Gazi İskender Paşa Mosque (Kanlıca Mosque)

Audio Narration

Construction Years:

1559-1560

Location:

Beykoz, İstanbul

Ordered by:

Gazi İskender Pascha

Architect:

Mimar Sinan

- Changes the building has undergone since its construction
  • Some parts of the complex were damaged by a fire in 1917. During the widening of the Üsküdar-Beykoz road in 1925, the walls surrounding the mosque, three courtyard gates and the graveyard were demolished.
  • The mosque’s minaret was renewed after the earthquake in 1894.
  • Various repairs were made throughout the 20th century, and the tomb and the mosque are the parts that have survived to the present day.
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- Prominent features of the mosque
  • Iskender Pasha Mosque was built by Mimar Sinan. It was initially a complex consisting of a mosque, a madrasah, a tomb and a bathhouse. The bathhouse and madrasah sections of the complex have not survived to the present day.
  • The mosque, which has a rectangular plan, is one of Mimar Sinan’s roofed mosques and is an elegant example of classical Ottoman architecture.
  • The walls of the mosque, which is built of rubble limestone, have two rows of windows on its facades; the windows in the lower row are rectangular, while the windows in the upper row are covered with pointed arches and plaster grids.
  • The mosque has a narthex, which was later closed with wooden walls. There are a total of thirteen windows arranged on top of each other on the northern facade where the main door is located.
  • The minaret located in the northwest corner has a square base and a polygonal section. The fine muqarnas under the minaret balcony are an elegant example of classical Ottoman stonework.
  • The interior has a wooden ceiling with bars, and according to Evliya Çelebi, the roof of the mosque was once covered with lead.
  • The windows in the Harim section and the hand-drawn works on the door are elegant examples of Ottoman art. There is an Arabic inscription consisting of three couplets written in Thuluth calligraphy on the door.
  • The tomb where Gazi Iskender Pasha and his son Ahmed Pasha are buried has masonry walls and a wooden roof and is illuminated by a total of sixteen windows on four facades.