Sekbanbaşı Mosque
Sekbanbaşı Mosque was a mosque located in the Ottoman capital of Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul). It was originally a Byzantine church.[1] According to the writings of Hafiz Hüseyin al-Ayvansarayî (Hadîkatü’l-cevâmi‘), the original Byzantine church had been converted by İbrahim Ağa (died 1496–7), the lieutenant of the Ottoman sekban regiments (sekbanbaşı).[1] The building was located in Kendir Sokağı, in the Kırkçeşme quarter (Fatih district), near the ancient aqueduct of Roman Emperor Valens.[1]
In 1838, the mosque was damaged by a fire, but underwent some restorations.[1] In 1918, during the final few years of the Ottoman Empire, the mosque and the surrounding neighborhood were once again hit by a fire.[2] This time, the mosque did not undergo reparations and was gradually abandoned.[2] The heavily damaged fundament of the mosque was then completely torn down in 1943 as the Turkish government wanted to enlarge the Atatürk Boulevard.[2] In 1954, the soil on which the mosque stood was completely cleared as apartment blocks were being built on it.[2] Today, nothing extant of the mosque remains.[2] However, just prior to its complete demolition, a hurried excavation was caried out by Semavi Eyice, which unearthed some of the substructures of the Sekbanbaşı Mosque.[2] These substructures were examined and surveyed on the spot.[2]
References[]
Sources[]
- Taddei, Alessandro (2021). "The Sekbanbaşı Mescidi or a Lesser-Known Middle Byzantine Church Typology at Constantinople". Eurasian Studies. 19 (1): 29–45. doi:10.1163/24685623-12340108.
- Mosques converted from churches in Istanbul
- Demolished buildings and structures in Turkey
- Fatih
- Churches and monasteries of Constantinople
- 15th-century mosques
- Ottoman mosques in Istanbul
- Former mosques in Turkey