
This small building, asymmetrical in plan, of
hewn stone, is on Asmaalti Square in Nicosia, to the north-east
of the Buyuk Khan. This inn, too, is typical of an Ottoman
inner-city commercial inn. Its exact date is uncertain but it is
believed to have been built in the 17th century. It is now
privately owned.
In the past the Gamblers' Inn was also known as
the Himarcilar or Kemancilar (violinists' or Fiddlers' Inn) inn.
It is two-storied, ranged around a courtyard garden and entered
through an arched passage from Asmaalti Square. The main gate is
not original and is a late repair. There is a second monumental
carved gate inside the passage which is clearly Medieval and not
of the Ottoman period, so one concludes that the inn stands on
the foundations of a Medieval structure. The irregularly-shaped
inner court is surrounded by rooms leading off arcades or
galleries on both floors. Though the inn had originally
approximately 52 rooms, the number at the present day is 44. On
the ground level the galleries have stone floors and wooden
beams, with pointed arched opening seated on square shafts.
Segmental arched doors lead into the inner rooms. Each room has
an embrasure window opening externally. A modern stair in the
south-east of the courtyard leads to the upper storey, where the
floor is marble. The prentice roof on wooden rafters is covered
by ridge tiles. Unlike the lower gallery, the upper one has no
arches but instead round columns on which the roof joists are
seated. The rooms leading off the galleries have barrel vaults
and segmental arched doorways. In some rooms there are
fireplaces. Here too the floors are marble, and the outer
windows are rectangular. Columns and arches on both floors of
the wing to the south are not original, being the result of
later repairs. Nor is the western front in an indiscriminate
manner, the entrance doors from the courtyard at ground level
were closed and external openings were substituted. In spite of
these many alterations and the resulting losses, the inn is
still a leading example of an old Turkish monument, both in
scale and in architecture.

Lefkoşa (Nicosia)
|
Gazimagusa (Famagusta)
|
Girne (Kyrenia)
|
Güzelyurt|
Iskele / Karpaz
