THE GREAT INN:
From a historical and architectural perspective, Buyuk Han is the most
noteworthy of the Turkish monuments in Nicosia. It is acknowledged to have
been constructed by the first Ottoman governor of Cyprus, governor-general
Muzaffer Pasha in 1572. The building is rectangular and has two storeys;
the rooms ringing a large courtyard open to an arched and domed pavilion.
The inn has been constructed with stones transported from different buildings
and places. Likewise, it is possible that the marble columns supporting
the small mosque in the middle of the courtyard have been taken from another
building. This small, domed mosque with its conic, hexagonal stone chimneys
complements the inn’s Turkish style of architecture. The rooms on the ground
floor were used as shops, store-rooms and offices. The rooms on the upper
floor with fireplaces with octagonal chimneys were the bedrooms. Although
the inn is very similar to the ones in Anatolia one difference can be noticed:
whereas this type of inns and caravanserais in Anatolia usually have only
one main entrance, the Great Inn has another.
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