Zincirli Mosque, Serres
Zincirli Mosque | |
---|---|
Religion | |
Affiliation | Islam |
Region | Central Macedonia |
Year consecrated | late 16th century |
Location | |
Municipality | Serres |
Country | Greece |
Geographic coordinates | 41°05′17.0″N 23°33′13.4″E / 41.088056°N 23.553722°E |
Architecture | |
Style | Ottoman architecture |
The Zincirli Mosque (Greek: Ζινζιρλί Τζαμί, meaning "mosque of the chains" in Turkish) is a historical mosque in the city of Serres in northern Greece.
The mosques is located in the southwestern corner of the city.[1] A middle-size mosque, it comprises a central, square prayer space with a two-storey colonnaded portico on its eastern, northern, and western sides; the qibla lies in the southern side, while the entrance is from the northern.[1] The central space is covered by a dome, while the porticoes are topped by keel-shaped domes.[1] The pulpit (minbar) is located on the southwestern corner of the building. It is made of marble, and is one the finest examples surviving in Greece today.[1] The entrance features a column-supported porch topped by small domes above the spaces between the columns.[1] While the main structure's masonry features dressed or rough stones surrounded by bricks, the porch is entirely of carefully dressed limestone ashlars.[1]
Its architecture and layout of the building are typical of the late 16th century, following the school of Mimar Sinan, and analogous to buildings of the same period in Istanbul.[1]