Among the largest mosques built by the Ottoman Empire in Dobruja, it is made of cut stone 85 cm thick.
It has 32 windows, of which 18 are on the upper part, ensuring natural lighting for the interior terrace that surrounds the building on three sides.
By that time, Dobruja was part of the Romanian Old Kingdom, and the minaret was rebuilt using funds supplied by the Religious Affairs and Public Instruction Ministry.
They would later give part of the profits they made through these raids to the Ottoman authorities, which would spend some of them on the Azizyie Mosque and the modern Tulcea Art Museum.
[3] The mosque and the former school are listed as historic monuments by Romania's Ministry of Culture and Religious Affairs.