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Grand Mosque of Tarsus

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Location
  
Tarsus, Turkey

District
  
Tarsus

Completed
  
1579

Architectural style
  
Ottoman architecture

Architectural type
  
Mosque

Rite
  
Sunni Islam

Status
  
Active

Opened
  
1579

Province
  
Mersin Province

Grand Mosque of Tarsus

Address
  
Şehitkerim Mahallesi, 33440 Tarsus/Mersin Province, Turkey

Region
  
Mediterranean Region, Turkey

Burials
  
Al-Ma'mun, Zubaidah bint Ja`far, Al-Qasim ibn Harun al-Rashid

Similar
  
Saint Paul's Church - T, Grand Mosque of Mersin, Laal Pasha Mosque, Tarsus Waterfall, Aya Tekla Church

Tarsus Grand Mosque (Turkish: Tarsus Ulu Cami) is a mosque in Tarsus, Mersin Province, Turkey.

Contents

Geography

The mosque is at the center of Tarsus in Camii Nur neighbourhood. It is the biggest mosque of Tarsus. It is very close to St Paul's Church, only about 180 metres (590 ft) bird's flight away.

History

The mosque had been built in 1579 during Ottoman rule. The commissioner of the mosque is İbrahim Bey of Ramadanid dynasty, a Turkmen dynasty which was the ruler of the region before 1517 and continued as the vassal of the Ottoman Empire during the rest of the 16th century. But according to information plate of the mosque, there was an older mosque in the place of Grand Mosque which was built during the Abbasid (Arab) rule in the 9th century . After Tarsus was captured by the Byzantine Empire, the old mosque was transformed into a church. But in the 14th century Ramazanoğlu captured Tarsus and in 1579 the mosque was rebuilt. Kırkkaşık Bedesten a bedesten to support the mosque was also built in 1579.

Technical details

The entrance to mosque courtyard is via a monumental marble gate at the north . The nartex with 14 columns to bear 16 domes has been decorarated with tiles. The building material of the main building is carved stone. The columns in the main building have been connected with half pointed arch so called Iranian Arch. The pulpit and the niche (directed to Mecca) is made of marble.

The tombs

At the east of the mosque there are tombs of Al-Ma'mun (the Abbasid caliph), Danyal (Daniel, not a prophet in Islamic tradition, but still considered as one of the holy people) and Seth who is believed to be the son of Adam.

References

Grand Mosque of Tarsus Wikipedia