The Museum of Yenisehir Semaki House
Şemaki House, converted into a museum, XVIII. It was built in the 19th century and it is one of the original examples of Ottoman architectural art. It was built by the Shemakizade family of Turkestan, who migrated from the village of Semaki in West Turkistan and settled in Yenisehir, and the pencil work adorning the house was XIX. belongs to century. This historical and worn-out historical building was converted into a museum in 1991, as it was used by the Şemaki family. The walls of the large room on the upper floor of the two-storey house without a basement are plastered with plaster and horasan, and the cabinet doors are decorated with the Istanbul Maiden's Tower and Sarayburnu paintings. The upper floor covering is made of wood. In this section, there is a “mansion lodge”, the ceiling of which is separated by a wooden arch, and this place is designed as the place where the house and the neighbors' young girls chat and craft. The most interesting feature of this house, which is open to visitors on days other than Monday, is that no nails were used in the construction of the house.