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🕌 Mosque Sunni

Mecidiye Camii

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مسجد Mecidiye

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About

Mecidiye Camii bears the name of Sultan ʿAbd al-Majīd (Abdülmecid I), the thirty-first Ottoman Sultan, who reigned from 1839 to 1861 and whose patronage of mosque-building left a distinctive imprint on the architecture of the later Ottoman Empire. The Mecidiye style, flourishing under Abdülmecid's reign, combined traditional Ottoman mosque forms with elements drawn from European neoclassical and baroque architecture, producing a hybrid idiom exemplified in the beautiful Ortaköy Mosque on the Bosphorus. Mosques bearing the name Mecidiye continue to be built in modern Turkey as a gesture of continuity with this Ottoman legacy. The Mamak mosque bearing this name is a neighbourhood structure of moderate scale, with a single minaret, a central dome, and a stone-paved forecourt. Inside, the prayer hall is carpeted in warm tones, and the mihrab is carefully finished with Kütahya tile. 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 reign of Abdülmecid — a ruler who attempted to modernise the empire while preserving its religious identity, and whose efforts serve as a reminder of the complex challenges faced by Muslim societies in every age. Women pray in a comfortable 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 and community iftars organised by local families. The mosque's collection of Ottoman-era prayer carpets, carefully preserved and occasionally displayed in the entrance hall on important Islamic anniversaries, includes fine examples of the carpet-weaving traditions that flourished under Abdülmecid's patronage, and the rich reds and blues of their weaves are themselves a small vestige of the material culture of the Mecidiye era that the mosque's name commemorates. For Muslim visitors to Mamak, Mecidiye Camii is a welcoming place to pray, and the name above its entrance carries a small echo of the elegant, cosmopolitan mosque architecture that graced the shores of the Bosphorus during the mid-nineteenth century.

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