Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mevlana_Museum> ?p ?o }
- Mevlana_Museum abstract "The Mevlâna Museum, located in Konya, Turkey, is the mausoleum of Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi, a Persian Sufi mystic also known as Mevlâna or Rumi. It was also the dervish lodge (tekke) of the Mevlevi order, better known as the whirling dervishes.Sultan 'Ala' al-Din Kayqubad, the Seljuk sultan who had invited Mevlâna to Konya, offered his rose garden as a fitting place to bury Baha' ud-Din Walad (also written as Bahaeddin Veled), the father of Mevlâna, when he died on 12 January 1231. When Mevlâna died on 17 December 1273 he was buried next to his father.Mevlâna's successor Hüsamettin Çelebi decided to build a mausoleum (Kubbe-i-Hadra) over his grave of his master. The Seljuk construction, under architect Behrettin Tebrizli, was finished in 1274. Gürcü Hatun, the wife of the Seljuk Emir Suleyman Pervane, and Emir Alameddin Kayser funded the construction. The cylindrical drum of the dome originally rested on four pillars. The conical dome is covered with turquoise faience.However several sections were added until 1854. Selimoğlu Abdülvahit decorated the interior and performed the woodcarving of the catafalques.The decree of 6 April 1926 confirmed that the mausoleum and the dervish lodge (Dergah) were to be turned into a museum. The museum opened on 2 March 1927. In 1954 it was renamed as \"Mevlâna Museum\".One enters the museum through the main gate (Devisan Kapısı) to the marble-paved courtyard. The kitchen of the dervishes (Matbah) and the Hurrem Pasha tomb, built during the reign of Süleyman the Magnificent, are located on the right side. On the left side are 17 dervish cells lined up, covered with small domes, and built during the reign of Murad III. The kitchen was also used for educating the dervishes, teaching them the Sema. The ṣadirvan (washing fountain) in the middle of the courtyard was built by Yavuz Sultan Selim.One enters the mausoleum and the small mosque through the Tomb gate (Türbe Kapisi). Its two doors are decorated with Seljuk motifs and a Persian text from mollah Abdurrahman Cami dating from 1492. It leads into the small Tilavet Room (Tilavet Odası) decorated with rare and precious Ottoman calligraphy in the sülüs, nesih, and talik styles. In this room the Koran was continuously recited and chanted before the mausoleum was turned into a museum.One enters the mausoleum from the Tilavet Room through a silver door made, according to an inscription on the door, by the son of Mehmed III in 1599. On the left side stand six coffins in rows of three of the dervishes (Horasan erler) who accompanied Mevlâna and his family from Belkh. Opposite to them on a raised platform, covered by two domes, stand the cenotaphs belonging to the descendants of the Mevlâna family (wife and children) and some high-ranking members of the Mevlevi order.The sarcophagus of Mevlâna is located under the green dome (Kibab'ulaktab). It is covered with brocade, embroidered in gold with verses from the Koran. This, and all other covers, were a gift of sultan Abdul Hamid II in 1894. The actual burial chamber is located below it. Next to Mevlâna's sarcophagus are several others, including the sarcophagi of his father Bahaeddin Veled and his son Sultan Veled. The wooden sarcophagus of Mevlâna dates from the 12th century now stands over the grave of his father. It is a masterpiece of Seljuk woodcarving. The silver lattice, separating the sarcophagi from the main section, was built by Ilyas in 1579.The Ritual Hall (Semahane) was built under the reign of Süleyman the Magnificent at the same time as the adjoining small mosque. In this hall the dervishes used to perform the Sema, the ritual dance, on the rhythm of musical instruments such as, the kemence (a small violin with three strings), the keman (a larger violin), the halile (a small cymbal), the daire (a kind of tambourine), the kudüm (a drum), the rebab (a guitar) and the flute, played once by Mevlâna himself. All these instruments are on display in this room, together with an ancient Kirşehir praying rug (18th century), dervish clothes (Mevlâna's included) and four crystal mosque lamps (16th century, Egyptian Mameluk period). In this room one can also see a rare Divan-i-Kebir (a collection of lyric poetry) from 1366 and two fine specimens of Masnavis (books of poems written by Mevlâna) from 1278 and 1371.The adjoining small mosque (Masjid) is now used for the exhibition of a collection of old, illustrated Korans and extremely valuable prayer rugs. There is also a box (Sakal-i Ṣerif), decorated with nacre, containing the Holy Beard of Muhammad.The mausoleum was depicted on the reverse of the Turkish 5000 lira banknotes of 1981-1994.".
