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TURKISH AND ISLAMIC ARTS MUSEUM

Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum as it is called today – or The İbrahim Pasha Palace – is located in the Sultanahmet neighbourhood within the district of Fatih in the area known today as Sultanahmet Square, formerly called the Hippodrome in the Byzantine era and Atmeydanı (“Horse Square”) in Ottoman times. Though its exact construction date remains unknown, it is believed to have been erected during the reign of Bayezid II (1418-1512). There is also nothing definitive on what purpose this palace, sitting at a slight elevation on the slopes of the Hippodrome, was originally built for. In a document from the Topkapı Palace archives dated 1520 it is stated to have been gifted with all expenses covered by Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent to the respectable İbrahim Agha, who was to serve as his grand vizier for 13 years, first ‘the favourite’ (makbul) then ‘the executed’ (maktul) as he was strangled to death after falling from grace. The İbrahim Pasha Palace was, contrary to other vizier’s palaces, built in ashlar masonry and for this reason considered to be in the Italian style. Evliya Çelebi calls this the grandest and largest of all viziers’ palaces in his Book of Travels.

The various chambers of the palace, which frequently changed hands between grooms and viziers of the Ottoman dynasty after İbrahim Pasha’s execution in 1536, were used for different purposes over time such as quarters for the Acemioğlanlar Ocağı (a rookie recruitment camp), an imperial lion house (Arslanhane), an asylum (Tımarhane), a sewing workshop (Karhane), a registry office (Defterhane), the Treasury Archives (Maliye Evrak Hazinesi), the National Defense Archives (Milli Müdafaa Evrak Hazinesi), an Army Corps Storehouse for Food Supplies (Kolordu Ambarı), a prison facility, courthouse archives, and a draft office. Though the Palace originally had four courtyards, later on the Registry Office (Defterhane) building was constructed in the first courtyard in the 19th century as well as an edifice for the Directorate of Land Registry and Cadastre in 1908. A major portion of the palace was torn down during the construction of the Court House lasting from 1935 to 1947. The second courtyard and surrounding buildings were restored under the supervision of master architect Hüsrev Tayla between 1966 and 1983, and reopened as the Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum in 1983. The museum later underwent another restoration starting in 2012 and lasting two years, opening its doors to visitors once more at the end of 2014. The remains of the hippodrome unearthed during this last restoration were also put on display as of 2014. These may be viewed both through the glass panel in the second courtyard and from the lower floor. The significance of this palace derives from its being the only one remaining from the 16th-century Ottoman Empire other than Topkapı Palace.