Turkey's president on Thursday unveiled the new nameplate for Hagia Sophia Mosque, the Istanbul icon due to reopen for prayers tomorrow for the first time in 86 years.
Following a meeting on military matters in the capital Ankara, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and a delegation unveiled the nameplate at the main gate of Hagia Sophia Mosque and took a group photo there.
Erdoğan was also told about the work being done for Hagia Sophia Mosque's reopening for tomorrow's Friday prayers.
It served as a church for 916 years until the conquest of Istanbul, and a mosque from 1453 to 1934-nearly 500 years-and most recently as a museum for 86 years.
On July 10, a Turkish court annulled a 1934 Cabinet decree that had turned Hagia Sophia into a museum, paving the way for its use again as a mosque after an 86-year hiatus.