Patrimonialization on the Ruins of Empire : Islamic Heritage and the Modern State in Post-Ottoman Europe.
After the failed Siege of Vienna of 1683, the Ottoman Empire gradually withdrew from Europe. Even so, monumental reminders of its former presence survived across the continent. The contributors to this volume show that the various successor states adopted substantially different approaches towards t...
| Other Authors: | , |
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| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
[Place of publication not identified] :
transcript Verlag,
2024.
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
Table of Contents:
- Cover
- Contents
- Introduction
- Patrimonialization, heritagization, heritization?
- Inheritances treasured, disregarded, or discarded
- Secondary inheritances and the politics and economies of interest
- Bandwidths of post-Ottoman patrimonialization
- Works cited
- No news as good news?
- The Habsburg empire's Muslim inheritance
- Scope: Whose art history?
- Periodization: Politics or culture?
- Modes of narration: Typology, survey, illustration
- Highlights: A canon prefigured
- Conclusion: Prevalence and persistence of the Oriental
- Works cited
- Ottoman until proven otherwise
- The long shadow of Ottoman Bosnia
- The architectural history of the Behram-beg mosque
- The Ottoman period building(s), 1540-1871
- The Habsburg-period rebuilding of circa 1888
- A major intervention circa 1895
- Excursus on decorative layers recently uncovered
- The future of the Behram-beg mosque's past
- Conclusion
- Works cited
- Monument preservation as an aspect of 20th century Turkish-Hungarian relations
- Introduction: Functional definition and the main aspects of the research
- Gül Baba and the shrine
- Sacral centre in a changing environment
- The shrine as a focus for visitors (emperors, historians, pilgrims, travellers, and delegations)
- The shrine and arts
- The shrine as museum
- The shrine as an educational area
- The shrine as the focus for monument preservation works
- A combination of previous factors: The complex heritage preservation works of the shrine and its environment
- and the Gül Baba Heritage Foundation
- Conclusion
- Works cited
- Scales of patrimonialization in late imperial Crimea
- Introduction
- Legislation: The view from the metropole
- Depiction of buildings in literature
- Conclusion
- Works cited
- Amazing stories?
- Before 2014: Crimea, its heritage and Ukrainian art history
- Knowing thy Other? Post-2014 exhibitions
- Reinventing the canon of Ukrainian art history after 24 February 2022
- Works cited
- Between destruction, protection, and transformative re-creation
- Islamic culture in Crimea to 1783
- Transformations under Russian/Soviet hegemony, 1783-1991
- Heritage politics since 1991
- Case studies
- Transformation and use for practical needs: The Kurkulet and Otarçıq mosques
- Deliberate destruction: Şeyhköy Mosque, Kalgay Palace, and Azizler burial ground
- Dissonant heritage and revindication: The Khan's Palace and Salacıq
- Reclaiming the historical past: Re-Ottomanization and the creation of a new tradition
- Neo-Ottomanism in the broader region
- Historical localness and (post-)imperial claims
- Conclusion
- Works cited
- Approaches toward the Evkaf built heritage on British-ruled Cyprus
- Introduction
- The Ottoman waqf's traditional building upkeep and maintenance system
- 'Modernizing' Evkaf: British colonial transformations in the traditional waqf building upkeep systems