The Enigmas

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    1/12

    1

    THE ENIGMAS, HEDONISTICS, ANDENORMITIES OF THE IMPERIAL HAREMS INISLMIC TRADITIONBy: Jane l l e Harr i sonArt His tory 132cProfe s sor KhouryDue: 3/17/99

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    2/12

    2

    Islam is a nation devoted to many aspects of traditional religious

    orthodoxy, social and political theories and, a hierarchy of structures that are not

    only conducive of the former enumerated but also several others. During the

    reign of Ottoman Empire this hierarchy of mental and physical realms created an

    ideology that placed the women of Turkey in distinct positions which led to a

    great divide between the males from the females and, the wealthy from the

    poor. Such divides led to the building of the Imperial Harems, or harem-I

    humayin. The Ottoman mind was influenced by the Eastern theological doctrines

    of the Hindu culture thus, there is a symbolic significance found in every mode of

    Ottoman representation: from the architectural design of the palaces to the holy

    words written in calligraphy on the tile walls. The Ottomans great architects such

    as Mehmed II and later, Sinan used structural design; organization of buildings

    like the Harem, the mosque, the mederese, the inner and outer gardens of the

    palace, the Hans, and the minarets to express the Sultans divine status as a

    ruling authority appointed by God. Another very important mode of expression

    used to communicate this religious and political power was that of colors; mainly

    those of red, blue, white, gold, and purple. Each with an ideological meaning

    that defined the Ottoman mind.

    By understanding the thinking process of the rulers, as well as their

    architects, the importance of the Harem unfolds to reveal a layered meaning;

    and within some historical context this discussion should identify these layered

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    3/12

    3

    meanings so that the Imperial Harem, the harem-I humayin not only reflects the

    negative side of Turkish womens lives, but also the positive.

    In todays context there are very opposing views of Ottoman society.

    Coming from the context of different historical views the story of the Ottoman

    Empire is divided, thus reflecting as I stated in the title, the enigmas, hedonistic

    and enormities of Islamic tradition. Norman Itzkowitz is one author that focused

    on the male succession and sociopolitical structure of the Ottoman Empire. It

    was his focus in Ottoman Empire and Islamic Tradition that left out the

    importance of women in political as well as social realms. In a metaphorical

    context his book could be a representation of the palace with the women; the

    kadin, kadin bas, and the supreme Valide Sultan segregated in isolation away

    from the royal court in the Harem. It is his one-sided historical context that

    leaves the reader without any understanding of the Ottoman Consciousness

    and without a context to study the architectural significance expressed by the

    Sultans architects for which, as it has been stated continuously throughout the

    palace records as a vital form of communication.

    In trying to understand the consciousness of Ottoman society the

    architectural structure of such palaces like the Topkapi Saray and the

    Suleymaniye will help build an ideological representation which will encompass

    the meaning of the Harem, Harem life, and Ottoman society verses other Muslim

    states of the early 1500s to the 1800s. Perhaps this can be done by viewing the

    Harem as a centerpiece of what has been called The circle of Equity (Itzkowitz

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    4/12

    4

    88). The circle of equity is an all-encompassing formulation that embodied the

    ethical, political, and social values of the Ottoman class (88).

    It is at this point that Norman Itzkowitz gives the circle of equity only an

    outer layer of explanation which, are eight statements written around the

    circumference of a circle (88). I say outer because they are expressed in a

    gender oriented frame of thought. The diagram below with an outer circle and its

    eight statements, as well as an inner circle (a development of my own to signify

    the vital role of women in society) that is a conscious representation of Ottoman

    women which, is not only a supportive mirror reflection of the male dominated

    society, but also the true building block for which the royal house of Osman was

    born.

    1) There can be no royal authority withoutthe military.

    2) There can be no military without wealth3) The reaya produce the wealth4) The Sultan keeps the reaya by making

    justice reign

    5) Justice requires harmony in the world6)

    The world is a garden, its walls are the

    state

    7) The states prop is the religious law8) There is no support for religious law

    without royal authority (88).

