The Valide Mosque is located on the north-west side of Aksaray
Square in Fatih. It was built at the behest of Sultan Abdülaziz's
mother, Pertevniyal Valide Sultan, between 1869-1871 and
was designed by the architect, Sarkis Balyan. It is also
known that Agop Balyan made a contribution to the project.
The mosque is actually part of a complex made up of a school,
tomb, clock room and public fountain. During the reorganization
of Aksaray Square in 1956-1959 the other parts of the complex
were either destroyed or, as in the case of the public fountain,
moved elsewhere.
The Neo-Gothic style of the Valide Mosque differentiates
it architecturally from the more classic mosques. The single
dome is quite high, but small. The mosque's main body and
front are different from any other mosques built up to
that period. The neo-gothic embellishments, in particular,
reinforce the mosque's unique beauty. The interior of the
mosque also boasts an array of rich and beautiful embellishments.
The interior is fully decorated with-blue inscriptions
and engravings shining with gold gilding. The mosque has
two minarets and a single gallery.
The door of the courtyard, which looks out onto Aksaray
Square, is strikingly different from other mosques of İstanbul
The door frame is one of the rare and unique examples of
the art of stone engraving.
Wood Carving & Inlays
The ancient Turkish art of wood carving makes use of a
variety of different design techniques on traditional forms
such as columns, doors, window covers, chests, stools,
and Quran covers. By the seventeenth century, inlays of
ivory, bone, mother-of-pearl and other semi-precious stones
were applied as inlays for carved wood pieces.
Perhaps the most ubiquitous use of mother-of-pearl inlays
in Turkey are to be found in palace furniture and architecture.
The most magnificent sites for such incomparable work are
the Topkapı Palace, the Mihrimah Sultan Mosque, the
Tomb of Murad III, the Beylerbeyi Palace and the Blue Mosque.
Stone Carving
Frequently used on the walls of buildings, mosques, minarets,
gates, columns, pools and tombstones as a decorative feature,
stone carvings added strenght and durability to structures
in addition to its aesthetic function. Although almost
all kinds of stones were used for carving and art work,
marble and sandstone traditionally have been the most frequently
used stone for this purpose.