Grand Mosque of Erzurum
Grand Mosque of Erzurum is an historic mosque in Erzurum, Turkey. It is also called "Atabey Mosque" because the Saltukids were referred to as the “Atabey”.
The mosque was built by Nasreddin Aslan Mehmed, the Emir of Saltuk, in 1179 CE, corresponding to 574 AH. The mosque is shaped in the classic rectangular model of the pre-Ottoman Seljuk era.
The mosque can hold up to 10,000 worshippers.
Structure
[file:Erzurum, ulu camii (moschea grande o di atabey o di kebir), 1176-79, poi 1639, interno 01.jpg|thumb|Interior]The ceiling of the mosque was built perpendicular to the mihrab wall. It consists of a wide middle nave, with three naves on both sides of it, making a total of seven naves. The mosque stands on 20 free "L", "T" and rectangular shaped pillars and measures. The roof is carried by 40 pillars, 16 of which are adjacent to the walls.
The mosque has an altar on both sides of the first door on the east side, which is also where the repair inscription made in 1860 is located. The front mihrab wall in the first construction of the mosque is covered by a dome with a large pendant resting on slightly pointed arches. This dome, known as the "Swallow Dome", was built as a corbelling, and it is believed that it belongs to the original form of the building. On the right side of the mosque, there is a brick minaret with a round body and a single chapel. The minaret can be reached from inside the mosque.