Sırçalı Medrese

Sırçalı Medrese
The front facade in 1913.
Religion
AffiliationIslam
DistrictKonya
ProvinceKonya
RegionCentral Anatolia
Location
LocationTurkey Konya, Turkey
Architecture
TypeMadrasa
StyleIslamic, Seljuk architecture
Completed1242

Sırçalı Medrese (literally Glazed medrese) is a 13th-century medrese (Islamic school) in Konya, Turkey.[1]

History

Built in 1242 during the reign of the Seljuk sultan Kaykaus II, by order of Emir Bedrettin Muslih for the study of Fiqh (Islamic doctrines). The interior is decorated with colourful tiles, hence the name of the structure. The building has a highly ornamented stone façade which includes relief work of various geometric patterning. Above the entrance is an inscription in Arabic calligraphy. The building has an open courtyard surrounded by two stories of the student cells and a large Iwan where the lectures took place.

The building now is Konya's Museum of Gravestones. It contains old Roman, Byzantine, Seljuk and Ottoman gravestones.

  • Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4489
    Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4489
  • Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4490
    Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4490
  • Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4492
    Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4492
  • Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4493
    Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4493
  • Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4497
    Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4497
  • Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4495
    Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4495
  • Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4494
    Konya Sırçalı Medrese gravestone museum 4494

References

  1. ^ The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture: Delhi to Mosque, Jonathan M. Bloom, Sheila Blair, Oxford University Press, 2009, page 118
  • "Sırçalı Medrese, Konya, Turkey".

See also

  • Seljuk eternity sign


Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
National
  • United States


Stub icon

This article about a Turkish building or structure is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e