Turkey’s most sacred mosque, the Eyüp
Sultan Mosque, is located on the southern coast of Halic (the Golden Horn), a
refreshing haven from the hubbub of Eminonu and Beyoglu..
The mosque is not Turkey’s oldest at
nearly 560 years old, but has always been more than a beautiful place for
worship. The Eyüp Sultan Mosque was the first mosque built by the Ottoman Turks
after their conquest of Constantinople in 1453. Originally built in 1458, it
was rebuilt in the baroque style in 1800 by Sultan Selim III, the 28th Ottoman
ruler, after the ruinous effects of an earthquake. Yet the significance of the
mosque extends far beyond Turkish lands, reaching into the wider Islamic World.
In 622, when the Prophet Muhammad
completed hijrah—the migration from Mecca to Medina—he lived with a close
companion for seven months. That trusted friend was Abu Ayyub, one of the first
to convert to Islam. Abu Ayyub served as the standard-bearer for the faith, a
testament to how respected he was, since a standard-bearer was chosen for his
noble traits to carry the flag at the forefront of battles as the most pious of
Muslims. Before he died in the first Arab siege of Constantinople (674-678),
Abu Ayyub made known his dying wish, a final rally for the Muslim army: “Abu
Ayyub urges you to penetrate deep into enemy territory, as far as you can go.
That you should carry him with you, and that you should bury him under your
feet at the walls of Constantinople.” While the troops failed to breach those
walls, they did manage to honor their revered martyr, erecting Abu Ayyub’s
grave by the Golden Horn.
To commemorate the gravesite of this
important figure in Islamic history, Sultan Mehmet II commissioned a grand tomb
and a massive complex, the Eyüp Sultan Mosque and Mausoleum. Thereafter, the
Mosque stood watch as the Turks transformed Byzantine Constantinople into
Ottoman Istanbul.