Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Konya: The heart of science, culture, trade in Anatolian history

Seljuk and Ottoman architectu­re is woven into the urban fabric of Konya, a center of science, culture and commerce that offers a visual feast to visitors

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH WITH AA

THE CENTRAL Anatolian province of Konya, the former capital of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum, is a center of science, culture and trade in Turkey and offers many attraction­s. The city is the second-most populated province in the country after the capital Ankara. Konya features some of the most artistic mosques and madrassas in Turkey and is known as the country’s pearl of Islamic tourism. These mosques and madrassas bear traces of Seljuk and Ottoman architectu­re and add an authentic atmosphere to the urban texture of the city, taking visitors on a historical journey with their spellbindi­ng appearance­s decorated with fascinatin­g ornaments.

Buildings such as the Alaeddin and Sahip Ata Mosques, which are the most important examples of Seljuk architectu­re that have survived to the present day, and the Karatay and Ince Minareli Madrassas, used as museums today, attract attention as the most-visited landmarks of the city.

Necmettin Erbakan University Seljuk Research Center Director professor Ahmet Çaycı told Anadolu Agency (AA) that the Seljuks started to build historical structures in Konya after making the city their capital. He added that the Alaeddin Mosque is in the center of the city and many madrassas, which were the universiti­es of the period, are located around it.

THE CENTRAL Anatolian province of Konya, the former capital of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum, is a center of science, culture and trade in Turkey and offers many attraction­s. The city is the second-most populated province in the country after the capital Ankara.

Konya features some of the most artistic mosques and madrassas in Turkey and is known as the country’s pearl of Islamic tourism. These mosques and madrassas bear traces of Seljuk and Ottoman architectu­re and add an authentic atmosphere to the urban texture of the city, taking visitors on a historical journey with their spellbindi­ng appearance­s decorated with fascinatin­g ornaments.

Buildings such as the Alaeddin and Sahip Ata Mosques, which are the most important examples of Seljuk architectu­re that have survived to the present day, and the Karatay and İnce Minareli Madrassas, used as museums today, attract attention as the most-visited landmarks of the city.

Necmettin Erbakan University Seljuk Research Center Director professor Ahmet Çaycı told Anadolu Agency (AA) that the Seljuks started to build historical structures in Konya after making the city their capital.

He added that the Alaeddin Mosque is in the center of the city and many madrassas, which were the universiti­es of the period, are located around it. The constructi­on of the Alaeddin Mosque was started on what is now dubbed Alaeddin hill during the reign of Anatolian Seljuk Sultan Mesud I. It took its final form, which is very close to the mosque’s current appearance, and was opened for worship during the time of Kayqubad I. The courtyard of the mosque contains the tombs, covered in small cenotaphs, of the Anatolian Seljuk rulers who made great sacrifices to make Anatolia their homeland, including Mesud I, Kilij Arslan II, Suleiman II, Kaykhusraw I, Kayqubad I, Kaykhusraw II, Kilij Arslan IV and Kaykhusraw III.

The İnce Minareli Madrassa, which means literally “the madrassa with the slender minaret,” is one of the structures situated near the Alaeddin Mosque. Çaycı said that the madrassa is among the earliest universiti­es in Anatolia and is considered one of the most outstandin­g examples of Turkish-Islamic architectu­re. As such, it has long been on UNESCO’s World Heritage Tentative List. According to the professor, the building mesmerizes visitors with its dazzling gates, tile decoration­s and geometric and floral motif stonework.

The crown gate of the madrassa is one of the best examples of Seljuk stone masonry. The inside of the minaret of the madrassa is decorated with floral and geometric motifs. The inscriptio­n “El Mülkü Lillah” (“The property of God”) and the Quranic verse Ayat al-Kursi are written on it in Kufic script.

The madrassa catches the eye with its turquoise minaret decorated with white-paste bricks from the outside. Turned into a masonry museum in 1956, it showcases some of the best-preserved examples of Seljuk symbolism in architectu­re, including doublehead­ed eagles and winged angels.

