Hagia Sophia, İznik

View of the church today

The Hagia Sophia (Greek: Ἁγία Σοφία, "Holy Wisdom") at Nicaea is a Byzantine-era church in Nicaea (now known as İznik) in Turkey.[1]

The church of Hagia Sophia was built by Justinian I in the middle of the city in the 6th century.[2] It was modelled after the larger Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, and it was in this building that the Second Council of Nicaea met in 787 to end the first period of Byzantine Iconoclasm.

Hagia Sophia in 1962. Photo by Paolo Monti.

A timber-roofed basilica with a central nave and side aisles, it was built shortly after 1065, but extensively remodeled after its conversion into a mosque. Before the remodeling it had two rows of triple arcades on columns that carried a clearstory wall with five windows.[3]

It was converted to a mosque after the fall of the city to the Ottoman Turks in 1337, and functioned as such until it was converted into a museum in 1935. In November 2011 it was again converted into a mosque.[4]

References

  1. Smith, William (editor); Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, "Nicaea", London, (1854).
  2. Hazlitt, Classical Gazetteer, "Nicæa"
  3. Richard Krautheimer, Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture, 4th edition, 1986, p365.
  4. "The Church That Politics Turned Into a Mosque". International Herald Tribune. 9 February 2012. Retrieved 12 February 2017 via The New York Times.

Coordinates: 40°25′46″N 29°43′13″E / 40.42944°N 29.72028°E / 40.42944; 29.72028


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