- Mevlana_Museum thumbnail Mausoleo_Mevlana.jpg?width=300.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageExternalLink mevlana.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageExternalLink www.mevlanamuzesi.net.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageID "13247763".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageLength "6561".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageOutDegree "54".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageRevisionID "708128689".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Abdul_Hamid_II.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Brocade.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Catafalque.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Category:1927_establishments_in_Turkey.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Category:Biographical_museums_in_Turkey.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Konya.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mevlevi_order.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Category:Museums_established_in_1927.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Category:Museums_in_Konya_Province.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Category:Religious_museums_in_Turkey.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Cenotaph.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Dervish.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Diwan-e_Shams-e_Tabrizi.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Dáire.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Faience.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Gürcü_Hatun.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Halile.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Kayqubad_I.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Keman.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Kemence.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Konya.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Kırşehir.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Mamluk.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Masnavi.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Mehmed_III.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Mevlevi_Order.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Mosque_lamp.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Muhammad.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Mullah.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Murad_III.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Nacre.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Naskh_(script).
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Obverse_and_reverse.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Persian_people.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Pervâne.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Rebab.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Rumi.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Sama_(Sufism).
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Selim_I.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Seljuq_dynasty.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Shadirvan.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Sufism.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Suleiman_the_Magnificent.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Sultanate_of_Rum.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Sülüs.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Talik.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Turkey.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink Turkish_lira.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink File:5000_TL_A_reverse.jpg.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink File:Mausoleo_Mevlana.jpg.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink File:MevlanaMuseum.jpg.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink File:Turkey.Konya008.jpg.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink File:Turkey.Konya019.jpg.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLink File:Turkey.Konya058.jpg.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mevlana Mausoleum".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mevlana Mosque".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mevlana Museum".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mevlana mausoleum".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mevlâna Mausoleum".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mevlâna Museum".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rumi Museum".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLinkText "his tomb".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageWikiLinkText "poet’s tomb".
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Museums_in_Turkey.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Rumi.
- Mevlana_Museum wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Mevlana_Museum subject Category:1927_establishments_in_Turkey.
- Mevlana_Museum subject Category:Biographical_museums_in_Turkey.
- Mevlana_Museum subject Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Konya.
- Mevlana_Museum subject Category:Mevlevi_order.
- Mevlana_Museum subject Category:Museums_established_in_1927.
- Mevlana_Museum subject Category:Museums_in_Konya_Province.
- Mevlana_Museum subject Category:Religious_museums_in_Turkey.
- Mevlana_Museum hypernym Mausoleum.
- Mevlana_Museum point "37.870555555555555 32.50472222222222".
- Mevlana_Museum type Place.
- Mevlana_Museum type Attraction.
- Mevlana_Museum type Establishment.
- Mevlana_Museum type SpatialThing.
- Mevlana_Museum comment "The Mevlâna Museum, located in Konya, Turkey, is the mausoleum of Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi, a Persian Sufi mystic also known as Mevlâna or Rumi. It was also the dervish lodge (tekke) of the Mevlevi order, better known as the whirling dervishes.Sultan 'Ala' al-Din Kayqubad, the Seljuk sultan who had invited Mevlâna to Konya, offered his rose garden as a fitting place to bury Baha' ud-Din Walad (also written as Bahaeddin Veled), the father of Mevlâna, when he died on 12 January 1231.".
- Mevlana_Museum label "Mevlana Museum".
- Mevlana_Museum sameAs Q902957.
- Mevlana_Museum sameAs متحف_مولانا.
- Mevlana_Museum sameAs موزه_مولوی.
- Mevlana_Museum sameAs Mevlana_Múzeum.
- Mevlana_Museum sameAs Museu_Mevlana.
- Mevlana_Museum sameAs m.03b_5s4.
- Mevlana_Museum sameAs Mausoleul_Mevlana.