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The interior furnishings of Sultan Ahmet Camii are typical
of those of the other imperial mosques in Istanbul.The most
important element in the interior of any mosque is the
mihrab, a niche set into the center of the wall opposite the
main entrance.The purpose of the mihrab is to indicate the
kible, the direction of the holy city Mecca, toward which
the faithful mast face when they perform their prayers.In
the great mosques of Istanbulthe mihrab is invaribly quite
grand, with the niche itself made of finely carved and
sculptured marble and the adjacent wall sheathed in ceramic
tiles.To the right of the mihrab we see the mimber, or
pulpit, where the imam stands when he is delivering his
sermon at the time of noon prayer on Fridays or on holy
days.The mosque is flooded with light from its 260 windows.
These were once filled with colored glass which would have
tempered the too-crude brightness; now they are slowly being
replaced with modern immitations.The painted arebesquesin
the domes and upper parts of the building are less good than
examples of this type of decoration from 16th and 17th
century, when they were reachly elaborate in design and
somberly magnificiant in color.
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