Timurtas Mosque
It was built by Subaşı Timurtaş Pasha in the first quarter of the 15th century. It is square planned and domed. The dome rises on a high pulley. As construction materials, rough-hewn rubble stone and brick were used. Alternate masonry technique was applied by laying one row of stones and two rows of bricks on the main walls. On the side and qibla facades of the mosque, there are five window openings, two at the top and four at the top, and one on the pulley. The lower windows are made larger than the upper windows. The pointed arches of the rectangular windows are made of brick. The windows on the pulley are aligned in the middle of the façade. The minaret, located in the western corner of the mosque, has a square cross-section and an alternating knitted base. The shoe, body and honeycomb part are brickwork. Cut stones were used on the upper and lower bracelets of the body and the balconies. It is covered with a lead-coated cone. There are windows on both sides of the entrance on the northwest facade. The portal, slightly protruding from the facade of the building, has a marble jamb enclosed in a pointed arch and a low arch. The top of the mosque is covered with a dome sitting on an octagonal drum. The transition to the dome in the square-planned sanctuary was made with Turkish triangles. The mihrab on the south wall of the sanctuary was made of brick. The mihrab has four rows of stalactites. A cabinet niche was opened in the middle of the side walls. In the western corner of the sanctuary, there is a door providing entrance to the minaret.