Ottoman monuments (712 Subjects)
Plan of the Mosque of Sultan Suleiman I in Istanbul.
The New Mosque in Istanbul.
Mosque near Livadeia.
Sultan Selim II Mosque in Edirne.
View of Topkapi Palace in Istanbul.
The Yedikule fortress (Heptapyrgion) in Istanbul.
The prison cells of Christian captives, probably at Yedikule fortress (Heptapyrgion) in Istanbul.
Karababa fortress in Euboea.
Castle of Patras, ancient Patrae.
Title page. Scene in the Valley of Sweet Waters.
Panoramic view of the (now lost) Palace of Beşiktaş, at the site of which the Dolmabahçe Palace was constructed.
View of Istanbul from Üsküdar.
View of Nikopol, Bulgaria.
View of Seraglio Point from Karaköy.
Fortress at Belgrade Forest on the European shores of the Bosporus, Istanbul.
Ruce port, Bulgaria.
View of the Ottoman shipyards of Kasımpaşa from Pera (Beyoğlu). On the left the mosques of Sultan Mehmed II and Yavuz Sultan Selim.
The armory bazaar in the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul.
The port of Istanbul.
The Fountain of Sultan Ahmed III at the Hagia Sophia square, Istanbul.
Panoramic view of the Golden Horn from the cemetery of Eyüp.
View of Aleppo and its castle.
The fortifications of the city of Rhodes with the Muslim cemetery seen from the northwest. Turkish women pray and give offerings to a tomb.
The fortifications of the city of Rhodes and the Muslim cemetery seen from the west. The author being shown the location.
The fortifications of the city of Rhodes and the Muslim cemetery seen from the southwest.
The fortifications of the city of Rhodes and the Muslim cemetery seen from the southeast.
Relief of angel and coat of arms of Grand Master Émery d'Amboise, from D'Amboise Gate. Ottoman inscription from the same gate (“There is no god but God, Muhammad is the messenger of God."). Relief of Virgin with infant and coat of arms of Grand Master Pierre d'Aubusson, discovered in the Jewish quarter and kept at the Franciscan monastery in Rhodes. Coat of arms of the Knights Hospitaller from the medieval town. Latin inscription «In convertendo inimicum meum retrorsum infirmabuntur et peribunt a facie tua» (Psalms 9:3 “When mine enemies are turned back, they shall fall and perish at thy presence”), referring to the siege of Rhodes by the Ottomans.
Dressing room in the Baths of Suleiman in Rhodes.
View of Corinth and Acrocorinth. In the background the Temple of Apollo (at ancient Corinth).
The remains of the Temple of Apollo at ancient Corinth.