Karamani Nişancı Mehmet Pasha (The last Grand Vizier of Mehmed the
Conqueror)
Architects:
Unknown
- Changes after its construction
The mosque was completely destroyed by an earthquake.
It was rebuilt in the 19th century with its walls built of stone and plastered with cement.
The roof is covered with tiles.
In the following years, a two-story wooden building with rectangular windows was built adjacent to the west wall of the mosque. This building was first used as the imam and muezzin lodgings but was incorporated into the mosque as the congregation increased.
The upper floor was arranged as a women gallery and opened onto the main mosque.
The narthex is also located in this part.
A small glass-fronted entrance has been added to the front of this building.
The minaret is located between two structures.
- Prominent features
There are long baroque-style windows on all four sides of the building except the west side.
The upper part of the windows starts as a semicircle and forms a smaller semicircle at the upper center point.
The mihrab is made of marble, the minbar and the pulpit are made of wood.
The ceiling is made of wooden planks and painted white.
The mihrab was added in the 19th century.
The interior walls are painted green.
Its single-balcony minaret is made of cut stone, its base is square, and its body is cylindrical.
Entering from the courtyard gate, there are restrooms on the left and ablution taps on the wall.
Mehmet Pasha was a descendant of Rumi and was martyred by the Janissaries in 1481, the year Mehmed the Conqueror passed away.
He is buried in the graveyard of the mosque.
In the Foundation Records, the mosque is named as “Arif Çelebioğlu Nişancı Mehmet Pasha” (Çelebioğlu states that he is a descendant of Rumi).