Topkapi Palace, Istanbul
Topkapi Palace, Istanbul
Topkapi Palace, Istanbul
THE DIVAN
The second courtyard was
flanked by the Divan, the
kitchens and the treasury.
These buildings contributed to
the display of imperial power
symbolically, by function, rather
than monumentality:
Fronting colonnades
outdoors, these arches
support domes and roofs
indoors.
Domes cover rooms and
halls as well as the
colonnades and again the
consistency of the
proportions and shapes of
these domes is strictly
maintained throughout.
The colonnades not only
run along the lengths of
buildings but link clusters
or indeed single modules
with one another providing
further cohesion.
MODULARITY
Most of the rooms, halls
and colonnades
constructed by the
alignment of modules
consisting of domes, or
pyramidal roofs placed
upon vertical
rectangular prisms, the
4 sides of which are
arches almost like the
modules of a Lego set.
STAINED GLASS,
WALL TILES
Stained glass and
tiles typical of the
interiors
The Interior with
tiled walls usually
used Iznik tiles to
decorate the interior
Interior Materials
MARBLE
The Sadirvanli Taslik
The marble used for the
door- and window-frames
is from the quarries of the
Proconnessos on the island
of Marmara which in
Antiquity provided
practically all the grey and
white marble used in the
Eastern Mediterranean.
COLOURED GLASS
The Has Oda (Privy
Chamber) of Murad III
(1574-95)
Showing the painted
dome on the pendentives
and an upper tier of
windows of coloured
glass.
The windows are double
glazed for the Istanbul
winter.
MARBLE FLOOR
The bathroom is the
most stark-looking of all
the rooms in the harem
all cement walls and
marble floors with
bright gold lavatory
fixtures.