The Sanki Yedim Mosque (the Mehmed Şakir Efendi Mescit or Keçeci Hayreddin Mescit) is a mosque in the Zeyrek neighborhood, Fatih, Istanbul, Turkey.[1]
History
The mosque was built, probably in the 18th century,[2] by someone by the name of Keçeci Hayreddin[3] or by the name of Sankiyedim.[4]
At some point the mosque was rebuilt by Adanalı Mehmet Şakir Ağa, and at some point the building burned, but was rebuilt by İmamzâde Hasan Efendi, reopening in 1868. It was again burned in the Çırçır fire of 1908,[5] and was again rebuilt in 1959-1961 by the Türkiye Anıtlar Derneği.[6]
Origin of name
A popular story tells that the person who later founded the mosque, whenever he wanted to eat something special, instead of buying it, he would set the money aside and say, "It is as if I ate" (Turkish: Sanki yedim). Eventually he had put aside enough money to build a mosque.[7]
Description
The current mosque is architecturally undistinguished, squeezed between apartment buildings and made of reinforced concrete.[8]
References
^Alçep, Hakkı; Karaman, Erdal (2017). Fatih Camileri ve Mescidleri [Mosques and Masjids of Fatih] (PDF) (Report) (in Turkish). Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı Fatih Şubesi. p. 413. Retrieved 26 November 2024.
^Eyice, Semavi (1950). "Demirciler ve Fatih Darüşşifası Mescidler" [The Demirciler and Fatih Darüşşifası Masjids]. Tarih Dergisi (in Turkish). 1 (2): 376 n. 53. Retrieved 26 November 2024.