Historical Cemberlitas Bath (Çemberlitaş Hamamı)

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Historical Cemberlitas Bath (Çemberlitaş Hamamı)

  • Cemberlitas Bath Inside
  • Cemberlitas Bath
  • Cemberlitas Bath
  • Cemberlitas Bath
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Historical Cemberlitas Bath (Çemberlitaş Hamamı) Historical Cemberlitas Bath (Çemberlitaş Hamamı)

Historical Cemberlitas Bath (Çemberlitaş Hamamı)

  • $PTypeName$Baths
  • $PCityName$Istanbul
  • $PPhone$+90 212 522 7974
  • $PAdres$Cemberlitas, Fatih, Istanbul

Historical Cemberlitas Bath (Çemberlitaş Hamamı)

The Çemberlitas Bath is located on Çemberlitas Square on Divanyolu Street situated in the midst of some of Istanbul’s greatest monuments. It is next to the Vezirhan monument erected by Constantine I (324 – 327). The Köprülü Mahmud Pasa complex with its mosque, school and tombs are directly opposite the bath and at its sides are the Vezir Han and the old university building. Also in the near vicinity of the bath are the tomb of Sultan Mahmut II and its treasury, the Köprülü Library, the Atik Pasa Mosque and school and the tomb of Ali Baba.

The Çemberlitaş Historical Bath
 
 

The Çemberlitas Historical Bath is located next to the Çemberlitas Column, near the Grand Bazaar. It was built by architect Sinan with the wish of Nurbanu Sultan, the mother of Sultan Murat III and the wife of Selim II, in 1584. Its construction  was intedned to generate revenue in order to support the Valide-i Atik Mosque in Üsküdar. 

The hamam has separate sections for both men and women. It was also called the Mother Sultan Bath (Valide Sultan Hamamı) and the Rose Bath (Gül Hamamı).Evliya Çelebi, the most famous Ottoman traveler, called it  Murat III Bath, the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1574 until his death.

The glass case of the bath is covered by a dome, and the three stories of changing rooms have been built within a glass case. One then continues from glass case into the hot section (ılıklık) which is roofed by three domes. From the hot section into the main building which is called the harare. At the four corners of the harare, there are six halls and twelve sustaining columns that are covered by domes. In front of the halvets there are navel stones (göbek taşı) that are said they had been fixed by Köprülü Mehmet Paşa. There are inscriptions on the navel stones which have been partially erased and which display the bath’s superb architectural textures as if one were passing through a fantastic corridor of history.  

The glass case (changing room) of the women’s section in the bath had been abated during road constuction and it has since operated as a pastry shop (börekçi). In addition, after the washing rooms of  the women’s section were later used for paper storage.  In 1988 the bath was restored and also reopened to visitors. 
Currently, the Cemberlitas Historical Bath has continued to entertain tourists seeking the pleasures and enjoyment of a Turkish bath. As such, it deserves to be regarded as a masterpiece of Ottoman bath architecture.


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