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Çorlulu Ali Paşa Camii

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مسجد Çorlulu علي Paşa

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Çorlulu Ali Paşa Camii in the Eminönü district of Istanbul, Turkey, commemorates Çorlulu Ali Pasha, a grand vizier of Sultan Ahmed III in the early eighteenth century whose epithet Çorlulu indicates his origins in the town of Çorlu in Thrace. His complex in central Istanbul, dating from 1708, is notable for including not only the mosque but also a madrasa, a library, and a charitable kitchen, all centred around an attractive courtyard with a garden and ablution fountain that has long been among the most atmospheric historical spaces in the city. The complex is today especially popular among students and scholars who gather in the courtyard cafés and tea gardens to study, read, and converse, and the mosque itself retains its full religious function alongside this civic vitality. Architecturally the building follows late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century Ottoman patterns, with a square prayer hall beneath a single dome, a slender minaret, an elegant exterior of dressed stone, and an interior preserving Iznik-style tilework, calligraphic panels, a carved mihrab, and a finely crafted wooden mimbar. The congregation today is drawn from the surrounding Eminönü neighbourhood and from the students and teachers of the nearby universities and religious institutions. Friday prayers fill the hall substantially. The Diyanet's weekly sermon text shapes the khutbah delivered in Turkish. For visitors, Çorlulu Ali Paşa Camii offers a particularly rewarding combination of historical depth, architectural refinement, and living civic use in its surrounding courtyard, and a stop here can easily be combined with a pause at one of the garden cafés for tea. Modest dress, shoes removed at the threshold, hair covered for women entering the prayer hall, quiet conduct throughout, and photography carried out only outside of active prayer are the expected courtesies. The garden courtyard is a local favourite for reading and quiet conversation between prayers. The courtyard cafés, particularly popular with students on warm afternoons, create one of the most atmospheric informal gathering places in central Istanbul, and many regulars time their tea breaks around the prayers.

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