Saturday, June 14, 2025

Blogger, Paulina Allen

Today’s Highlights:

  • Bursa Ulu Cami (The Great Mosque)
  • Yeşil Türbe (the Green Tomb) and Yeşil Cami (The Green Mosque)
  • İskender Kebap for lunch
  • Shopping in Bursa’s Bazaars
  • Movie night!

Journey to Bursa

Today was a bittersweet day because it was our last day trip. We left at 9 to catch a 9:30 dolmuş (a mini-bus or shared taxi that runs a predetermined loop), but we were running a few minutes late, so we ran the last leg of the walk! After making it to our dolmuş by the skin of our teeth, we enjoyed the (slightly squished) hour-and-a-half ride to Bursa. Bursa sits at the foothills of the Uludağ, which translates to “great mountains.” Its location in this mountainous region gave us beautiful mountain views on our journey there.

                  The dolmuş brought us to the Bursa bus station, so we took another bus from there into the center of town.

Group in the dolmuş

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Photo by Wen Ting Ooi

Ulu Cami

                  Our first stop of the day was at the Ulu Cami or Great Mosque. This mosque was likely the oldest we have seen during our time in Turkey, and it was reminiscent of the mosques we saw in southern Spain. It was built before the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople in 1453, and therefore the architecture of this mosque had not been influenced by the monumental Byzantine buildings of Constantinople, such as the Hagia Sophia. Unlike the mosques in Istanbul, most of which copied the Hagia Sophia with a large central dome and two semi-domes, this mosque held twenty domes arranged in rows of five. The top of the central dome is now glass, but it used to be open, and below it sits a marble fountain called a sardirvan.

Minaret of Ulu Cami.

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Photo by Naomi Pitamber.