Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Happy to be Blue.

The most photogenic building in Istanbul has to be the Sutlan Ahmed Mosque, or, as it's known colloquially, the Blue Mosque, admired for it's classic Ottoman architecture. Located on prime Sultanahmet real estate, the mosque benefits that stunning Fountain of Sultan Ahmed III a cobblestone's throw away in the old hippodrome area. Built some 400+ years ago, the Blue Mosque is perfection, with it's wedding cake tiered domes and six minarets (count them, six!), highly unusual in the world of mosques, and apparently quite the scandal when it was built, because Mecca's Masjid al-Haram didn't have nearly as many (though soon after, Mecca's Masjid al-Haram added a few more to fix this problem; Mecca's soon boasted seven minarets). 

The interior of the mosque explains the name -- the place is filled with blue and white tiles made in Izmir. The floors were covered with crimson-hued, floral wall-to-wall carpet. 

Since we were not worshippers in this working holy place, we entered with other visitors around the side of the building where inappropriately dressed women without headscaves -- me, for instance with only my big black hat -- and women AND men with exposed legs, were handed glorious blue wraps and plastic bags to slip our shoes into since Mosques always enforce a "no shoe rule." There's no charge to enter, but donations are appreciated as you leave. 

It wasn't prayer time, so the mosque's innermost center was not crowded, but the tourist area was, so we gaped, gawked, admired and skedaddled, impressed, of course. All those domes from the outside? Stunning on the inside. 



1 comment:

  1. love the slapdash scarves ladies!! Keep posting Annabel.
    xo S.

    ReplyDelete