Görüş Makalesi

Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony

Cilt: 3 30 Aralık 2021
  • Alison Terndrup
PDF İndir
EN

Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony

Öz

The Suna and İnan Kıraç Foundation Collection (SVIKV) holds an illustrative mid-century example of Ottoman commemorative lithography, large in format (63 x 41 cm; 71 x 49 cm including its frame) and enhanced with hand-applied colors (fig. 1). According to its trilingual inscription—printed in English, Ottoman Turkish, and French—the scene shows an imperial procession held for the bayram holiday holiday of 1176 H / 1762, passing through the First Court of the Topkapı Palace.

Anahtar Kelimeler

Teşekkür

My thanks go to YILLIK managing editor K. Mehmet Kentel and editorial assistant Miray Eroğlu for introducing me to this work. Thanks to Emine Fetvacı for introducing me to Miray. I thank Gwendolyn Collaço, András Riedlmayer, and Hyunjin Cho for their generous advice and astute points regarding the logistics of printmak- ing and circulation in the nineteenth century. Thanks to Furkan Sevim and Himmet Taşkömür for their help with the Ottoman translation of the inscription.

Kaynakça

  1. 1 Alois Senefelder invented the lithographic process in Bavaria in 1804, but the technology for chemically preparing stones did not arrive in the print centers of the Ottoman Empire, including Istanbul and Smyrna (today’s Izmir), until the 1830s. It took until the middle of the century for Istanbul’s presses to come into their own.
  2. 2 This refers to one or both of the two major Islamic holidays: Ramazan Bayramı, or Eid al-Fitr, and Kurban Bayramı, or Eid al-Adha.
  3. 3 Topkapı Palace Museum (TSM), 121/679 (formerly 17/169).
  4. 4 For a study of trilingual captions in French, Ottoman Turkish, and Greek appearing in a collection of twenty-five hand-colored engravings and lithographs produced in Ottoman Smyrna in the 1830s, see Gwendolyn Collaço, ed., Prints and Impressions from Ottoman Smyrna: the Collection de costumes civils et militaires, scènes populaires, et vues de l’Asie-Mineure Album (1836–1838) at Harvard University’s Fine Arts Library (Istanbul: Orient-Institut Istanbul, 2019).
  5. 5 This piece was acquired by Suna and İnan Kıraç Foundation, Istanbul in 2018 from the Yılanlı Yalı collection.
  6. 6 “It is the official view of the bayram procession of the reigning Sultan Mustafa III between the Imperial Gate and the Middle Gate in the year 1176 H.”
  7. 7 The Middle Gate is more typically known in Turkish as the Ortakapı or the Bâbü’s-selam (Gate of Salutation).
  8. 8 In both English and French, “Sublime Porte” was used as a metonym for the Ottoman central government, named after the gate to the grand vizier’s offices.

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil

İngilizce

Konular

-

Bölüm

Görüş Makalesi

Yazarlar

Alison Terndrup Bu kişi benim
0000-0001-6089-0023
United States

Yayımlanma Tarihi

30 Aralık 2021

Gönderilme Tarihi

25 Kasım 2021

Kabul Tarihi

-

Yayımlandığı Sayı

Yıl 2021 Cilt: 3

Kaynak Göster

APA
Terndrup, A. (2021). Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony. YILLIK: Annual of Istanbul Studies, 3, 150-156. https://doi.org/10.53979/yillik.2021.7
AMA
1.Terndrup A. Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony. YILLIK. 2021;3:150-156. doi:10.53979/yillik.2021.7
Chicago
Terndrup, Alison. 2021. “Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony”. YILLIK: Annual of Istanbul Studies 3 (Aralık): 150-56. https://doi.org/10.53979/yillik.2021.7.
EndNote
Terndrup A (01 Aralık 2021) Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony. YILLIK: Annual of Istanbul Studies 3 150–156.
IEEE
[1]A. Terndrup, “Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony”, YILLIK, c. 3, ss. 150–156, Ara. 2021, doi: 10.53979/yillik.2021.7.
ISNAD
Terndrup, Alison. “Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony”. YILLIK: Annual of Istanbul Studies 3 (01 Aralık 2021): 150-156. https://doi.org/10.53979/yillik.2021.7.
JAMA
1.Terndrup A. Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony. YILLIK. 2021;3:150–156.
MLA
Terndrup, Alison. “Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony”. YILLIK: Annual of Istanbul Studies, c. 3, Aralık 2021, ss. 150-6, doi:10.53979/yillik.2021.7.
Vancouver
1.Alison Terndrup. Procession and Continuity: A Nineteenth-Century View of an Eighteenth-Century Ceremony. YILLIK. 01 Aralık 2021;3:150-6. doi:10.53979/yillik.2021.7