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beginning of Cyprus’s long engagement with Islam.
However, in many ways the Ottoman conquest had
simply replaced one group of rulers with another,
leaving the Greek Orthodox population largely
intact. This situation was understood by the Ottoman
emperor, Selim I, who after the conquest tried to
improve the prosperity of the island by populating
it with Greek families from the Kayseri region.
Ottoman rule ended with the First World War and
from 1918 the island was under British rule until it
became independent in the 1950s.
The main building material
on Cyprus is dressed
limestone although baked brick is also used. Also
Cyprus differs from its other near-eastern
neighbours in having a rich source of high quality
timber, enabling buildings to be built with pitched
wooden roofs covered with tiles. Although it is
known that the early Arab conquerors of Cyprus
built several mosques in Nicosia most of these were
dismantled or destroyed when Yazid withdrew the
garrison in 683. The only Islamic building in Cyprus
connected with this period is the tomb of Umm
Haram who died near Larnaca
during the early Arab
invasion. However, the earliest reference to the tomb
is 1683 and the main structure on the site today is a
tekke (Hala Sultan Tekke) built in 1797. Thus the
Islamic architecture of Cyprus is all from the
Ottoman period and is closely linked to the Ottoman
architecture of Anatolia. There are, however,
distinctive features in Cypriot Islamic architecture
which may be traced to the fact that the Ottomans
converted many of the existing
Gothic buildings into
mosques or palaces leaving the Greek Orthodox
churches untouched. The most spectacular examples
of this are the Selimiye Cami in Nicosia and the Lala
Mustapha Pasha Cami in Famagusta which are both
converted Gothic cathedrals. The Selimiye in Nicosia
was a thirteenth-century cathedral (Ayia Sofia) which
was converted to a mosque in 1570 by removing the
choir and altars and changing the arrangement of
windows and doors so that the main entrance was
from the north. At some
later date a cylindrical
Ottoman minaret was built on to the projecting
corner buttresses. The Lala Mustapha Mosque on
Famagusta was built in the fourteenth century as the
cathedral of St Nicholas, it was badly damaged
during the conquest of 1570 and converted into a
mosque in 1571 after being stripped of all its internal
decoration. Like the Selimiye,
the Lala Mustapha
Mosque had a minaret added to its west end at a
later date. The same procedure was adopted with
the Lusignan Palace which was converted into the
governor’s palace by the addition of a new Ottoman
reception room (diwan). Some buildings were
converted for different uses, thus the fourteenth-
century church of St George of the Latins was
converted into the Büyük
Hammam of Nicosia by
adding an Ottoman-style porch with niches and
thickening the walls.
In addition to converting Gothic churches the
Ottomans constructed new buildings with Gothic
details—thus the minaret of the Cami Kebir (Great
Mosque) at Larnaca is built with trefoil panels.
Elsewhere Gothic influence on Ottoman buildings
can be seen in the use of round windows and the
dog-tooth pattern on balcony supports.
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