Part of site |
Hagia Sophia |
Variant Names |
II. Selim Türbesi |
Street Address |
Within precinct walls of Hagia Sophia, Eminönü District |
Location |
Istanbul, Turkey |
Architect/Planner |
Sinan |
Client |
Murad III |
Date |
1576-77 |
Style/Period |
Ottoman |
Century |
16th |
Building Type |
funerary |
Building Usage |
mausoleum |
The tomb is oriented parallel to the Hagia Sophia, facing northwest. It has a complex structure assembled from a square outer shell and an octagonal inner shell. From the exterior, the tomb appears as a squat square structure with chamfered corners, covered by an inset dome raised on a multifaceted drum that extends outward to meet the square façade above the entrance. A three-bay portico with a dome at the center and barrel vaults over the side bays precedes the entryway. Inside, the dome sits on eight arches carried on columns that are tied with shorter arches to the exterior wall. Four corner arches of the dome are braced with semi-domes that help carry some of the dome's weight onto the outer shell; they project only slightly from the drum on the exterior. The interior is well-lit with two tiers of windows on the square shell, a third row of windows on the dome's drum and eight windows on the lead-covered dome. Built entirely of cut stone, the tomb is paved with marble panels on the exterior that were carved in situ.
The tomb of Selim II is well known for the sixteenth century Iznik tiles that decorate the interior and the portico façade. There are two famous floral panels on either side of the entrance; the left one was taken out of the country during a restoration in the late nineteenth century and is currently exhibited at the Musée du Louvre. Sections of the calligraphic band between the upper and lower windows on the interior are also missing and were painted in during contemporary restorations. The painted decoration of the interior, with the possible exception of the dome, was redone in the late eighteenth century. Wooden shelving were embedded in the walls used to store precious belongings of the sultan many of which have disappeared before the Ottoman heritage laws were instituted in the early twentieth century. The portico has fine examples of stone latticework and marble carving such as calligraphic panels assembled from polychrome marbles.