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    5/12

    5

    This inner circle of equity, one composed of the Harem life can also reflect

    a ninth value of Turkish society, that which states all of the above can not exist

    without the female as a life giver, the woman as the generator of society. This

    statement is held valid by many of the Muslim customs found in their religious

    and political laws. It expresses why there was a need for an Imperial harem to

    house the many wives and concubines of the Sultan and the wives of his imperial

    court. Now within the two circles I have diagramed the hierarchical structure of

    society to emphasize where the different patterns of thought coincide and create

    smaller hierarchical structures with women forming the base, as well as

    positioning the female at the apex of rule. One example of this positioning of

    power held by a Turkish woman was Hatice Turkan who held political reign in

    the mid-seventeenth century. Most authority of the Valide Sultan (and any other

    women) was contained within the harem-I humayin rather than the Empire

    which, was the Sultans domain. Although the Valide Saltans role seems to be

    one of silence and not ruling, much as it was in the Roman Empire that

    influenced the Byzantine and Ottoman rulers she held political power within the

    palace. Unlike the Valide Saltan, the other women of the Harem were subdued

    by the different modes of pleasure that was offered to the kadin, kadin bas, and

    the kadinlik (the four women who were the Sultans official concubines) .

    The modes of pleasure within the Harem were to the normal eye plesures

    to be envied. The peasantry perhaps longed for such opportunities not knowing

    that the pleasures were used to subdue the angst within their imprisoned souls.

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    6/12

    6

    To subdue the womens jealousy and rivalry the use of opium was widely

    accepted and, encouraged to promote a sense of relaxation and paradise. The

    kadin cubuqu (womans pipe) was used to smoke great Turkish tabacco and,

    opium. Fine foods to fill the belly and coffee to promote conversations kept the

    concubines in positions of lower authority. The Valide Sultan, one can assume,

    rarely had time to join in the lax conditions enjoyed by the lower ranks of the

    Imperial Harems residences. This mode of thinking reflects Muslim religious

    belief that the holy war is psychological rather than geographical because she

    had to keep a clear head to continue in her role as the apex of the womens

    stream of thought.

    Though this psychological war is a customary belief throughout the

    Turkish society, it also is contradictory to the Sultans purpose of conquering

    other lands for political power and, positioning the palaces in geographical areas

    that reflect piety towards God. The reasons for mentioning the holy war as

    psychological rather than geographical is that in the enclosure of the Harem the

    women must have had some mental repercussions from the seclusion they were

    subjected to from outer society. The repetitive acts that became the kadians

    ritual way of life could only stagnate their lust for life. Even in a paradise setting,

    with courtyards and fountains, hamams and sitting rooms, the enclosed, isolated

    environment could only begin to pressure-cook the minds of imprisoned women.

    This isolation was less intense with the company of others; thus the variable of

    psychological warfare is reintroduced. Thus, the physical surrounding did have

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    7/12

    7

    repercussions on the mind, but the intoxicating substances could help (or hinder)

    in the battle for sanity.

    The Topkapi palace is one such structure that inherently reflects the

    ideology of Turkish male society. It was built by Mehmed II and renovated later

    by Sinan in the late 1500s (roughly 1585). The spatial, architectural, and

    functional organization of the royal household was unified under one principle:

    the omnipotence of the Sultan (Architecture, Ceremony, and Power 96).

    The Palace, with its three courtyards that divide the palace into a

    hierarchy of symbolic meaning, displays the power of the Sultan and, the

    segregation of common persons from the authorities of the royal court. Each

    courtyard is separated by a gate that transmits the intellectual significance of the

    architectural structure of the palace. Although Sinan did not built the Topkapi

    Palace he was able to instill his architectural communication in the renovation he

    conducted after the royal kitchens burnt down in 1574. It was believed that

    major damage to the Harem left Sinan with the freedom to express his own

    meanings through use of space, materials, and positioning of the royal

    apartments.

