A Cultural Heritage of Humanity: The Süleymaniye Complex


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PALIMPSESTO IBERA/ANATOLIA, Joan Bernat Pineda Pérez,Rafel Arnal Rodrigo, Editör, L'EXIAM Edicions, Teruel, ss.237-244, 2025

  • Yayın Türü: Kitapta Bölüm / Araştırma Kitabı
  • Basım Tarihi: 2025
  • Yayınevi: L'EXIAM Edicions
  • Basıldığı Şehir: Teruel
  • Sayfa Sayıları: ss.237-244
  • Editörler: Joan Bernat Pineda Pérez,Rafel Arnal Rodrigo, Editör
  • İstanbul Yeni Yüzyıl Üniversitesi Adresli: Evet

Özet

The academic research project “Palimpsest” investigates a multidimensional

stratification of space and socio-cultural context. Grounded in the idea of preserving

and transmitting social, cultural, and spatial memory across generations, the selected

historical site is the Süleymaniye Manuscript Library, located within the Süleymaniye

Complex. The complex was commissioned by Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent between

1548 and 1557 in the Fatih district of Istanbul, and its architect was Mimar Sinan.

This structure serves as a memory center that reflects the social and cultural life of the

Ottoman Empire. The complex comprises a mosque, madrasas, a hospital (darüşşifa),

a soup kitchen (imaret), a bathhouse (hamam), an elementary school (sıbyan mektebi),

a library, a caravanserai, and shops, all functioning within the framework of the waqf

(foundation) system that catered to diverse societal needs.

The library section, initially formed with palace books, was established as an independent

building in 1752. Over the centuries, the complex endured destructive events such as

fires, natural disasters, and earthquakes; however, its architectural infrastructure was

consistently rebuilt upon the existing structure without severing it from its historical

context. In 1918, the conversion of the first and second madrasas of the complex into a

library led to its designation as the Süleymaniye Public Library. Comprising valuable

collections of manuscripts and printed works, the library was formed by gathering

books from various libraries across different districts of Istanbul.

Today, the library archive houses 168 collections, 100,000 manuscripts and printed

works, and over 70,000 printed volumes, including rare manuscripts in the fields

of exegesis (tafsir), hadith, medicine, astronomy, and literature. These collections

provide evidence of how cultures were formed and how human knowledge has been

transmitted through time. With its history, architecture, and enchanting atmosphere,

the Süleymaniye Library represents a cultural treasure of humanity, a monumental

heritage of nearly 500 years that has continuously evolved with modern conditions.

Nevertheless, it has preserved its spatial identity while transmitting knowledge across

generations through manuscripts and books as the most fundamental medium of

cultural continuity.

Keywords: Palimpsest, Spatial Continuity, Mimar Sinan, Manuscript, Library