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Architect Sinan designed this mosque after 1557, for Mihrimah
Sultan, Sultan Suleyman's daughter. This mosque is unprecedented
with its supporting system and dome (19 m.). Four arches that spring
from four piers hold up the dome, which has an astonishing height
(35 m.). There are very narrow, domed aisles on the east and west
sides of the building. These aisles do not lend a support to the
covering system.
In addition to this drawback in the supporting system, the four
tympana (:walls filling the arches) are excessively fenestrated
through three layers of windows (19 windows in each), which render
the walls transparent curtains. The qibla wall below the southern
tympanum also contains windows. On the inside, two rows of double
granite columns bear the thrust of the eastern and western tympana.
They also separate aisles from the domed central area. On the other
hand, the southern and northern tympana are not buttressed any way.
The outcome of this constructional drawback is an elegant structure,
which looks like a crystalline ball, hung to ropes fastened on
sticks. This effect is more apparent on the inside, which is
abundantly lit with sunlight during daytime. This mosque reminds
another exceptional building, Hagia Sophia Church, which contains a
huge dome placed on
a basilica. This junction is a real challenge to structural canons,
which necessitate a gable roof on top of an oblong basilica. In
Mihrimah Sultan Mosque, the fenestration in the walls and the heavy
dome calls for a bulky buttressing system, which is absent. In both
examples, architects challenged established rules and created
extraordinarily lit and ample spaces below the dome. |