Examples of Hagia Sophia in the following topics:
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- Like most Byzantine churches of this time, the Hagia Sophia is centrally-planned, with the dome serving as its focal point.
- The dome of Hagia Sophia has spurred particular interest for many art historians, architects and engineers because of the innovative way the original architects envisioned it.
- After the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople, the plan of the Hagia Sophia would significantly influence the construction and design of the Süleymaniye Mosque (1550-1557).
- The Church of Saints Sergius and Bacchus (527-536), known today as "Little Hagia Sophia," was probably a model for the actual Hagia Sophia.
- Emperor Justinian ordered the construction of Hagia Sophia in 532 CE.
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- At the end of the first session, on the first day of Lent, all made a triumphal procession from the Church of Blachernae to Hagia Sophia, restoring the icons to the church in an event called the Feast of Orthodoxy.
- A series of naturalistic innovations can be seen in examples from the Hagia Sophia, the monastery of Hosios Loukas, and Saint Mark's Basilica.
- The Hagia Sophia is a former Greek Orthodox patriarchal basilica (church), constructed from 537 until 1453.
- After the end of iconoclasm, a new mosaic was dedicated in the Hagia Sophia under the Patriarch Photius and the Macedonian emperors Michael III and Basil I.
- These characteristics seen in Byzantine mosaics began to change in the following century, partially through the addition of perspective in the Theokotos of the Hagia Sophia.
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- Emperor Justinian was responsible for substantial expansion, a legal code, and the Hagia Sophia but suffered defeats against the Persians.
- His greatest accomplishment was the Hagia Sophia, the most important church of the city.
- The Hagia Sophia was a staggering work of Byzantine architecture, intended to awe all who set foot in the church.
- Byzantine Emperor Justinian built the Greek Orthodox Church of the Holy Wisdom of God, the Hagia Sophia, which was completed in only four and a half years (532 CE–537 CE).
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- Byzantine styles as seen in the Hagia Sophia served as particularly important models for Ottoman mosques, such as the mosque constructed by Sinan.
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- Byzantine styles as seen in the Hagia Sophia served as particularly important models for Ottoman mosques, such as the mosque constructed by Sinan.
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- After the fall of the Western Empire, several churches, including the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople and San Vitale in Ravenna, were built as centrally-planned structures.
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- Its dome bears a striking resemblance to the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul, Turkey.
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- It was made official in 815 CE at a meeting of the clergy in the Hagia Sophia.
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- This was also seen in the Theotokos of the Hagia Sophia, but in this case the architecture provides more of a place setting, as in the landscape of the Lamentation from Nerezi.
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- Constantinople was transformed into an Islamic city: the Hagia Sophia became a mosque, and the city eventually became known as Istanbul.