Nusretiye Mosque is another
imperial mosque but one that does not bear the name of its benefector. ‘Nusret’
means victory and there are different opinions about what this ‘victory’ refers
to. The strongest one is that it refers to the abolution of the guild of the
Janissaries by the founder of the mosque, Sultan Mahmud II. What this mosque
has to do with this move of the Sultan is that the mosque was built as a part
of a military quarter together with some other military buildings. His order
for construction of this quartridge was also a result of Mahmud II’s reformist
character in terms of military. By that point we can collect that Nusretiye
Mosque was built as a sign for the achievement of the military reforms of the
sultan in general. A member of the famous Balyan family of arcihtects Krikor
Amira Kalfa was put in the charge of completing it. No less than what Sultan
achieved with the reforms, the architect who started the construction in the
year 1823 also performed an achievement over the mosque by finishing it within
3 years.
Although it is an imperial
mosque, due to its construction concept, Nusretiye is not surrounded by typical
Ottoman kulliyah (mosque compound) buildings but by military post buildings. The
only elements from a kulliyah type of settlement near this mosque are a
fountain, a water distribution fountain, a timekeeper’s house and an imperial
pavilion for the sultan to reside before greeting people on Friday.