Banya Bashi Mosque

The mosque is desinged and built by the famous Ottoman architect Sinan. The main building is rectangular with the central dome and the minaret rising from the four corners. The interior of the mosque acquires its current appearance as a result of several renovations over the course of history. The current condition of the Banya Bashi mosque makes it possible to hold about 700 Muslims on Fridays, and nearly 1,200 Muslims on Eid .

About this building

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Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Monuments
  • Links to national heritage

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons/Catholic_cathedral_Sofia

Saint Joseph Cathedral

The cathedral of Saint Joseph is a Roman Catholic church and it is the largest catholic cathedral in Bulgaria: it can hold up to 1000 worshipers. The current building was inaugurated in 2006. It has been rebuilt on its previous location after it was destroyed by Allied bombing raids during the second World War. The foundation stone of the new building was laid by Pope John Paul II during his visit to Bulgaria in 2002.

Wikimedia Commons/Ann Wuyts

Kodzha Mahmut Pasha Mosque

The former mosque is the oldest building of its kind in Sofia. The mosque with its squared plan has nine domes of equal diameter. They are supported by pointed arches and covered with leaden sheets. The middle ones are higher and ‘the entire space, through a special system of domes and arches, is an absolutely symmetrical construction, and it’s on this symmetry, harmony and equality among all its parts, that the major artistic effect is due. During the Russian-Turkish War (1877-1878) the mosque was turned into a hospital. Later it was a library, museum and printing house, and since 1892 it has housed the National Archaeological Institute With Museum .