AĞRI ISHAK PASHA PALACE

İshak Pasha Palace is more of a complex than a mere palace.
It is our second administrative campus after the Topkapı
Palace in İstanbul and the most famous of the palaces built
at recent decades.
The palace which was built on a hilla at the side of a
mountain 5 km east of Doğubeyazıt District is the last large
monumental structure of the Ottoman Empire in the "Lale
Devri" period. It is one of the most distinguished and magnificent
examples ofthe 18th century Ottoman architecture and is
very valuable in terms of art history. According to the
top of the door inscription at the Harem Section it was
consstructed in 1784 or 1199 accordingto the Islamic calendar.
As the ground building sits on is a valley slope, it is
rocky and hard. Despite the fact that it is at the center
of the Old Beyazıt city its three sides (north, west, south)
are steep and sloped. There is a suitable flat area only
to the east. The entrance of the palace is on that side.
Its also its narrowest facade.
As the palace was built inan age when the castles ceased
to be special and fire arms were developed and were abundently
available its defense towards the hills on the east is weak.
Its main gate is the weakest point in that respect. The
structure of the main gate is no different than those seen
in the palaces built in İstanbul and elsewhere in Anatolia
and has a neat stone workmanship and carving.
Today we have very few examples of the historical Turkish
palaces still surviving. One of these is the İshak Pasha
Palace and complex.
Ishak Pasha Palace is composed of following sections in
terms of architectural style:
1- Exterior facades
2- First and second courts
3- The men's quarter (selamlık)
4- The mosque building
5- The Soup Kitchen (Darüzziyafe)
6- Bath
7- Rooms of the Harem Section
8- Hall for ceremonies and entertaintment
9- Arch gates
10- Panteries and ammunition room
11- The mousoleum
12- The bakery
13- Dungeons
14- Some sections from interior design (doors, windows,
cupboards, fireplaces, soft drink cupboard etc)
The characteristic of the palace is in its mixture of
Ottoman, Persian and Seljuk architectural styles. The palace
was built in 1685 by II. İshakpaşa of the Çildıroğulları
and Çolak Abdi Pasha and took its final form in 1784. The
building occupies an area of approximately 115m x 50 m.
The portal on the eastern facade of the palace, which is
built with cut stones, reflects the characteritics of the
Seljuk art with its reliefs and decorations.

The palace is composed of two courts and the collection
of structures positioned around them. Some of the buildings
of the first court are destoyed. The second court which
is surrounded on four sides with buildings has a rectengular
plan. To the right, with reference to the entrance there
is the men's quarter and behind it the harem section. At
the end of these, there is the mosque and the mousoleum.
The mousoleum is built in the style of the Seljuk "kümbet"
(cupola) architecture. The palace section has two stoerys.
All of its 366 rooms are arranged on these two floors. Each
room has a stone fireplace. The cavities within the stone
walls indicate that the building as a whole possessed a
central heating system.The reception hall is 30mx3 m. It
has stone walls and floor . Its walls are decorated with
couplets and verses from theKkoran in the decorative examples
of the Turkish Chaligraphy art. Among these a couplet, which
in very free translation goes like "Ishak, upon will, made
the whole world a place of benovelence and the date to witness
this was one thousand one hundred ninetynine" and indicates
that the palace was completed in 1784 A.D. The mousoleum
in the second court yard of the palace is built with cut
stones This octoganal mousoleum is in the shape of the copolas,
which is one of the most typical examples of the traditional
Seljuk mousoleum architecture and has two storeys. Its walls
are decorated with geometric motifs. Çolak Abdi Pasha, İshak
Pasha and their close kin are resting at this mosoleum.
The interior and exterior architectural wealth of the
Ishak Pasha palace could be described forever. Whether the
palace is taken as a whole or should its rooms and buildings
studied individually, sucsess, order and mastery is all
that one can fine
Ishak Pasha Palace stands at a desolate valley today and
the fact that it was the subject of various legends and
stories add to its magnificent athmosphere some colour and
mystery.
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