Vol. 12 No. 2 (2015): Cultural Transitions in Ottoman Architecture
Articles

Spolia usage in Anatolian rulers: A comparison of ideas for Byzantines, Anatolian Seljuqs and Ottomans

Bilge Ar
Department of Architecture, Faculty of Architecture, Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul, Turkey

Published 2015-07-01

Keywords

  • Ottoman Architecture,
  • Anatolian Seljuq Architecture,
  • Reuse,
  • Roman-Byzantine Architecture,
  • Spolia material

How to Cite

Ar, B. (2015). Spolia usage in Anatolian rulers: A comparison of ideas for Byzantines, Anatolian Seljuqs and Ottomans. A|Z ITU JOURNAL OF THE FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE, 12(2), 3 - 17. Retrieved from https://www.az.itu.edu.tr/index.php/jfa/article/view/414

Abstract

The re-evaluation and re use of antique construction material as spolia may have much deeper meanings than sole economic purposes. It may be because of aesthetic taste or the wish to give a political or religious message. The origins and choice of spolia, the motives for the use of it, possible political, ideological, liturgical and perhaps legal reasons behind it must all be evaluated. Spolia materials are subject to many different fields by nature of their given and original lives. This work covers some ideas between approaches to spolia material and meanings attibuted to them in mainly monumental buildings of Byzantine Empire, Anatolian Seljuq Sultanate and Ottoman Empire. The evaluation starts with the reign of Constantine, on vast lands covering the East and the West, Rome and Constan- tinople where extensive use of spolia was deliberately applied. Through Middle Ages different approaches were encountered in Europe, Byzantine territories and in the lands dominated by Anatolian Seljuqs. Later on while Early Ottoman era applications get integrated to the applications of the Byzantine era, a completely different attitude and usage is developed during Classical Ottoman era. This work tries to give an overview of these usages and the ideas behind them through some comparative ideas.