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  2. Süleymaniye Mosque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Süleymaniye_Mosque

    Elevation and plan of the mosque published by Cornelius Gurlitt in 1912. The interior of the mosque is almost a square, measuring 58.5 by 57.5 metres (192 by 189 feet), forming a single vast space dominated by its central dome. [30] The dome is 53 metres (174 feet) high and has a diameter of 26.5 metres (86.9 feet) which is exactly half the height.

  3. Great Mosque of Sulaymaniyah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Mosque_of_Sulaymaniyah

    The mosque was originally a structure made from mud brick and clay. In the years 1940, 1950, and finally, 1968, the mosque was completely rebuilt with brick, while maintaining the same layout and certain details of the original building. [2] A minaret was added to the mosque in 1880 under the orders of Sultan Abdul Hamid II. [2]

  4. Classical Ottoman architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Ottoman_architecture

    The mosque complex was built between 1545 and 1548. [22] Like all imperial külliyes, it included multiple buildings, of which the mosque was the most prominent element. The mosque has a rectangular floor plan divided into two equal squares, with one square occupied by the courtyard and the other occupied by the prayer hall.

  5. Sulaymaniyya Takiyya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulaymaniyya_Takiyya

    The Sulaymaniyya Takiyya (Arabic: التَّكِيَّة السُّلَيْمَانِيَّة, romanized: at-Takiyya as-Sulaymāniyya; Turkish: Şam Süleymaniye Külliyesi [1]) is a takiyya (Ottoman-era Arabic name for a mosque complex which served as a Sufi convent) in Damascus, Syria, located on the right bank of the Barada River. [2]

  6. Süleymaniye Hamam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Süleymaniye_Hamam

    The Süleymaniye Hamam is a historic Turkish bath (hamam) in Istanbul, Turkey, that forms part of the Süleymaniye Mosque complex. The building, on a hill facing the Golden Horn, was built in 1557 by Turkish architect, Mimar Sinan, and was named for his patron, Süleyman the Magnificent, who had commissioned it. It was sometimes called the ...

  7. Ottoman architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman_architecture

    The basic design of the Şehzade Mosque, with its symmetrical dome and four semi-dome layout, proved popular with later architects and was repeated in classical Ottoman mosques after Sinan (e.g. the Sultan Ahmed I Mosque, the New Mosque at Eminönü, and the 18th-century reconstruction of the Fatih Mosque).

  8. Plans revised for mosque on Plainfield Avenue in Edison ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/plans-revised-mosque-plainfield...

    The mosque plans call for the renovation and expansion of the home at 157 Plainfield Ave. into a three-story worship center, with two floors of prayer halls, a first-floor mass prayer area for men ...

  9. Sahn-ı Seman Medrese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sahn-ı_Seman_Medrese

    Until the construction of the medreses of the Suleymaniye complex , the Sahn-ı Seman medrese was the most prestigious school in the Ottoman Empire. [1] It was a very large Islamic theological complex, grander in scale and organisation than earlier Ottoman medreses, constructed in the newly conquered (1453) former Byzantine capital city of ...