- الصفحة الرئيسية
- مراكز البحوث
- TAM
- The Women who Built the Ottoman World: Female Patronage and the Architectural Legacy of Gülnuş Sultan
TAM ROUNDTABLE MEETINGS
The Women who Built the Ottoman World: Female Patronage and the Architectural Legacy of Gülnuş Sultan
Muzaffer Özgüleş
11 Kasım 2017 Cumartesi 17:00 Salon: ŞAKİR KOCABAŞ SALONU
Turkey Research Center presents a new series titled "Talks on Cities and Neighborhood" that will give you the opportunity to discuss the historical and contemporary issues of the urban planning, spatial history, and environment through related books, dissertations and articles. In our next meeting in November, we are going to host Muzaffer Özgüleş*. He will present his book on “The Women who Built the Ottoman World: Female Patronage and the Architectural Legacy of Gülnuş Sultan”**.
“At the beginning of the 18th Century, the Ottoman Empire remained the grandest and most powerful of Middle Eastern Empires. One hitherto overlooked aspect of the empire's remarkable cultural legacy was the role of powerful women - often the head of the harem, or wives or mothers of Sultans. These educated and discerning patrons left a great array of buildings across the Ottoman lands; opulent, lavish and powerful palaces and mausoleums, but also essential works for ordinary citizens, such as bridges and waterworks.
Muzaffer Ozgules here uses new primary scholarship and archaeological evidence to reveal the stories of these Imperial builders. Gulnus Sultan for example, the head of the imperial harem under Mehmed IV and mother to his sons, was often pictured on horseback, and travelled widely across the Middle East commissioning architects and craftsmen as she went. Her buildings were personal projects designed to showcase Ottoman power and they were built from Constantinople to Mecca, from modern-day Ukraine to Algeria.
Ozgules seeks to re-establish the importance of some of these buildings, since lost, and traces the history of those that remain.The Women Who Built the Ottoman World is a valuable contribution to the architectural history of the Ottoman Empire, and to the growing history of the women within it.” ***
* Assist. Prof., GAUN.
**The Women who Built the Ottoman World: Female Patronage and the Architectural Legacy of Gülnuş Sultan, I.B. Tauris, 2017.
*** The speech will be conducted in Turkish.
İLGİLİ YUVARLAKMASALAR
- Geometric Patterns of Süleymaniye Mosque and a Particular Exercise
- Architecture in Turkiye in 2000s: Problems and Opportunities
- The Challenge of Europe's "Now": Time in the Romantic Age Architecture
- Construction of Ottoman Vîlāyet-i Rûm (patrons-vaqfs-actors of architecture): Yorguc Pasha family's patronage (1429-1494)”
- Örencik Houses
- A Trilogy on the House: Bademli - Hacımercan – Yedievler
- A Design and Construction Story: Dr. Hikmet Bey House
- A Wooden Building Cooperative in Afyon
- Geometric Patterns in Classical Ottoman Architecture
- Modernism and House
- The Birth of Modern Family and House in Istanbul Since
- A Neighborhood Fiction: İznik Toki Houses
- House Indeed: An Adobe House in Kahramanmaraş
- Understanding Collaborative Partnership Practices in Cultural Heritage Management: Case Study of Maritime Greenwich
- House in the East Blacksea and a New Trial: House of Yaşar
- Yahşibey Houses
- The Story of Two Houses in Fatih
- The 200-year Story of the Wooden House in the US
- Edirne Uc Serefeli Mosque and the Restorations up to the Republican Period through the Documents
- The Kiosk of Poet: Aşiyan
- The Latecomer Home
- Talk with Eric Broug: On Islamic Geometric Patterns
- History of a Göynük House: Four Generation Two Architects
- Memory and Space: Sâmiha Ayverdi’s “İbrahim Efendi Konağı”
SEMINARS
As the most traditonal activity of BISAV, the courses take place in every fall and spring of a year.
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