The structure of the main gate is no different than those seen in the palaces built in İstanbul and elsewhere in Anatolia and has a neat stone workmanship and carving. Today we have very few examples of the historical Turkish palaces still surviving.
One of these is the İshak Pasha Palace and complex. Ishak Pasha Palace is composed of following sections in terms of architectural style:. The characteristic of the palace is in its mixture of Ottoman, Persian and Seljuk architectural styles. The palace was built in by II.
The building occupies an area of approximately m. The palace is composed of two courts and the collection of structures positioned around them. The corridor starting on the left side of the antechamber leads to the mosque and adjoining rooms. The reception room of the selamlik measures 19 to 8 meters.
According to Charles Texier's description, its ceiling was painted with fantasy birds, and in the rectangular niches, painted glass panels with floral patterns were visible.
The ceiling collapsed later, because of the Russian bombardment, and only the vaulted ceilings of the corridors have been preserved. The floor was laid of basalt blocks. One of the selamlik rooms was equipped with the balcony supported on wooden beams that had been mentioned previously. Above each window, there is a different braiding pattern in the high relief. The five windows to the east of the portal illuminate the reception room, and two, slightly larger windows belong to two rooms on the other side.
It is a slender octagonal tower with a conical roof. Its corners are formed by triple columns. The lower wall panels contain frames with a pineapple in the middle. In the wall fields above, a plant with many-leafed curved branches grows out of a round pot.
Inside, a twelve-stepped staircase leads down from the door in the eastern side to a vaulted room, roughly 5 by 2. In the courtyard, two stone cottages that look like dog kennels, are actually ventilation and exposure openings for the burial chamber. The mosque in the second courtyard occupies the area between the open space in the centre and the northern enclosure wall.
It has one minaret with a balcony. The minaret has a circular plan, and it was built with alternating red and light stone layers. The square prayer hall in the south is arched by a high dome with the inside diameter of mere than eight meters. The traces of ornamental painting are still visible inside the dome. The prayer hall has a column-supported gallery for women.
The mosque's interior is decorated with reliefs, including the trees of life. The building of the mosque has been restored with carefully fitted pale pink stone blocks. The room behind the north wall and gallery of the prayer hall and connected to it by three wide doors is called son cemaat yeri. It served as the extended prayer hall for those who came too late. When the prayers finished, the same room played the role of a schoolroom and a medrese. A high ornamental portal on the centre of the western wall of the second courtyard leads into a long straight corridor to the harem section.
The portal is decorated with reliefs representing vines, animals, fruit, and flowers. The harem private section of the palace is the westernmost part of the palatial complex.
In this part of the palace, there are many rooms with stone fireplaces, baths, and toilets, as well as a kitchen. Air ducts running along the walls, found in many rooms of the palace, suggest that there was also a central heating system installed, for the comfort of its inhabitants. There was also running water and a sewage system at the residents' disposal. Although the upper levels of the harem section have not been preserved, some structural clues suggest the existence not only of the second floor but also of a smaller third floor.
Moreover, the pictures made by Charles Texier demonstrate that the harem had two floors and it was covered with a flat roof.
It had a wall opening through which the food was served in a north-south-facing corridor. Two round arches over mighty pilasters support the flat roof of the kitchen, in the centre of which stands an octagonal lantern with pyramidal roof, the solution that goes back to Seljuk models.
Next to the kitchen, there were three rooms for the cooks. Two of them contain pools, built of cut stones. Possibly, perishable foodstuffs were stored there underwater. Nearby, there is a relatively small hammam section which consisted of a bath and a changing room. The largest room of the harem was the salon muayede salonu located in the middle and accessible through portals from the east and west sides.
From all the rooms of the palace this received the most elaborate design. Assassin's Creed: Revelations. Assassin's Creed: Rebellion. Diego de Alvarado. Universal Conquest Wiki. Notable proto-Assassins. Notable members.
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