Mimar Sinan İngilizce Hayat
Khoca Mimar Sinan Ağa was the chief Ottoman
architect and civil engineer for sultans Suleiman I, Selim II, and Murad III. He
was responsible for the construction of more than three hundred major
structures, and other more modest projects, such as his Koran schools (sibyan
mektebs).
Trained as a military engineer, he rose through the ranks to
become first an officer and finally a Janissary commander, with the honorific
title of ağa. He learned his architectural and engineering skills while on
campaign with the Janissaries, becoming expert at constructing fortifications of
all kinds, as well as military infrastructure, such as roads, bridges and
aqueducts.[4] At about the age of fifty, he was appointed as chief royal
architect, applying the technical skills he had acquired in the army to the
“creation of fine religious buildings” and civic structures of all kinds. He
remained in post for almost fifty years.
His masterpiece is the Selimiye
Mosque in Edirne, although his most famous work is the Suleiman Mosque in
Istanbul. He headed an extensive governmental department and trained many
assistants who, in turn, distinguished themselves, including Sedefhar Mehmet
Ağa, architect of the Sultan Ahmed Mosque. He is considered the greatest
architect of the classical period of Ottoman architecture, and has been compared
to Michelangelo, his contemporary in the West.] Michelangelo and his plans for
St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome were well-known in Istanbul, since Leonardo da
Vinci and he had been invited, in 1502 and 1505 respectively, by the Sublime
Porte to submit plans for a bridge spanning the Golden Horn.
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