4.611/13 Civil Architecture in Islamic History (HASS)
Instructor: Nasser Rabbat
12- The Creation of an Ottoman Palatial Complex:
The Topkapi Saray (the Gun Gate Palace) in Istanbul was the Ottoman sultans' residence and the seat of government for almost four century (1460-1850). It is composed of a series of buildings surrounding a number of interconnected courts on the top of a hill that overlooks the Golden Horn and the Marmara Sea. The first phase was completed in 1464-65 under Fatih Mehmet II (the Conqueror) who occupied Constantinople in 1453, changed its name to Istanbul, and prepared it to become the Ottoman capital.
Çinili Kiosk (The Tiled Pavilion) (1473): The earliest remaining pavilion from the first building of Fatih, it shows the Timurid influence on the early palatial Ottoman architecture and decoration. Its cross-axial plan is to become the prototype for Ottoman kiosks and Yalis (water-front pavilions).
Schematic Division of Topkapi Saray:
First Court: Entered through Bab-i-Humayun (Gate of Majesty), is a huge court with barracks for different divisions of guards and several shops and store houses.
Second Court: (Court of Justice) Entered through Orta Kapi (Middle Gate). Only the Sultan can ride into it, it contains the stables, the kitchen, the council chamber (Divan), and the Treasury.
Third Court: Entered through the Bab-i-Saadet (Gate of Felicity), it is the private court of the Sultan. It contains the Throne Hall (Ars Odasi) built for Murat III in 1585 by the architect Davud Aga, Ahmet III Library, a number of services (Hall of the Pantry and Hall of the Treasury) and a number of halls and classrooms for guards, in addition to the four domed chambers of the relics of the Prophet, brought from Egypt by Selim I after 1517.
Fourth Court: The court of pleasance, it contains a number of kiosks, pools, and raised and sunken gardens.
The Revan Kiosk (1635) and The Baghdad Kiosk (1638): Both built by Hasan Aga for Murat IV to celebrate his conquests in Yerivan in Armenia and Baghdad.
The Golden Iftariya (watching porch of the sultan, built by Ibrahim I in 1640).
The Harem: Developed after Mehmet II and over more than two centuries, it contains more than 800 chambers, two mosques, an infirmary and eight bath-houses, in addition to chambers and pavilions for the sultans and the crown-princes.
Murat III bedchamber (1578): Refurbished by the great architect Sinan.