KARATAY MADRASSA

Another hot spot for visitors in the city is Karatay Madrassa, commission­ed by Emir Celaleddin Karatay in 1251. The architect of the structure is not known, and this spellbindi­ng structure was also used during the Ottoman period.

Çaycı stated that the Karatay madrassa is one of the most glorious examples of madrassas featuring a closed courtyard. This madrassa is also a significan­t indicator of Seljuks’ great talent in stone masonry. The stones of the structure were brought from Sille, a small settlement on the borders of Konya. Sille was one of the few remaining Greek villages in central Anatolia before the population exchange between Greece and Turkey.

The madrassa also features excellent examples of Seljuk-period tile work. Because of this, it was transforme­d into the Tile Works Museum in 1955. Today it displays artwork dating back to the Seljuk and Ottoman periods.

Çaycı explained that the İplikçi Mosque, another important Seljuk monument in the city center, was one of the first mosques in the city. “The deed of endowment of the Altunapa Madrassa, which was previously adjoining to the mosque, refers to Najib alDin Ayaz, a yarn dealer, as a trustee of the madrassa. And there was a yarn market close to the mosque. Therefore, the mosque was started to be called ‘iplikçi’ meaning yarn dealer.”

The professor also mentioned the Sahip Ata Mosque and Zazadin Hanı. Noting that Sahip Ata Mosque is one of the early and magnificen­t complexes of the Seljuk period, he said that this complex was composed of a mosque, a madrassa, a hammam and a number of fund-raising shops for the maintenanc­e of the building complex. Sahip Ata was a vizier from the Sultanate of Rum, and his tomb is situated in Sahip Ata Mosque. The structure went under restoratio­n during the Ottoman and Republican periods and then was developed as a museum featuring ethnograph­ic items.

Zazadin Hanı is a Seljuk caravanser­ai commission­ed by Emir Sa’d al-Din Köpek. The inn, which was built with rectangula­rcut stones and features a courtyard, has the appearance of a castle. It is located in a very strategic area since it is Konya’s opening gate to both the north and the east, according to Çaycı.

GLORIOUS OTTOMAN WORKS

Konya charms its visitors with diverse Ottoman architectu­ral works as well. Çaycı noted that the historical covered bazaar and Kapu Mosque are the most important Ottoman-period works in the city. Kapu Mosque is the largest of the Ottoman mosques in the city. Built from cut stone, the mosque bears classical elements of Ottoman architectu­re in its structure. While its mihrab, a semicircul­ar niche in the wall of a mosque that indicates the qibla, was made of stone, its minbar (pulpit) is wood.

The grand bazaar, located near the Mevlana Museum, is the place where one can find any product imaginable. Bringing a breeze of history, the bazaar is a popular spot for visitors and offers authentic products.

Another standout Ottoman work in Konya is the Aziziye Mosque. Çaycı said that the original mosque was commission­ed by Damat Mustafa Pasha, who was the husband of Ottoman Sultan Mehmed IV’s daughter Hatice Sultan. When this mosque was ruined due to a fire in 1867, it was recommissi­oned by Sultan Abdülaziz’s mother Pertevniya­l Sultan. Noting that it is a very eclectic structure that includes Westernize­d elements (baroque) of the Ottoman period and also Eastern elements, the professor said that the structure is known as the mosque whose windows are bigger than its doors.

 ?? EDITOR İREM YAŞAR ?? A view from the Aziziye Mosque, Konya, central Turkey, March 10, 2016.
EDITOR İREM YAŞAR A view from the Aziziye Mosque, Konya, central Turkey, March 10, 2016.
 ??  ?? An interior view from the Ince Minareli Madrassa, Konya, central Turkey, July 11, 2021.
An interior view from the Ince Minareli Madrassa, Konya, central Turkey, July 11, 2021.
 ??  ?? A view from the Alaeddin Mosque, Konya, central Turkey.
A view from the Alaeddin Mosque, Konya, central Turkey.

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