DERLEYEN(LER):
Suzan Yalman
A. Hilâl Uğurlu
CATEGORY:
ANAMED
Architectural History
Art History
History
PAGES: 200
SIZE: 19,5 x 25 cm
EDITION: 1st print ,2019-11-01 11:45
HARDCOVER ISBN: 9786057685148
HARDCOVER PRICE: 100 TL
With its history that goes back millennia, Anatolia is studded with sites from different eras that are deemed “sacred.” The collected essays in this volume present diachronic and synchronic studies of Anatolian sacred sites from the medieval period onward that situate them within various spatial, urban, and sociocultural dynamics. Each article explores unique case studies that illustrate the role of human agency in the creative process of transforming awe-inspiring sites into sacred spaces. Collectively, the volume reveals that the magnetic qualities of such destinations create a web of sanctity, as well as a complicated matrix of economic, political, and social relations.
The scholarly contributions published here emerged from the 11th International ANAMED Annual symposium, entitled “Sacred Spaces + Urban Networks” and held at Istanbul’s Koç University Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations (ANAMED) in December 2016. This symposium brought together prominent scholars in the field and former fellows of the research center, including the volume’s editors. While our initial goal was to explore different layers of sacredness in Anatolia, ultimately, the volume sheds light on parallels among case studies and presents the connectedness between these layers.
Spatial Webs charts the cultural heritage and identity of Anatolia, focusing on projects that incorporate Geographic Information Systems and other analytical […]
Amy Singer, Anuja Dangol, Ayşe Nur Akdal, 320 TLSpatial Webs: Mapping Anatolian Pasts for Research and the Public
Mapping Anatolian Pasts for Research and the Public
Trebizond, that “long-anticipated city of the Komnenians with its soft and melodious name” to quote Jakob Fallmerayer, has long lured […]
Annika Asp-Talwar, Antony Eastmond, Barbara Roggema, 111,11 TLByzantium’s Other Empire
Trebizond
As an extension of the exhibition “Picturing a Lost Empire: An Italian Lens on Byzantine Art in Anatolia, 1960–2000” which […]
Alessandra Guiglia, Andrea Paribeni, Antonio Iacobini, 70 TLPicturing a Lost Empire
An Italian Lens on Byzantine Art in Anatolia, 1960-2000