Caravanserai Located just east of the town center, the caravanserai is a roughly square building arranged around a central courtyard. There two rows of five separate rooms on the courtyard's north and south sides - these were used by better-off travelers. These are bordered by two long rooms that take up the entire north and south sides of the building; these served as stables and sleeping quarters for most guests. The monumental entrance is located on the building's east side. Each side of the entryway is flanked by a vaulted recess with a raised floor; this was where guards were posted. Inside the portal is an entrance hall leading to the courtyard. On either side of the hall there are several rooms that were used to store merchandise. A staircase leading up to the roof is on the right side. At the west end of the building are three tall
iwans, which are awkwardly out of place in the building's design - the builders may have copied them wholesale from another building, such as a
medrese. The iwans were used as places to sleep in the summer and possibly also as stables. Two large rooms border the iwans, one on the north and one on the south; like the rooms by the entrance hall, these were used to store merchandise. The caravanserai was changed significantly during the early Ottoman period. The original design had included two
porticos on the north and south sides of the courtyard, in front of the first-class rooms; these no longer exist. There had also originally been six first-class rooms on each side; the two at the west end were later converted into iwans.
Türbe The türbe is located in the middle of a circular courtyard surrounded by a thick wall. A walkway goes around the top of the outer wall, behind a small
parapet. The entrance portal, which is on the southwest side, is richly decorated and is framed by a
muqarnas. The wall is raised around the portal, and the upper walkway would have originally gone through a tunnel at this point. On the inside of the wall, beneath the walkway, are a series of wide arched niches. These were originally designed to accommodate tombs for family members. The wall above them overhangs slightly and probably represent the remains of a vaulted portico. One of these niches has since been replaced with a fountain. The türbe's main tower is a relatively simple structure without windows. Inside, a staircase leads down to the burial chamber, which is partly below ground. File:Tercan Mama Hatun Türbesi interior 2770.jpg| Tomb of Melike Mama Hatun. File:Tercan,kümbet4.jpg| Entrance portal to the tomb complex. File:Tercan Mama Hatun Türbesi interior 9115.jpg| Interior view of the walkway on top of the outer wall. Tercan Mama Hatun Türbesi interior 9111.jpg| Interior of the tomb ==Other nearby sights==