Parthenon mosque

{{Short description|Former mosque in Athens}}

File:Vue de l'Acropole d'Athènes en 1670 Dessin d'après la lithographie de M Felix Périn - Omont Henri Auguste - 1898.jpg

The Parthenon mosque refers to one of two places of Islamic worship created successively within the Parthenon during Greece's Ottoman period. The first was the mosque adapted from the Church of Our Lady of Athens, which was destroyed by a Venetian bombardment in 1687. The second was a free-standing building erected in the open space of what was the naos of the now ruined Parthenon; this was dismantled in 1843.

History

File:Peytier - Mosque in the Parthenon.jpg in the 1830s]]

At what point the Parthenon first became a congregational mosque is undocumented. However, Mehmed II is known to have visited Athens in 1458 after the surrender of the Acropolis to the Ottoman Empire and again in 1460,Kritoboulos, Histories 3.9.4–7. Fowden, 2019, p.80 and it is speculated that the act of conversion could have taken place then or shortly thereafter since the prominent churches of conquered territories were typically converted.N. G. Nikoloudis, The conversion of Parthenon into a mosque, Post Augustum 1 (2017), pp.33-38 cites contemporary correspondence to the effect that the Parthenon remained a church for a number of years, and a conversion date of 1466-70 is more likely. The structural changes to the building were slight. A Frankish tower in the south-west corner of the pronaos, which might have served as a bell tower, was converted to a minaret.Recent scholarship has cast doubt on this as the location of the minaret. See Fowden, 2019, p.79 n.50 The presbytery screen, the high altar, and the altars in the side apses were all removed.Korres, The Parthenon from Antiquity to the 19th Century, in Tournikiotis, 2009, p.152 The mosaic of the Virgin in the apse evidently survived conversion.Michaelis, Der Parthenon, 1871, p.48, n.176 Less certain is the fate of the ambo, the removal or not of the episcopal throne, and the precise location of the minbar and mihrab.Michaelis, Der Parthenon, 1871, p.55 This building was destroyed in the Venetian bombardment during the 1687 Siege of the Acropolis and replaced with a smaller free-standing, single-domed mosque that stood in the cleared space of the naos. It was built sometime in the early 18th century."must have been built after 1699, when the French ambassador Compte de Feriol visited the ruins; in fact, it may have been part of the 1708 repairs." Ousterhout, 2005, pp.322-323 This in turn was removed in 1843 with the beginning of archaeological activity on the Acropolis.

Evidence

The primary evidence for this period of the Parthenon’s existence is scant. Not only have the physical structures been erased, but the documentary evidence of the mosque is also scarce. The earliest references are in the biographies of Mehmed II and the Vienna Anonymous manuscript of c. 1460.Also the Ambrosian Anonymous of c 1470 Ousterhout, 2005, p.317 Mehmed is recorded as having admired the city and its monuments. In 16th-century Ottoman tax records, the mosque is named {{Transliteration|ota|cami’-i kal’e-i Atina}}, 'fortress mosque of Athens'.Ousterhout, 2005, p.320 The most detailed surviving contemporary description is in Evliya Çelebi’s Seyahatnâme. Evliya not only recorded the physical details of the Parthenon but attempted to incorporate it into the Ottoman cultural milieu and Islamic legend and folklore.Fowden, 2019 Evliya's visit in 1667 was succeeded by a number of European visitors, who left a small cache of records of the Ottoman Parthenon before its destruction. These include Carrey’s drawings, the Bassano drawing of 1670Museo Civico of Bassano del Grappa, Collezione RIVA, 11599. See L. Beschi, 1956. “Un disegno veneto dell’Acropoli Ateniese nel 1670,” Arte Veneta 10, pp. 136–141. and Spon’s, Vernon’s and Wheler’s accounts of the Acropolis. The second mosque is slightly better documented in the form of travellers' drawings. Amongst the last of these records is de Lotbinière's 1839 daguerreotype of the Parthenon, depicting the mosque still present in the naos.

== Notes ==

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Bibliography

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  • {{cite journal |first=Elizabeth Key|last= Fowden|title= The Parthenon, Pericles and King Solomon: a case study of Ottoman archaeological imagination in Greece|journal= Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies| volume= 42| issue= 2|date= 2018|pages= 261–274|doi= 10.1017/byz.2018.8|s2cid= 165918625|url= https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/273492}}
  • {{cite book|author-first=Elizabeth Key|author-last= Fowden|chapter= The Parthenon Mosque, King Solomon and the Greek Sages|editor-first1= M.|editor-last1= Georgopoulou|editor-first2= K.|editor-last2= Thanasakis|title= Ottoman Athens: Archaeology, Topography, History|location= Athens|date= 2019}}
  • {{cite book |editor-first=Panayotis|editor-last= Tournikiotis|title= The Parthenon and Its Impact in Modern Times|publisher= Abrams|date= 2009}}
  • {{cite book|author-first= Robert|author-last= Ousterhout|chapter= "Bestride the Very Peak of Heaven": The Parthenon after Antiquity|editor-first= J.|editor-last= Neils |title= The Parthenon: From Antiquity to the Present|publisher= Cambridge|date= 2005}}

{{Refend}}

{{Commons category|Ottoman Mosque in the Parthenon}}

{{Acropolis of Athens}}

{{Ottoman monuments of Athens}}

{{coord missing|Greece}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Parthenon mosque}}

Category:15th-century mosques in Greece

Category:Buildings and structures demolished in 1843

Category:Parthenon

Category:Ottoman mosques in Greece

Category:Former mosques in Greece

Category:Ottoman architecture in Athens

Category:Mosques in Athens

Category:Demolished buildings and structures in Greece