Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Gazi Hajdar Kadi Mosque

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Location
  
Bitola, Macedonia

Completed
  
1561

Width
  
11m

Opened
  
1561

Number of minarets
  
1

Architect
  
Affiliation
  
Length
  
11m

Materials
  
Marble & Stone

Architectural style
  
Ottoman architecture

Architectural type
  
Mosque

Gazi Hajdar Kadi Mosque httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Old Mosque - Kumanovo, New Mosque - Bitola, Ishak Çelebi Mosque, Sultan Murad Mosque, Šarena Džamija

The Gazi Hajdar Kadi Mosque, (Macedonian: Ајдар Кади Џамија; Turkish: Gazi Haydar Kadi Cami) is a mosque, situated in Bitola, Republic of Macedonia. Currently in disuse, the former religious building has been transformed into a warehouse by the local Macedonian authorities.

History

The mosque was commissioned by Haydar Bey, then beylerbey of Rumelia Eyalet, the largest Ottoman administrative territory, with Manastir as a regional centre. According to the inscription in Arabic on the stone plaque above the door, the mosque was built in 969 he (1561/62 AD). The mosque is a domed building with massive walls of about 1.4 meters thick. The builders came from a small village in the region of Manastir but the project was most probably prepared by an unknown Islamic architect, influenced by the work of famous architects of that time, such as Kodja Sinan. In the description of Evlia Celebi's travels through the Balkans in the 17th century, this mosque was considered as one of the most beautifully decorated. Study of the remains show that the Haydar-Kadi Mosque was the only mosque in Bitola with two minarets. Marble decorations adorn the mihrab and the triangle-shaped tromps. A stone bas-relief can be seen on the portal, capitals and on the mimbar. Colourful geometrical designs can be found around the windows, on the arches, as well as on the tromps. The wood-carved door is executed in bas-relief. The most distinctive motif is the stylized Arabic letter "elif'. This type of woodcarved doors can be seen in Istanbul mosques. The mosque was repaired in 1890. We also know that all the mosques of the town were restored before the visit of the Mehmed V in 1910, a fact confirmed by certain elements of the interior decoration painted at that time.

References

Gazi Hajdar Kadi Mosque Wikipedia


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