Age of Sinan, The - Architectural Culture in the Ottoman Empire
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Age of Sinan, The - Architectural Culture in the Ottoman Empire
– Prospect magazine
`this truly marvellous book, which brings together the skills of an architectural historian, linguist and archival researcher, represents a profound advance over and above all previous studies in the field. In its comprehensiveness, its insights, and its careful and close readings of both monuments and documents, Necipoglu`s book provides an indispensable and much needed point of reference . . . a true tour de force, one that will instruct and inspire not only students, but also seasoned scholars in the field, serving as a model and as a challenge for many years to come.` – Journal of Islamic Studies
‘a remarkable work of synthesis . . . [Gülru Necipoglu] has compiled and reordered all the useful observations made previously; she has re-examined the standard sources, viewing them critically but without obvious prejudice; and she has added an immense amount of information gleaned gleaned from the buildings themselves, and from a wide range of narrative sources. The results can be enlightening’.
– Cornucopia magazine
‘The effort that has gone into the research and compilation of this publication is remarkable . . . an essential text for anyone with a serious interest in architecture.’
– Architectural Review
‘Besides opening new avenues in studies of Ottoman architecture, [The Age of Sinan] provides an enjoyable reading not only for Ottoman historians but also those who are interested in Ottoman culture and architecture in general.’
– Journal of the Faculty of Architecture, Middle Eastern Technical University
‘The long awaited book on Mimar Sinan by Gülru Necipoglu . . . offers a major new interpretation of his architecture that places him in the context of his time. . . . The drawings in this book are of the highest quality . . . Indeed, this is one of the most comprehensively illustrated books on architecture that I have ever seen . . . [This is] an outstanding book’
– Henry Matthews, The Art Book
‘An historical and sociological tour de force, this book is written – and written very well – with authority, skill, and grace. The scholarship is of the highest order. Gülru Necipoglu is simply the most technically accomplished, historically minded, and most important historian of Islamic art working today. This book will become the definitive study of Sinan – and of his age in cultural production’
– Cornell H. Fleischer, University of Chicago, author of Bureaucrat and Intellectual in the Ottoman Empire: The Historian Mustafa Ali (1541-1600).
Mimar Koca Sinan (c. 1489–1588), the ‘Great Architect Sinan’, was appointed chief royal architect to the Ottoman court by Sultan Suleyman I in 1539. During his fifty-year career he designed and constructed hundreds of buildings including mosques, palaces, harems, chapels, tombs, schools, almshouses, madrassahs, caravanserais, granaries, fountains, aqueducts and hospitals. His distinctive architectural idiom also left its imprint over the terrains of a vast empire extending from the Danube to the Tigris, and he became the most celebrated of all Ottoman architects, particularly renowned for his influence on the cityscape of Istanbul.
Sinan’s most influential buildings were his mosque complexes, where his inventive experimentation with light-filled centralized domes, often compared with parallel developments in Renaissance Italy, produced spaces in which the central dome appeared weightless and the interior surfaces bathed in light. In this monumental new study, Gülru Necipoglu argues that Sinan’s rich variety of mosque designs sprang from a process of negotiation between the architect and his patrons, rather than from unrestrained formal experimentation as has been previously described. The author is the first to use published and unpublished primary sources to illuminate the cultural setting in which Sinan’s monuments were produced, received and experienced.
The author describes how Sinan created a layered system of mosque types, reflecting social status and territorial rank, shaped by ideas of identity, memory and decorum. Seen from this perspective, Sinan’s works, with their highly standardized pattern of forms, used in ingeniously varied combinations, acquire dimensions of meaning that have not been previously recognized.
Gülru Necipoglu is the Aga Khan Professor of Islamic Art and Architecture in the Department of History of Art and Architecture at Harvard University. She is the editor of Muqarnas: An Annual of Islamic Visual Culture, and author of Architecture, Ceremonial and Power (1991) and The Topkapi Scroll: Geometry and Ornament in Islamic Architecture (1995).
















