| Bursa, Turkey |
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Bursa is a city in northwestern Turkey and the capital of Bursa Province . With a population of 1,194,687 ( 2000 census), it is Turkey's fourth largest city. The city is famous for its ski resorts (on the mountain of Uludağ), the mausoleums of Ottoman sultans, and the surrounding fertile plain. It is also the home of some famous Turkish Foods , especially Chestnut desserts and a meat dish called İskender Kebap . Bursa is the center of the Turkish Automobile industry, where FIAT and Renault have located their factories. The former names for Bursa are Brusa and '''Prusa''' ( Greek ''Προύσσα''). The earliest known site at this location was Cius , which Philip V Of Macedon ia granted to the Bithynia n king Prusias I in 202 BC , for his help against Pergamum and Heraclea Pontica (modern Karadeniz Ereğli ). Prusias renamed the city for himself, Prusa. It was later a major city, located on the westernmost end of the famous Silk Road , and was the capital of the Ottoman Empire following its capture from the Byzantines in 1326 until the capture of Edirne in 1365 and remained an important administrative and commercial center even after it lost its status as the capital. The Algerian resistance fighter Emir Abd El-Kader resided here for a while ( 1852 to 1855 ), as well as Ayatollah Khomeini in his first year of exile ( 1963 ) before leaving for Nejef in Iraq and later for Paris , and Ismail Hakkı Bursevi a famous Islamic scholar and Sufi is buried here. MOSQUES OF BURSA Ulucami Ulucami, the Great Friday Mosque, is the major mosque of Bursa and a landmark of early Ottoman architecture. It was built by Ali Neccar in 1396-1399, at Sultan Bayezid I 's command. The mosque is large and rectangular, with twenty domes arranged in four rows of five supported by twelve columns. It has two Minaret s. Inside the mosque there are 192 monumental wall inscriptions written by famous Calligraphers . At the top right is a picture of the fountain (in Turkish, ''şadırvan'') inside the mosque, where worshippers can perform Ritual Ablutions ; the dome overhead is capped by a skylight, creating a soft, serene light below. Below right is a picture of the many domes and the calligraphy that adorns the supporting pillars. The horizontally spacious and dimly lit interior, with all of its nooks and crannies, seems peaceful and contemplative. This atmosphere contrasts with later Ottoman mosques (see for example the work of long-time chief architect Sinan ), whose increasingly elevated central domes create a vertical emphasis that feels more grand and imperial. EXTERNAL LINKS |