Hunat Hatun Complex

{{Short description|Islamic religious complex in Turkey}}

{{unreliable sources|date=February 2017}}

File:Hunat Hatun Külliyesi.jpg

File:Tile from Hunat Hatun Baths in Kayseri. 1237-38 Kayseri Archaeological Museum, inv. 75-665.jpg

The Hunat Hatun Complex is a historic Islamic religious complex in Kayseri, Turkey.

Early in the 13th century, Kayqubad I, Sultan of the Anatolian Selçuks (1219–1237), captured the Alanya fortress (then called Kalon Oros, later renamed Ala'iyya) from its Armenian ruler, Kir Vart. One of the conditions of Vart's surrender was that his daughter Hunat (“lady” in Persian) Mahperi Hatun would become the sultan's wife. After her marriage, Lady Hunat (as she is redundantly called in English) converted to Islam and commissioned the Hunat Hatun Complex, made up of the Hunat Hatun Mosque, tomb, medrese, and hamam, which is still functioning and has separate facilities for men and women.{{Cite web|url=https://premiumtravel.net/turkey-cities/kayseri/|title=Kayseri|access-date=2017-02-07|archive-date=2021-05-23|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210523125345/https://premiumtravel.net/turkey-cities/kayseri/|url-status=dead}}

Gallery

File:Hunat Hatun Complex 2426.jpg|Hunat Hatun Complex Front

File:Hunat Hatun Complex 96 002.jpg|Hunat Hatun Complex Interior mosque

File:Hunat Hatun Complex 2428.jpg|Hunat Hatun Complex Interior mosque minber and mihrab

File:Hunat Hatun Complex 2430.jpg|Hunat Hatun Complex Interior mosque central dome

File:Hunat Hatun Complex 2434.jpg|Hunat Hatun Complex Mausoleum

File:Hunat Hatun Külliyesi medrese 2545.jpg|Hunat Hatun Complex Medrese

References

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Category:Seljuk mosques in Turkey

Category:13th-century Islam

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