Burmalı Mescid Mosque

Audio Narration

Construction Year:

1497 (According to Ottoman archives, but thought to be 1540)

Location:

Fatih, İstanbul

Ordered by:

Mevlana Emin Nureddin Osman Effendi

Architect:

Unknown

- Changes the building has undergone since its construction
  • In the Uzunçarşı-Mercan fire in 1911, the surrounding area was burned, but the mosque survived without any damage.
  • It was closed due to the regulation of 1928 (Regulation numbered 6061 dated 8 January 1928, which limited the number of mosques) and fell into disrepair due to lack of maintenance.
  • It was restored by the foundations in 1961 and reopened for worship; the portico columns were replaced with spolia materials.
- Prominent features of the mosque
  • The most striking feature of the mosque is its minaret with twisted brick work. The round body of the minaret is woven with twisted rods up to the balcony.
  • It is one of the rare examples of a twisted minaret in Istanbul; similar ones are found in Amasya and the Üç Şerefeli Mosque in Edirne.
  • The minaret rostrum of the building is made of cut limestone, and the narthex was built with mixed techniques using stone and brick rows.
  • The primary school and fountains that used to be located next to it have not survived to this day.
  • During the restoration in 1961-1962, the old spolia column bodies and capitals were renewed with pieces collected from different parts of the city.