The Age of Sinan
Gülru Necipoglu
2005
SINAN, MIMAR KOCA - Necipoglu, Gülru.
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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. In this monumental new study, Glru 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 The author is the first to use published and unpublished primary sources to illuminate the cultural setting in which Sinan's monuments were produced, received and experienced.
Titel zum Thema:
Architektur Architekten Vor 1800 Außereuropäische Kunst Islam Architektur Außereuropäische Kunst Islam Themen Künstler Vor 1800 Sinan,Mimarkoca