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Karatay Madrasa
Karatay Madrasa is a madrasa (a school with a frequently but not absolutely religious focus) in Konya, Turkey located at the foot of the citadel hill, across from the ruins of the Seljuk palace and in view of the Alâeddin Mosque. Since 1954, the building has served as a museum displaying a collection of historic tile art, particularly from the Seljuk period. The madrasa and the Karatay Han, a caravanserai completed in the 1240s, are the largest extant monuments in Konya and its immediate regions.
History
It was founded in 1251 by the vizier Jalal al-Din Qaratay (d. 1254) during the joint rule of the brothers Kayqubad II, Kaykaus II, and Kilij Arslan IV. The madrasa was built next to the Küçük Karatay Madrasa, which no longer exists. The monument was built after the Mongol invasions of Anatolia and as a result the design is not strictly Seljuk in nature. Jalal al-Din is most likely buried in a side room of the Karatay Madrasa, which contains a cenotaph. In the records of Shams al-Din Ahmad Aflaki, a biographer of Rumi, the madrasa was a place where gatherings of both Sufis and scholars took place. Despite the recorded presence of Sufis, the document listing the madrasa's endowment (waqfiyya) states: "And he [the founder] stipulated that the müderris (teacher of Islamic law in a madrasa) should be Hanafi...", likely because the Seljuk rulers were largely Hanafi. The tile manufacture of the madrasa was likely coordinated by Muhammad al-Tusi, a master ceramicist from the Iranian city of Tus in Khurasan, who was also responsible for the tile decoration of the Sırçalı Madrasa.
Architecture
The madrasa has a rectangular floor plan measuring approximately 31.5 by 26.5 m. It is entered through a vestibule on the southeast side, at the corner of the building. From the outside, the entrance features a highly ornate stone portal featuring Arabic inscriptions, geometric and floral motifs, ablaq masonry (alternating bands of grey and white marble), and a muqarnas canopy over the doorway. The portal, which is not joined to the body of the building, is similar to that of the Alâeddin Mosque; the stonework is likely the work of craftsmen from northern Syria in the 1220s. It is possible that the portal had been previously built at the same time as the Alâeddin Mosque and was reused for the madrasa.
Museum
Since 1954, the place serves as a museum where Seljuk tiles are united, while artifacts in stone or in wood are on display in Ince Minaret Madrasa, also in Konya. The collection of Karatay Museum was particularly enriched by the finds collected from the Kubadabad Palace royal summer residence on Lake Beyşehir shore, at eighty miles from Konya to the west, which was excavated since the 1960s. A restoration of the building was carried out in 2006. Another restoration project was in progress as of 2019.
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