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Osmanlı İstanbul'unda Kasap İlyas Mahallesi

Bir Mahallenin Doğumu ve Ölümü (1494-2008)

Cem Behar

Bir Mahallenin Doğumu ve Ölümü (1494-2008) Gönderileri

Bir Mahallenin Doğumu ve Ölümü (1494-2008) kitaplarını, Bir Mahallenin Doğumu ve Ölümü (1494-2008) sözleri ve alıntılarını, Bir Mahallenin Doğumu ve Ölümü (1494-2008) yazarlarını, Bir Mahallenin Doğumu ve Ölümü (1494-2008) yorumları ve incelemelerini 1000Kitap'ta bulabilirsiniz.
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Beğendi
Kitap, Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar'ın Beş Şehir adlı romanından alıntı ile başlıyor. Alıntı uzun oldugu için ben son cümlesiyle başlamak istiyorum. "Zaten mahallenin yerini yavaş yavaş alt kattaki üstekinden habersiz, ölümüne, dirimine kayıtsız, küçük bir Babil gibi her penceresinden ayrı bir radyo merkezinin nağmesi taşan apartman aldı" Ülkü Dergisi -16 temmuz 1945 de yazılan bu cümle günümüzle ne kadar da uyumlu değil mi? Cem Behar'ın incelediği Osmanlı İstanbul'unda Kasap İlyas Mahallesi, her yanıyla merakları cezbedici bir örnek olarak karşımıza çıkıyor. İsmini nerden aldığı ve görüşmelerin sonucunda hala o mahallede oturanların mahalle hakkında düşündükleri bir çırpıda okunuyor. Dönemin koşulları incelendiğinde kayıtların nasil tutulduğu, mahallenin merkezinde konumlanan camii, hamam, medrese vb. tarzdaki kamu yapılarının mahalle için önemi, ahşap yapılar, yangınlar, dönemin geçim kaynakları hepsi hakkında yeterli bilgi bulabileceğiniz bir kitap..
Bir Mahallenin Doğumu ve Ölümü (1494-2008)
Bir Mahallenin Doğumu ve Ölümü (1494-2008)Cem Behar · Yapı Kredi Yayınları · 20147 okunma
Avrupalıların elit aileleri varsa bizimde elit imamlarımız var
The flexibility of the process of appointment sometimes created real dynasties of imams officiating in the same local mosque and sons often succeeded fathers as leaders of small Istanbulite local communities. Although the appointment procedure for imams in republican Turkey has greatly changed—the imams are nowadays no more than ordinary government officials and their appointment procedure obeys the rules that apply to all civil servants— even in the present-day Kasap İlyas mahalle, a father and his son have been the officiating imams of the mosque since 1970. Local dynasties of imams may therefore have survived to a certain extent.
Reklam
In the Muslim mahalles of pre-nineteenth-century Istanbul, the central figure of the neighborhood community was the religious leader of the local mosque, the imam. He was indeed an influential man and, at times, a local potentate of sorts. Certainly not because of the meager powers given him within the administrative setup of towns in the central Ottoman lands but rather, as we shall see in greater detail in the case of the Kasap İlyas mahalle, simply because he was often relatively well-off—if not outright wealthy. Besides, his legal position as trustee of a number of pious foundations put him in command of a nonnegligible amount of local economic resources.
Ayverdi states that the center of gravity of the sixteenth- and sevententh-century Istanbul population was situated around the large and central Bayazit complex and that the density of settlement decreased as one moved westwards.
The case of a “new” mahalle, just next to Kasap İlyas is a good example of an attempted but aborted neighborhood. Its existence is documented as far back as the second quarter of the sixteenth century, and it seems to have then occupied an area around the Davud Paœa gate. It was at that time called a “new mahalle, adjacent to Kasap İlyas,” probably because it did not yet have a mosque of its own from which to derive a name. In the 1630s, however, Bekir Paœa, one of the defterdars28 to Sultan Murad IV, built a two-story wooden mosque on the seaside just outside the ramparts, endowed it, and appointed an imam and a muezzin to officiate in it. With a number of people already living in the area, and a newly established and endowed mosque, the new neighborhood was thus set to acquire its independence from Kasap İlyas.
Local legend tells us that Kasap ƒlyas was the chief butcher/meat provider to the Ottoman army that conquered Constantinople in 1453 and that in recognition of his services, the sultan bestowed upon him a large plot of land. On this plot of land he first built a small mosque bearing his name and endowed it. Around this local mosque, goes the legend, a whole neighborhood bearing his name then took shape. The elderly inhabitants of Kasap ƒlyas still recount the many foundation myths concerning Kasap İlyas and his arrival to the neighborhood, as well as his many exploits, religious and otherwise. Kasap ƒlyas has grown into a sort of mythical figure and he has been surrounded by an aura of sanctity by the locals for quite a long time. His deed of trust (vakfiye) was set down in 149417 and his small shrine standing in the small graveyard beside his mosque bears the date of 1495 as the date of his passing away. The present-day Kasap İlyas mosque was almost totally rebuilt after the 1894 earthquake. Of the original structure, nothing much remains
Reklam
Unlike the mahalle, the semts never were legal administrative units. The mahalle, however, was always both a basic urban administrative unit and a social and economic entity. However, these two meanings never completely overlapped. The centrally determined administrative network of Ottoman Istanbul and the web of local identities did not necessarily coincide. This was so in the inceptive fifteenth and sixteenth centuries as well as in the “mod￾ernizing” nineteenth. The perception of the urban population regarding their environment and their self-definition in relation to their immediate surrounding was always more important than the religious/administrative matrix imposed upon the cityscape for purposes of control or tax collection.
The traditional mahalles of Istanbul were generally very mixed in terms of wealth, social class, and status. Residential patterns usually ran along lines of ethnicity and religion. However, ethnically and/or religiously mixed mahalles were not infrequent either. Recent studies have tended to show that even in the early periods of Ottoman rule, ethnic and religious identities did not necessarily exhaust the definition of a mahalle. The notion of the absolute homogeneity of the Islamic or Middle Eastern town quarter regarding its social composition and the idea that these neighborhoods were exclusively defined by religious, ethnic, class, or occupational affiliation have also seriously been challenged by recent studies on Ottoman cities, especially in the empire’s Arab provinces.
The mahalles were well entrenched as basic communities at the local level and played key roles in shaping local identities and solidarities. This solidarity entailed a particular modus vivendi, plus some sort of collective defense, as well as various mechanisms of mutual control and surveillance, many of them designed for regulating and monitoring public morality. In many mahalles collective social life was real, durable, and strong. In many of them, for instance, self-appointed bands of youths would act as militias to defend the mahalle’s “honor” from outside “agressions.” In others, there were, in the nineteenth century, self-organized amateur “fire-brigades” who took charge of the extinction of real and of the prevention of potential fires. These young mens’ brotherhood type of groups (tulumbacı) also took upon themselves the task of defending the honor and reputation of the locals.