Once you enter, your shoes are removed, and you are looked at to see if your dress attire is suitable to enter (ex. no showing of the legs). The interior of the mosque is definitely nice to gaze upon, with the its ceiling designs and tile designs that catch your eye. The most important part of the interior would have to be the mihrab. It is located in front of the prayer area. It is made of sculpted marble with a double inscriptive panel above it. It is also surrounded by many windows. To the right of the mihrab is the minber, or pulpit, where the imam stands when he is delivering his sermon at the time of noon prayer on Fridays or on holy days. As for Ahmet, who ascended to the throne at the age of 13, he died one year after the mosque was constructed at the age of 27. His tile-encrusted tomb rest in a separate building on the north side facing Sultanahmet Park.
Below I have a short video of the mosque, along with a bit of the spice market that Hande and I visited after.
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