CONTRARY TO THE HISTORICAL RECORD, WHICH VIEWS THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE
EASTERN OTTOMAN CITIES AS UNCHANGING REMNANTS OF A MEDIEVAL AND
PROTO-TURKISH GOLDEN AGE, THIS RICHLY ILLUSTRATED BOOK HIGHLIGHTS THE
WIDE-RANGING TRANSFORMATIONS THAT MARDIN, DIYARBAKIR, URFA, ANTEP,
BITLIS AND ERZURUM, SAW AT THE HANDS OF ARMENIAN ARCHITECTS OF THE
NINETEENTH AND TWENTIETH CENTURIES.
Case studies reflect the agency of Armenian architects in constructing
these buildings- whether churches, mansions, government offices,
schools, or commercial structures. Each chapter looks to one of these
cities and the participation of Armenians in shaping these places, not
just through architecture but through city institutions, patronage,
and benevolence. It argues that Armenians used the urban environment,
and a uniquely Armenian reinvention of vernacular architecture, which
reflected their religious, educational, intellectual, and political
networks, to partake in the revival of these cities in an era marked
by reforms to the Ottoman polity, political culture, and local
governance. This was a show of popular belonging, and pride in local
traditions, but it was also, merged with symbols of Ottoman authority,
a reflection of the formation of Ottoman local elites, which included
these Armenians - thus representing complex localization and
Ottomanization processes at work. This book shows that there was not
'one' Armenian culture or identity, but many competing visions across
Ottoman cities.
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Armenian Architects, Vernacular Style and Architectural Placemaking in the Ottoman East
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780755655106
Publisert
2026
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter