was built by Constantius' father, Constantine the Great (r. 306–337). Hesychius of Miletus wrote that Constantine built Hagia Sophia with a wooden roof...
al-Kukab consisted of a large centred hall with a gabled roof flanked by side aisles and two small towers. The GreatMosqueofConstantine was originally...
Sidi Lakhdar Mosque (Arabic: مسجد سيدي الاخضر), or Djamâa Lakhdar is a mosque located in Constantine, Algeria. It is mainly characterised by its curved...
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Constantine the African. Constantine the African (Latin: Constantinus Africanus; died before 1098/1099, Monte Cassino)...
In Constantinople, the area of the Nurosmaniye Mosque was close to the Forum ofConstantine, where the Column ofConstantine (Turkish: Çemberlitaş Sütunu)...
of prayer such as prayer halls (musala), courtyards (ṣaḥn) and porticoes (riwāq). All the mosques in this list are congregational mosques – a type of...
330 by Constantine the Great, the founder of Constantinople, the new capital of the Roman Empire. The church was unfinished when Constantine died in...
The Beylik ofConstantine (Arabic: بايلك قسنطينة, romanized: Bâylik Qasentina), Beylik of the Sunrise or Beylik of the East (Arabic: بيليك الشرق, romanized: Bâylik...
entertainment. In AD 324, the Emperor Constantine the Great decided to refound Byzantium after his victory at the nearby Battle of Chrysopolis; he renamed it Nova...
and Kathisma Palaces to build the Sultan Ahmed Mosque and its adjoining buildings. The site of the Great Palace began to be investigated in the late 19th...
Historic Areas of Istanbul Column ofConstantine Column of Marcian Column of the Goths Forum ofConstantine Forum of Theodosius Hippodrome of Constantinople...
It is the largest mosque in Algeria and Africa and the third largest mosque in the world by total area, after the GreatMosqueof Mecca and the Al-Masjid...
Muslims at the Sidi Lakhdar Mosque in Constantine. Multiple sources report that 25 Jews and 3 Muslims died over the course of the three-day riot, and several...
names) became the capital of the Roman Empire during the reign ofConstantine the Great in 330. Following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in...
Sultanahmet Mosque New Mosque Eyüp Sultan Mosque Fatih Mosque Bayezid II Mosque Zeyrek Mosque Arap Mosque Gül Mosque Bodrum Mosque Vefa Kilise Mosque Eski Imaret...
shifted to Tunis, the GreatMosqueof al-Zaytuna, the city's main mosque, became the country's leading center of learning. Ofgreat impact on culture were...
branch of the Mese road, just inside the now disappeared Wall ofConstantine (dating to the foundation of Constantinople by Constantine the Great) in correspondence...
Bey, into the mosque İmrahor Camii (literally, Mosqueof the Equerry). The ancient structure sustained grave damage from the great fire of 1782; the 1894...
Eastern Orthodox church converted into a mosque by the Ottomans. The church was known under the Greek name of Myrelaion (Greek: Eκκλησία του Μυρελαίου)...
religion of the Roman Empire in the reign ofConstantine I (also known as Constantine the Great) by the Edict of Milan in 313. Constantine patronized...
Column ofConstantine, and the historical Nuruosmaniye Mosque. Islamic architecture List ofmosques Ottoman architecture Atik Ali Pasha Mosque back side...
honor of his son. The location of Byzantium attracted Constantine the Great in 324 after a prophetic dream was said to have identified the location of the...
The column was moved by Constantine the Great when Constantinople became the new capital, and has stood at the Hippodrome of Constantinople ever since...
Sarayı) (see Palace of the Porphyrogenitus) Topkapı Palace Yıldız Palace Monuments Aviation Martyrs' Monument Column ofConstantine (also known as the...
is near the Wall ofConstantine. Older authors for a long time were unable to confirm its identity, which was ascribed to several of the city's cisterns...