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Muradiye Cami

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مسجد Muradiye

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Muradiye Camii bears a name carried by a number of beloved Ottoman mosques, most famously the Muradiye Külliyesi in Bursa, the complex built by Sultan Murad II (r. 1421–1451) which remains one of the jewels of early Ottoman architecture. The name derives from Murad, meaning 'the one who is desired' or 'the wished-for', and has long been among the most popular names for both sultans and mosques in Ottoman Turkey. To name a mosque Muradiye in modern Ankara is to invoke that whole tradition and to place the new building in continuity with its great Ottoman predecessors. The Mamak mosque bearing this name is a neighbourhood structure of modest scale but careful execution, with a single slim minaret, a central dome, and a stone-paved forecourt. Inside, the prayer hall is carpeted in warm tones, and the mihrab is finished with Kütahya tile of a quality that recalls the classical models. The walls carry calligraphic panels of divine names and Qur'anic verses in several classical scripts. The imam's Friday sermons often engage thoughtfully with Ottoman Islamic history, drawing lessons from the piety of Murad II — a ruler famous for twice attempting to abdicate in favour of his son Mehmed (later the Conqueror) in order to devote himself to worship and study. Women pray in an upper gallery, and Qur'an classes for children run throughout the year. Ablution facilities are clean and heated. During Ramadan the mosque runs a full programme of tarawih. The mosque's Ramadan tarawih prayers, led by a young hafız whose recitation is particularly admired, draw worshippers from surrounding streets and often beyond, and the spiritual focus of those long evening prayers in a mosque whose name bears the weight of several centuries of Ottoman devotional tradition is itself one of the quietly memorable experiences of Ramadan for many of the regular attenders. For Muslim visitors to Mamak, Muradiye Camii is a welcoming place to pray, and the name on its minaret is itself a small bridge between the present congregation and the great Ottoman sultans whose patronage shaped the architectural heritage of Turkish Islam.

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