Mevlâna Museum
The Mevlâna Museum, in Konya, Turkey, started life as the dervish lodge of the Mevlevi order, better known as the whirling dervishes. It houses the mausoleum of Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi, a Persian Sufi mystic.
History
Sultan 'Ala' al-Din Kayqubad, the Seljuk sultan who had invited Mevlâna to Konya, gave his rose garden as a burial place for Rumi's father, Baha' ud-Din Walad, who died on 12 January 1231. When Mevlâna died on 17 December 1273 he was buried next to his father.Mevlâna's successor Hüsamettin Çelebi decided to build a mausoleum over the grave of his master. The Seljuk construction, under architect Badr al-Din Tabrizi, was completed in 1274. The construction costs were met by Gurju Khatun, the wife of the Seljuk Emir Suleiman Pervâne, and Emir Alameddin Kayser. The cylindrical drum of the dome originally rested on four pillars. The dome is covered with turquoise tiles.
Additional sections were added to the original complex until 1854. Selimoğlu Abdülvahit decorated the interior and carved the wood for the catafalques.
A decree issued by Atatürk on 6 April 1926 ruled that the mausoleum and the dervish lodge must be turned into a museum which duly opened on 2 March 1927. In 1954 it was officially renamed the Mevlâna Museum.
Description
The main gate of the museum leads into a marble-paved courtyard. The dervishes' kitchen and the tomb of Hurrem Pasha, built during the reign of Süleyman the Magnificent, stand on the right side. On the left are 17 cells for dervishes, built during the reign of Murad III, each of them covered with a small dome. The kitchen was also used for educating the dervishes and teaching them to perform the sema, the famous whirling ritual. The ṣadirvan in the middle of the courtyard was built in the reign of Yavuz Sultan Selim.Ritual Hall
The Ritual Hall was built during the reign of Sultan Süleyman the Magnificent at the same time as the adjoining small mosque. In this hall the dervishes used to perform the Sema, the ritual whirling dance, performed to the rhythm of musical instruments such as the kemence, the kemane, the halile, the daire, the kudüm, the rebab and the ney, once played by Mevlâna himself. Examples of these instruments are on display in this room, together with an 18th-century Kirşehir prayer rug, dervish clothing and four crystal-glass mosque lamps. In this room there is also a rare Divan-i-Kebir from 1366 and two fine specimens of Masnavis from 1278 and 1371.Sarcophagi
Mevlana's sarcophagus is placed under the turquoise dome that is a symbol of the city, with the actual burial chamber beneath it. It is covered with brocade embroidered in gold with verses from the Koran. This, and all other covers, were a gift of sultan Abdul Hamid II in 1894. Next to Mevlâna's sarcophagus are several others, including those of his father Bahaeddin Veled and his son Sultan Veled. The wooden sarcophagus of Mevlâna, dating from the 12th century, is a masterpiece of Seljuk woodcarving. The silver lattice, separating the sarcophagi from the main chamber, was built by Ilyas in 1579.Mausoleum
The Tomb gate leads into the mausoleum and the small mosque. Its two doors are decorated with Seljuk motifs and a Persian text from the Mollah Abdurrahman Cami dating from 1492. It leads into the small Tilavet Room which is decorated with rare Ottoman calligraphy in the sülüs, nesih, and talik styles. In this room the Koran used to be recited and chanted continuously before the mausoleum was turned into a museum.A silver door leads from the Tilavet Room into the mausoleum. According to an inscription on the door, this was made by the son of Mehmed III in 1599. On the left side six coffins are lined up in rows of three; they belonged to the dervishes who came to Konya with Mevlâna and his family from Belkh. Opposite them on a raised platform beneath two domes stand cenotaphs belonging to descendants of the Mevlâna family and some high-ranking members of the Mevlevi order.