I who died in 1520. The architect was Alaüddin (Acem Alisi).[1] The mosque was completed in 1527/8. Attempts have been made to associate the structure with the famous imperial architect
Mimar Sinan, but there is no supporting documentary evidence, and the date of the mosque is too early. However, one of the türbe in the garden of the mosque is a work of Sinan (see below).
Architecture
Exterior
The mosque was built on a terrace overlooking the
Cistern of Aspar, the largest of the three Roman reservoirs in
Constantinople. The large courtyard (avlu) has a colonnaded
portico with columns of various types of
marble and
granite. The mosque has panels of coloured tiles that were decorated using the cuerda seca technique. These are similar to the lunette panels above the windows on either side of the fireplace in the
Circumcision Room (Sünnet Odası) of the
Topkapı Palace and were almost certainly made by the same group of Iranian craftsmen working for the Ottoman court.[2][3] The mosque is flanked by twin
minarets.
Interior
The interior plan of the mosque is a simple square room, 24.5 metres (80 ft) on each side, covered by a shallow dome 32.5 metres (107 ft) in height.[4] As with the
Hagia Sophia, the dome is much shallower than a full hemisphere. The windows are decorated with
lunette panels of polychrome cuerda seca tiles. To the north and south of the main room, domed passages led to four small domed rooms, which were intended to function as hospices for traveling
dervishes.
Tombs
Located in the garden behind the mosque and overlooking the Golden Horn is the türbe of
SultanSelim I which was completed in 1523. The building is externally octagonal, and has a porch decorated with panels of tiles of unique design.[5]
A second octagonal türbe with a long inscription carved into the stonework of the exterior contains the tombs of four children of
Suleiman the Magnificent. It dates from 1556, and is attributed to
Mimar Sinan. The third türbe in the garden is that of Sultan
Abdülmecid I, built shortly before his death in 1861.