Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Fight Of A Century: Where In Kayseri Was Mimar Sinan Born?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Fight Of A Century: Where In Kayseri Was Mimar Sinan Born?

    FIGHT OF A CENTURY: WHERE IN KAYSERI WAS MIMAR SINAN BORN?

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Nov 30 2009
    Turkey

    Agırnas and Mimar Sinan, two villages in the central Anatolian
    province of Kayseri, have been fighting each other for nearly 100 years
    over their competing claims to be the birthplace of Ottoman architect
    MimarbaÅ~_ı Sinan. As a result, one resident says, families have
    gone so far as to forbid marriages between young people from the
    two villages

    Kayseri's Agrınas village is officially recognized as the hometown
    of MimarbaÅ~_ı Sinan.

    An entire century has proved an insufficient amount of time for
    residents of two neighboring villages in the central Anatolian
    province of Kayseri to determine which town was the birthplace of
    Turkey's most renowned architect.

    Kayseri's Agrınas village is officially recognized as the hometown
    of MimarbaÅ~_ı Sinan, the chief architect for the Ottoman Empire,
    who is often referred to as simply Mimar Sinan, or architect Sinan.

    A member of a family from Kayseri, according to history books, Sinan
    is said to have created his first works as a child using kevenk,
    a volcanic stone unique to Kayseri, which sits amid the foothills of
    the extinct volcano Mount Erciyes.

    During the time of Yavuz Sultan Selim, Sinan was taken into the guild
    of the janissaries, an Ottoman infantry corps. Sons of Christian
    families living within the borders of the empire were taken from their
    families, converted to Islam and educated in the guild of janissaries.

    Before Agırnas sits the village of Talas, which still maintains its
    historical character. We felt like time travelers as we visited the
    village's abandoned and ruined churches and ancient streets.

    The most interesting stop in Talas was undoubtedly the historical
    Talas American College and Hospital complex. The structure, which
    is affiliated with Erciyes University and makes a strong impression
    with its unique architecture, almost defies the years from its perch
    overlooking the village.

    Agırnas-born botany expert Sinan Demiroglu, who guards the historical
    building and bears the same name as the famous architect, guided us
    throughout the day after learning that one person from our team has
    roots in Kayseri.

    Fight to claim ownership

    All historical sources cite Agırnas as the birthplace of MimarbaÅ~_ı
    Sinan, but some Kayseri locals believe that the legendary architect
    was born in the nearby village of Mimar Sinan, just a few hundred
    meters away. The residents of the two villages have quarreled for
    decades over ownership of their most famous son.

    "Mimar Sinan villagers say that he was born there; Agırnas villagers
    say their village is mentioned as the birthplace in all records
    and thus claim ownership," Demiroglu told the Hurriyet Daily News &
    Economic Review. "According to my 93-year-old grandmother, this fight
    has been continuing for nearly 100 years."

    As a result, Demiroglu added, families have gone so far as to forbid
    marriages between young people from the two different villages.

    Cell towers changed the village

    While visiting the villages one by one, we also passed through Germir,
    just a few kilometers from Talas and the birthplace of internationally
    renowned American director Elia Kazan. Demiroglu said he had hosted
    Kazan in his grandmother's mansion when the late director visited
    the village several years ago.

    Unlike Talas, Germir has failed to preserve its historical fiber. The
    entrance to the village resembles a construction site; seven- or
    eight-story buildings rise from everywhere. There is nothing left in
    the village, which was famous for its vineyards and orchards.

    Although rapid growth is cited as the cause of the changes in Germir,
    Demiroglu says the main factors are the mobile phone towers placed
    in the village.

    "The villagers went to court because of the towers," he said, adding
    that they had filed suit in an ongoing case to have the mobile phone
    towers removed. "Germir was also famous for walnut trees, but like
    the vineyards and orchards, they are no longer producing."

    The story of the golden bell

    The final destination on our tour with Demiroglu was a ruined Armenian
    church in Germir. "I grew up playing in this church. We used to throw
    stones at the portraits of saints on the walls," he said, adding that
    he now regrets this.

    The church's historic bell had been stolen, and Demiroglu said he
    believed the legend that his grandmother tells about how the bell
    was taken away.

    "A big airplane came close to the bell tower. My grandmother says
    that it was a German airplane," he said. "Those in the plane took
    the church's golden bell and flew away."

    Who was MimarbaÅ~_ı Sinan?

    According to historical records, MimarbaÅ~_ı Sinan was born in
    Kayseri's Agırnas village and was taken into the guild of janissaries
    at the time of Yavuz Sultan Selim.

    Sinan's ethnic roots remain a matter of intense debate to this day,
    with some claiming he was of Armenian or Greek origin and others
    saying he was a Turk.

    Earning the title of chief architect of the palace, Sinan decorated
    the empire with his works, including the Husreviye complex in Aleppo,
    Syria; the Coban Mustafa PaÅ~_a complex in Gebze; and the Haseki
    complex, built for Hurrem Sultan, in Istanbul.

    Three of his works built after he became chief architect can be viewed
    as steps displaying the development of his art.

    The first is the Å~^ehzade Mosque and complex in Istanbul. The
    Suleymaniye Mosque, built a few years later, is considered the
    architect's most magnificent work in Istanbul. Lastly, the Selimiye
    Mosque, in the northwestern city of Edirne, is widely considered to
    be Sinan's masterpiece.

    The Selimiye Mosque, which he built while in his 80s, has a dome that
    is higher and deeper than that of the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul.
Working...
X