THE GREATLEAGCY OF HAGIA SOPHIA
FROM GREAT CHURCH TO GREAT MASJID
Hagio Sophia is one of the greatest surviving examples of Byzantine
architecture. Its interior is decorated with mosaics and marble pillars and
coverings of great artistic value. Hagia Sophia was built by two architects ,
Isidorus of Miletus and Anthemius of Tralles , after it burned down for the
second time in 532 C.E. Employed by the Byzantine emperor Justinian I,
the two architects , highly skilled in mechanics and mathematics , oversaw
the construction of the church in just six years . Hagia Sophia’s vast 105-
foot dome is pierced with windows , giving the impression that it floats on
air. After the Turkish conquest of Constantinople in 1453, the
church was repurposed as a mosque , minarets and a mihrab was added ,
and giant disks bearing Islamic calligraphy were installed on the
building’s walls.