Kılıç Ali Pasha Mosque is a complex that was built by Mimar Sinan in the
16th century in Istanbul, consisting of a mosque, a madrasa (the college of
that time), a Turkish bath (hamam), a fountain, a tomb, a kindergarten and a
burial ground. According to the two inscriptions on the mosque, it was built in
988 Hijri (1580 AD).
Kılıç Ali Pasha was the Chief Admiral of the Ottoman Empire during Murad
the third period. As per the custom, he appeared before the Sultan to get
permission. Murat III said that “You are the master of the seas. All seas are
yours. You can also build the mosque on the sea.” After this saying, he filled
a cove on the Tophane coast and had the mosque built here.
Evliya Çelebi (an Ottoman traveller), while describing Istanbul in the
first half of the 17th century, gives information about the architecture,
interior decoration and furnishings of the sanctuary, which is a like Sultan's
mosque, pointing out that the building resembles Hagia Sophia by saying
"There is no other like it in Istanbul". In a photograph taken by
Robertson, who illustrated the oldest images of Istanbul, towards 1855, it is
seen that the minaret of the mosque was renovated from the middle of the body
by erecting a scaffolding, and it is understood that the minaret was destroyed
for an unknown reason. On one of the colored glass plaster windows is a
signature stating that these were made in 1913 by a master named Tevfik from
Bursa.
The place is covered with two semi-domes on the qibla (when Muslims pray,
they face to this direction) direction axis, as in Hagia Sophia Mosque. The
element that most emphasizes the similarity of the building with Hagia Sophia
is a pair of support buttresses on each side. Here, Sinan the Architect
interpreted the plan and superstructure of Hagia Sophia, which he studied very
well, with a different architectural understanding, more perfect in terms of
both aesthetics and statics. In this respect, it can be said that Kılıç Ali
Pasha Mosque is not a simple imitation, but an improved, statically safer phase
of Hagia Sophia architecture.
Another important story of the mosque is about Cervantes, the author of Don
Quixote. Cervantes, a soldier in the Spanish navy, was captured in the Battle
of Lepanto and his freedom was restored after working in the construction of
this complex. Having lost his left hand in this war, he devoted himself
entirely to writing and wrote Don Quixote, the first novel of modern Europe.