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ANKARA: Turkey To Protect Architect Sinan's Works In 40 Countries

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  • ANKARA: Turkey To Protect Architect Sinan's Works In 40 Countries

    TURKEY TO PROTECT ARCHITECT SINAN'S WORKS IN 40 COUNTRIES

    Hurriyet
    March 8 2010
    Turkey

    The Turkish Presidency and the Culture Ministry have begun an
    international project to preserve buildings constructed by the master
    Ottoman architect Sinan, with plans for the restoration of his works
    in 40 countries where the Ottoman Empire once ruled. Some experts,
    however, worry the project is neglecting the works of other important
    architects

    Although Turkey has launched a new project to preserve and restore the
    works of master Ottoman architect Sinan in 40 different countries,
    some experts have criticized the project, saying other historical
    legacies are being neglected.

    The project, which will be carried out in 40 countries in which the
    Ottomans once had a presence, is being headed by Hagia Sophia Museum
    Chairman and Ottoman specialist Dr. Haluk Dursun with support from
    the Culture and Tourism Ministry.

    At the same time, officials announced the formation of an Architect
    Sinan Foundation under the auspices of the Presidency.

    Dursun said Syria and Greece had also given support to Turkey for the
    project in an interview with the Hurriyet Daily News and Economic
    Review. Sinan's best-preserved works are in Syria, Yemen and the
    Bulgarian city of Plovdiv, according to Dursun.

    Noting that the idea for the project emerged a few years ago,
    the researcher said he and a team of experts visited the different
    countries to assess the works of the master architect.

    Extensive restoration work for Sinan's buildings that are in severe
    disrepair will begin as soon as official permission is granted by
    the relevant authorities.

    'Only mosques are being protected'

    Sinan was born in the Agırnas village of the central Anatolian
    province of Kayseri. The future chief architect of the Ottoman Empire
    created his first works by making formations out of "kevenk" stones,
    a type of soft volcanic rock found in Kayseri, when he was a child.

    Sinan, who is said to be the child of an Armenian or Greek family from
    Kayseri, was drafted into the Janissaries, an Ottoman infantry corps.

    The sons of Christian families living within the empire were often
    taken from their families, converted to Islam and educated in the
    guild of the Janissaries.

    Dursun said there has been much discussion of Sinan's ethnicity,
    but that these debates largely served no purpose. "There is nothing
    more natural than different ethnicities in an empire. Discussions on
    ethnicity are meaningless. Sinan is a value to this land."

    Istanbul Technical University Faculty of Architecture member Afife
    Batur, however, criticized Dursun's sole focus on Sinan. "Yes, Sinan
    is a significant name in terms of the history of architecture. It
    cannot be denied. But why are Sinan's works taken under protection
    but not the works of the other architects before and after Sinan?"

    Demanding an extension of the preservation project, Batur said:
    "I would prefer that such a comprehensive project implemented under
    the auspices of the Presidency included the whole of the history of
    our architecture. But I should ask why all of Sinan's works within
    the borders of Turkey, except mosques, are devastated. Is there a
    project for them?"

    Istanbul University member and Byzantine Art history expert Associate
    Professor Asnu Bilban Yalcın said she did not agree with Batur's
    views, adding that Turkey had done its best to preserve the works of
    other architects for future generations.

    She said UNESCO and European Union initiatives had made an important
    contribution to Turkey's protection of its historical artifacts.

    'Worst damage done to ourselves'

    Dursun said the protection of a historic structure was generally
    related to whether it had a continuing function in the present day.

    "If the structure is a mosque, it means this structure is still alive.

    This is what function means." Other Sinan works, such as caravanserais,
    have meanwhile been reborn as cultural centers.

    Noting that Sinan's buildings had been placed into religious and
    secular categories, Dursun said the architect's buildings had been
    neglected in Muslim countries, including Turkey. "The main reason
    for this is to deny and ignore the Ottomans and their heritage. Not
    only Arabic countries, but also we have also done the worst amount
    of damage to ourselves by ignoring the Ottomans."

    The researcher, whose own work has actually focused primarily on
    Sinan's non-religious buildings, including Turkish baths, khans and
    caravanserais, said the project would take many years to complete.
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