Şehrengiz, Urban Rituals and Deviant Sufi Mysticism in Ottoman Istanbul

Şehrengiz, Urban Rituals and Deviant Sufi Mysticism in Ottoman Istanbul

by B. Deniz Calış-Kural
Şehrengiz, Urban Rituals and Deviant Sufi Mysticism in Ottoman Istanbul

Şehrengiz, Urban Rituals and Deviant Sufi Mysticism in Ottoman Istanbul

by B. Deniz Calış-Kural

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Overview

Åžehrengiz is an Ottoman genre of poetry written in honor of various cities and provincial towns of the Ottoman Empire from the early sixteenth century to the early eighteenth century. This book examines the urban culture of Ottoman Istanbul through Åžehrengiz, as the Ottoman space culture and traditions have been shaped by a constant struggle between conflicting groups practicing political and religious attitudes at odds. By examining real and imaginary gardens, landscapes and urban spaces and associated ritualized traditions, the book questions the formation of Ottoman space culture in relation to practices of orthodox and heterodox Islamic practices and imperial politics.

The study proposes that Åžehrengiz was a subtext for secret rituals, performed in city spaces, carrying dissident ideals of Melâmî mysticism; following after the ideals of the thirteenth century Sufi philosopher Ibn al-‘Arabî who proposed a theory of 'creative imagination' and a three-tiered definition of space, the ideal, the real and the intermediary (barzakh). In these rituals, marginal groups of guilds emphasized the autonomy of individual self, and suggested a novel proposition that the city shall become an intermediary space for reconciling the orthodox and heterodox worlds.

In the early eighteenth century, liminal expressions of these marginal groups gave rise to new urban rituals, this time adopted by the Ottoman court society and by affluent city dwellers and expressed in the poetry of Nedîm. The author traces how a tradition that had its roots in the early sixteenth century as a marginal protest movement evolved until the early eighteenth century as a movement of urban space reform.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781472432278
Publisher: Ashgate Publishing Ltd
Publication date: 07/28/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

B. Deniz Çalış-Kural is an architect and historian of Ottoman landscape and urban culture. She was awarded a BArch. by METU, Ankara, Turkey; a March. by Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY and a PhD degree from METU. For her graduate studies, Çalış was granted fellowship from TUBITAK-The Scientific and Technological Council of Turkey (1996-1998). She was a junior fellow at Dumbarton Oaks Garden and Landscape Studies, Washington, DC (2003-2004). Her work has been published in TOPOS and Dumbarton Oaks Publications, among others. She has taught at Yeditepe and BahçeÅŸehir Universities of Istanbul. In 2010-2011, she was a visiting scholar at the University of Virginia, School of Architecture. Çalış teaches in the Istanbul Bilgi University Faculty of Architecture.


Table of Contents

Contents: Preface; ‘Holy Paradise! Is it under or above the city of Istanbul?’; Gardens, creative imagination and the theory of intermediary space in Ibn al-‘Arabî’s philosophy and its reception in the Ottoman world; Gazel poetry and garden rituals (1450-1730): ideal and real gardens of love; Åžehrengiz poetry and urban rituals (1512-1732): ideal and real city spaces of love, reconciliation and liberation; Nedîm’s poetry and new rituals of the Tulip Period (1718-1730): construction of gardens at KaÄŸithane commons; The ‘storehouse’ of Ottoman landscape tradition: gardens and city spaces as barzakh; Appendices; Bibliography; Index.


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