The Greatest Architect of All Time
The Greatest Architect of All Time
The Greatest Architect of All Time
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http://lostislamichistory.com/the-greatest-architect-of-all-time/
Early Life
Mimar was the son of a Greek or Armenian convert to Islam, Abd al-Mannan. He joined the elite corps of the Ottoman army, the Janissaries as a young man, like his father did before him. In the Janissaries, Sinan showed early talent as an engineer. He rose up through the ranks, becoming an officer in the army who participated in numerous military campaigns under sultans Selim and Suleyman. As the Ottoman armies marched to new extents in Europe, Africa, and Persia, Sinan went with them, organizing engineering corps for the military, as well as building mosques and other civil buildings in newly Ottoman cities. In 1538, his talents could no longer be ignored and he was given a position as the head architect of the sultans government in Istanbul.
Early Works
The timeless gem of Istanbuls architecture has always been the Hagia Sophia. It was built as a Christian church in 537 by the Byzantines and was converted to a mosque to serve the new Muslim population after Mehmed IIs conquest of the city in 1453. Since then, Ottoman architects had used the Hagia Sophias giant dome as a template for how to design Muslim mosques. Ottoman mosques were thus based on a premise of having one giant central dome over the main prayer hall that was held up by numerous semidomes on its sides. This greatly increasing the mosques size and capacity. Despite the numerous attempts through the decades to top the Hagia Sophia The Hagia Sophia was the inspiration f or Ottoman mosques in size and beauty, no architect was able to accomplish such a feat. Mimar Sinan made it his goal to build a monument to Islam that was more magnificent than the epic Hagia Sophia. Sinan certainly had a lot of practice in designing buildings. As he began his career, he built smaller mosques across the empire. He built the Khusruwiyah Mosque in Aleppo, Syria in 1547, which remains today as a landmark in that city. He also renovated the mosque of Imam Abu Hanifa in Baghdad, and the mosque of Jalal
al-Din al-Rumi in Konya. These projects all gave Sinan a good background in architecture and engineering, and they also provided him with the skills he would need once he started building larger monuments to the glory of Islam.
Masterpiece
When Suleyman died in 1566, his son and successor, Selim II, also wanted a mosque built in his name. The location would not be Istanbul, but instead the city of Edirne, about 200 kilometers away. Despite being in his 70s when construction began, Sinan was determined to finally top the Hagia Sophia. When the mosque was completed in 1574, he finally achieved his goal. According to his autobiography, Sinan considers the Selimiye Mosque to be his masterpiece. It had the tallest minarets in the world at that point, each topping 80 meters. The dome was built on an octagonal base, thus allowing it to reach new heights that finally topped the Hagia Sophias dome. While some aspects of the Selimiye are similar to the Suleymaniye, it is taller Sinans earlier work with a taller dome that seems to rise on its own without any support from lower pillars or semidomes. It remains today as the main landmark of Edirne, Turkey, and a masterpiece of architectural achievement that has never been matched. Mimar Sinan died in 1588 at 98 years of age. He was buried in the cemetery of the Suleymaniye Mosque, near his greatest patron, Sultan Suleyman. During his life, he built some of the greatest monuments the Ottoman Empire has even seen. The impact he had on the Muslim The Selimiy e Mosque in Edirne, Mimar Sinans masterpiece world was not just limited to the mammoth mosques he built. He built over 90 large mosques throughout the empire, 50 smaller mosques, 57 colleges, 8 bridges, and numerous other public buildings throughout the Ottoman realm. His apprentices would go on to build other major landmarks throughout the world, including the Sultanahmet Mosque (Blue Mosque) in Istanbul and the Taj Mahal in Agra, India. He is considered the greatest Muslim architect of all time, and his works are some of the greatest symbols of Islam today, over 400 years after his death.
Bibliography: Hodgson, M. G. S. The Venture of Islam, Conscience and History in a World Civilization. 3. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1974. Khan, Muhammad. The Muslim 100. Leicestershire, United Kingdom: Kube Publishing Ltd, 2008. Print.