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- Title
AYDINOĞULLARI'NDAN OSMANLI'YA TİRE KÜLLİYELERİ (14. - 16. YÜZYILLAR).
- Authors
YÜKSEL, Çağla CANER
- Abstract
Building complexes, those commissioned by the ruling elite as a charity to become a good Muslim, to improve public welfare, to foster settlement and development and finally to epitomize their power and authority, hold a significant place within the architectural context of Anatolia in the 14th - 16th centuries. These building groups were either social institutions developed around a mosque in the center or were in the form of dervish lodges founded by the heterodox dervishes to help secure, prosper, and develop the newly conquered territories particularly during the Principality and Early Ottoman periods. While dervish lodges were built for the most part in rural lands, building groups, which assemble different functional units around a mosque either planned and designed together from the beginning or developed into a whole with later additions, were built in urban centers, like those in Tire. These building complexes were at the same time influential in transforming, developing and shaping their immediate urban contexts. As such, this study is a comparative inquiry into the building complexes of Tire commissioned first by the Aydınid and next by the Ottoman patrons in the 14th - 16th centuries, which questions their architectural development, transformation and contribution to their immediate urban settings.
- Subjects
TURKEY; BUILDINGS; AYDINIDS; ARCHITECTURE; OTTOMAN architecture; ARCHITECTURAL history; HISTORY
- Publication
Hacettepe University Journal of Turkish Studies / HÜTAD Hacettepe Üniversitesi Türkiyat Arastirmalari Dergisi, 2014, Vol 11, Issue 21, p7
- ISSN
1305-5992
- Publication type
Article