On a website I found, translated and edited: This mosque, which is located in the Tire district of Izmir province, was built by the son-in-law of Sultan Selim I, Grand Vizier Lütfü Pasha, while he was in Aydın as the Sanjak Bey in the 1500s. Since there is no inscription indicating the date of construction, an exact date cannot be suggested. It is written only in Lütfü Pasha's endowment charter dated 1543 that the mosque is a lead-domed place of worship, and in front of it is the last congregation place with five domes and five marble columns. So it was built in the middle of the century. It is learned from the foundation charter that there was a madrasah with fifteen rooms and twelve shops next to the mosque. Apart from this structure, Lütfü Pasha also had an inn, soup kitchen, fountain and fountain built in Tire. This building, which is one of the typical examples of classical Ottoman architecture, has a square plan made of cut stone. A central dome covered with stalactite squinches over the place of worship. The narthex, which is reached by a three-step staircase from the courtyard in front of the mosque, has five sections and is carried by six columns. The section in front of the door that provides the entrance to the mosque in the middle of the narthex has a lead dome, and the other sections are covered with tiles. The mihrab is in the form of a round niche. The window wings of the mosque are made of wood and in the kündekari technique. The pulpit is made of wood and covered with decorations in the technique of insertion. The minaret with a stone pedestal, a round body and a single balcony, located on the west of the mosque, can be reached from the narthex.
On a website I found, translated and edited: This mosque, which is located in the Tire district of Izmir province, was built by the son-in-law of Sultan Selim I, Grand Vizier Lütfü Pasha, while he was in Aydın as the Sanjak Bey in the 1500s. Since there is no inscription indicating the date of construction, an exact date cannot be suggested. It is written only in Lütfü Pasha's endowment charter dated 1543 that the mosque is a lead-domed place of worship, and in front of it is the last congregation place with five domes and five marble columns. So it was built in the middle of the century. It is learned from the foundation charter that there was a madrasah with fifteen rooms and twelve shops next to the mosque. Apart from this structure, Lütfü Pasha also had an inn, soup kitchen, fountain and fountain built in Tire. This building, which is one of the typical examples of classical Ottoman architecture, has a square plan made of cut stone. A central dome covered with stalactite squinches over the place of worship. The narthex, which is reached by a three-step staircase from the courtyard in front of the mosque, has five sections and is carried by six columns. The section in front of the door that provides the entrance to the mosque in the middle of the narthex has a lead dome, and the other sections are covered with tiles. The mihrab is in the form of a round niche. The window wings of the mosque are made of wood and in the kündekari technique. The pulpit is made of wood and covered with decorations in the technique of insertion. The minaret with a stone pedestal, a round body and a single balcony, located on the west of the mosque, can be reached from the narthex.
by Dosseman
CC BY-SA 4.0
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3078.jpg
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3078.jpg
by Dosseman
CC BY-SA 4.0
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3079.jpg
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3079.jpg
by Dosseman
CC BY-SA 4.0
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3080.jpg
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3080.jpg
by Dosseman
CC BY-SA 4.0
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3081.jpg
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3081.jpg
by Dosseman
CC BY-SA 4.0
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 4146.jpg
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 4146.jpg
by Dosseman
CC BY-SA 4.0
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 4147.jpg
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 4147.jpg
by Dosseman
CC BY-SA 4.0

Lütfü Paşa Camii

Tire, Türkiye'de bir cami

Tire, İzmir, Türkiye
7 fotoğraf Fotoğraflı

Konum

Fotoğraflar

On a website I found, translated and edited: This mosque, which is located in the Tire district of Izmir province, was built by the son-in-law of Sultan Selim I, Grand Vizier Lütfü Pasha, while he was in Aydın as the Sanjak Bey in the 1500s. Since there is no inscription indicating the date of construction, an exact date cannot be suggested. It is written only in Lütfü Pasha's endowment charter dated 1543 that the mosque is a lead-domed place of worship, and in front of it is the last congregation place with five domes and five marble columns. So it was built in the middle of the century. It is learned from the foundation charter that there was a madrasah with fifteen rooms and twelve shops next to the mosque. Apart from this structure, Lütfü Pasha also had an inn, soup kitchen, fountain and fountain built in Tire. This building, which is one of the typical examples of classical Ottoman architecture, has a square plan made of cut stone. A central dome covered with stalactite squinches over the place of worship. The narthex, which is reached by a three-step staircase from the courtyard in front of the mosque, has five sections and is carried by six columns. The section in front of the door that provides the entrance to the mosque in the middle of the narthex has a lead dome, and the other sections are covered with tiles. The mihrab is in the form of a round niche. The window wings of the mosque are made of wood and in the kündekari technique. The pulpit is made of wood and covered with decorations in the technique of insertion. The minaret with a stone pedestal, a round body and a single balcony, located on the west of the mosque, can be reached from the narthex.
© Dosseman | CC BY-SA 4.0 Wikimedia Commons icon

On a website I found, translated and edited: This mosque, which is located in the Tire district of Izmir province, was built by the son-in-law of Sultan Selim I, Grand Vizier Lütfü Pasha, while he was in Aydın as the Sanjak Bey in the 1500s. Since there is no inscription indicating the date of construction, an exact date cannot be suggested. It is written only in Lütfü Pasha's endowment charter dated 1543 that the mosque is a lead-domed place of worship, and in front of it is the last congregation place with five domes and five marble columns. So it was built in the middle of the century. It is learned from the foundation charter that there was a madrasah with fifteen rooms and twelve shops next to the mosque. Apart from this structure, Lütfü Pasha also had an inn, soup kitchen, fountain and fountain built in Tire. This building, which is one of the typical examples of classical Ottoman architecture, has a square plan made of cut stone. A central dome covered with stalactite squinches over the place of worship. The narthex, which is reached by a three-step staircase from the courtyard in front of the mosque, has five sections and is carried by six columns. The section in front of the door that provides the entrance to the mosque in the middle of the narthex has a lead dome, and the other sections are covered with tiles. The mihrab is in the form of a round niche. The window wings of the mosque are made of wood and in the kündekari technique. The pulpit is made of wood and covered with decorations in the technique of insertion. The minaret with a stone pedestal, a round body and a single balcony, located on the west of the mosque, can be reached from the narthex.

Fotoğrafçı: Dosseman

CC BY-SA 4.0 Tam boyut
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3078.jpg
© Dosseman | CC BY-SA 4.0 Wikimedia Commons icon

Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3078.jpg

Fotoğrafçı: Dosseman

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Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3079.jpg
© Dosseman | CC BY-SA 4.0 Wikimedia Commons icon

Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3079.jpg

Fotoğrafçı: Dosseman

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Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3080.jpg
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Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3080.jpg

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Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3081.jpg
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Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 3081.jpg

Fotoğrafçı: Dosseman

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Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 4146.jpg
© Dosseman | CC BY-SA 4.0 Wikimedia Commons icon

Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 4146.jpg

Fotoğrafçı: Dosseman

CC BY-SA 4.0 Tam boyut
Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 4147.jpg
© Dosseman | CC BY-SA 4.0 Wikimedia Commons icon

Tire Lütfü Paşa Camii 4147.jpg

Fotoğrafçı: Dosseman

CC BY-SA 4.0 Tam boyut
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Detaylar

Açıklama
Tire, Türkiye'de bir cami
Diğer adlar
Paşa Camii
Tür
cami
Konum
Tire, İzmir, Türkiye
İl
İzmir