Saturday, June 9, 2018

RAMADAN IN TURKEY 2018

Assalamualaikum

Alhamdullillah my dua has been answered as I always wanted to spend one whole month in Turkey Istanbul. Ramadan 2018 here started on May 15 and will ends on the evening of Thursday 14 June inshaAllah. Turkey we dont follow the moonsighting unfortunately. We live in Uskudar the Asian Side in Istanbul as you know Istanbul, the largest city in Turkey and the fifth-largest city in the world by population, is considered European, yet it occupies two different continents. One part of Istanbul lies in Europe and the other part lies in Asia. Istanbul’s European part is separated from its Asian part by the Bosphorus strait, a 31-km-long waterway that connects the Black Sea with the Sea of Marmara, and forms a natural boundary between the two continents. Two suspension bridges across the Bosporus - the Bosporus Bridge and Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge, also called Bosporus Bridge II, connect the two sides, yet many tourist prefer to visit the European side of Istanbul because of its historical significance. The European side is also the city’s commercial center with banks, stores and corporations and two-third of its population. The Asian side feels more relaxed, with wide boulevards, residential neighbourhoods and fewer hotels and tourist attractions.

Anyway Ive been to many masjids especially built by the Ottomans architects Mimar Sinan and others. Check out these magnificent masjids MashAllah. The teraweeh here I just love it 20 rakaats with 3 witr. Most masjids are usually packed with jemaah. Tourist and visitors are allowed to visit these mosques outside prayer times. Free entry and of course modest attire is highly recommended.


This is Mihrimah Masjid It is the first of two mosques built by Mihrimah Sultan, daughter of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent and wife of Grand Vizier Rüstem Pasha. It was designed by Mimar Sinan and built between 1546 and 1548. The picture below a dear friend from Melbourne visited us after Umrah and Im so glad to take them around Istanbul to show the amazing places here in Uskudar.










Name of Monument:
Pertevniyal Valide Sultan Mosque Complex

Location:
Aksaray, Istanbul, Turkey

Date of Monument:
Hegira 1288 / AD 1871

Architect(s) / master-builder(s):
There are different opinions regarding the identity of the architect. Some researchers think it was the Italian architect Montani Effendi, while others believe the architect was Sarkis Balyan. It has also been suggested that Agop Balyan participated in the design, and that the designer Osep assisted with construction.

Period / Dynasty
Ottoman

Patron(s):
Pertevniyal Valide Sultan (the mother of Sultan Abdülaziz, d. AH 1301 / AD 1883).

Source: [http://www.discoverislamicart.org/database_item.php?id=monument;isl;tr;mon01;30;en&cp]







Yeni Valide Camii Uskudar

The Yeni Valide Mosque is an 18th-century Ottoman mosque in the Üsküdar district of Istanbul, Turkey.
Address: Mimar Sinan Mahallesi, 34664 Üsküdar/Istanbul
Opened: 1710
Architectural style: Ottoman architecture
Groundbreaking: 1708
Number of minarets: 2

It was built between 1708 and 1710 on the iskele (pier) road by Emetullah Râbi'a Gülnûş Sultan, mother of SultanAhmed III. The main part of the building is square-shaped and covered with a flattened main dome and four half domes. The mosque has two minarets with two balconies each. Calligraphy inside the mosque is the work of Hezarfen Mehmet Efendi.







Ortakoy (Ortaköy) Mosque
Located just before the Bosphorus Bridge, the Ortaköy Camii, Turkey (Ortaköy Mosque Turkey) has to have one of the most picturesque settings of all of the Istanbul mosques. Indeed, Ortaköy Mosque photos, with the bridge the background are often used to demonstrate that particular Istanbul juxtaposition of traditional and modern.

Built on the sight of an 18th century mosque (built by Mahmut Ağa, the son-in law of Grand Vizier Ibrahim Pasha), the current building was completed in 1855, to serve as the Büyük Mecidiye Camii (Grand Imperial Mosque) to the Ottoman Sultan Abdülmecid. It was designed by Armenian architect, Garabet Balyan, and his son Nigoğayos Balyanl, who were also responsible for the nearby Dolmabahce Palace.




to be continued .....

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