    The Imperial Harem is a large complex of apartments in the third court,

    which is divided into three distinct parts: the first housed the male pages,

    entrusted to white eunuchs. The second housed the female population, guarded

    by the black eunuchs, and the third is a walled hanging garden which,

    communicates with the other two through gates (History 91). This three-layer

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    8/12

    8

    division is reflective of the structures guarding the Sultan from the common

    people. These structures are the courtyards and, the gates that protect

    penetration of lower status persons from entering the next level.

    In Cengiz koseoglus The Topkapi Saray Museum Architecture: The Harem

    and Other Buildings, the structural design of the Harem is presented with key

    buildings numbered. In this diagram the most public area is presented

    longitudinally with the Carriage gate as #1 on the far left. Entrance from there or

    the Cumie Kapisi (main entrance #18) is parallel to the quarters of the black

    eunuchs. The rise of power is presented as the 2nd and 3rd levels are examined in

    more detail by Koseoglus. This symbolic pattern gives rise to the continuous

    theme of layered accessibility, noting that rarely anyone was admitted into the

    Harem at all, and if any outsiders were permitted entrance, one can conclude

    that the throne room (#39), the Valide Sultans apartments (#30), bedchamber

    (#33), baths, the kadins quarters (#23), and the Valides courtyard (#38) where

    strictly forbidden.

    This layering of accessibility, or hierarchy is also encircled with the

    ideological theme of male power encompassing the female world of social,

    religious, and political life. The male eunuchs are a symbol of a gate that is a

    gate of power that denies anyone from entering the Sultans wives and

    concubines areas. While at the heart of the Harem the Valide Sultans quarters

    stand where she is able, in a metaphorical tone, to oversee everything that

    occurs in the Harem. She is at the heart of the circumference of the circle of

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    9/12

    9

    equity viewing the actions from the inside to the outer layers. This theme is

    reflective of the diagram I presented earlier with the male and female streams of

    thought encircling the triangle of hierarchal power.

    Mehmed II designed the Topkapi Palace, but it has been stated by

    historians that it is unclear weather or not he in fact designed and built the

    Imperial Harem. Suleyman also took part in the renovation of the palace before

    Sinan did a major overhaul as the chief administrator of architecture. It was at

    that time it has been concluded that the large structure called the Imperial

    Harem was built.

    If this is so, then the final interpretation of the architectural design will

    have a significantly different outcome. Mehmed II, when designing structures

    used an ideology that his complexes where the center of learning. They also

    reflected his imperial claims to the Byzantine succession. If Sinans structures

    within the Topkapi Palace where influenced by Mehmed II, which it seems they

    were, and only seems appropriate to keep the continuity of architectural

    communication, then the ideology of the former must be considered in the later.

    Sinan may have interpreted his work differently, trying to give the Imperial

    Harem meaning beyond Mehmed IIs frame of thought, but the ideas he had to

    work with were already pre-designed. Sinan therefore, had much more freedom

    of expression in designing many of the other complexes.

    If we compare for example, the way the Imperial Harem is a compact

    structure, tightly enclosed with very few open spaces (and no windows) such as

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    10/12

    10

    the Valide Sultans throne room, or the concubines infirmary where, the

    pressures of the imprisoned life, the imprisoned soul exbound to Sinans

    mosques we find a great contrast in structural language.

    The courtyards which are the only areas of release can, in this respect be

    a metaphor for the opium used to relax the inmates and, deviate their minds

    from the reality that they are prisoners. And within the Harem itself, there are no

    religious structures, no mosque for the women to go to and pray. In fact, these

    women, mainly the concubines, got lost in a world detached from God. They

    lived a life of indulgence, seeking pleasures too often. Was Sinan trying to

    express various layers of meaning within the ideology of Mehmed IIs structural

    design? Mainly, the communication and embodiment of the womens life and

    position in the palace, as well as the womens own inner emotions and outlets?

    The Harem then, reflects early Christianitys ideology of the Bibical tale

    about Adam and Eve. The Muslims did accept many of the scriptural writings

    found in the Christian Holy Bible. If the Harem is a symbol of the embodiment of

    the women in the Palace, then women are devoid of any religious sanctuaries

    and only express a very intense mood or an act of indulgence, both of which

    create a feeling of release and entrapment for the Sultan and the rest of the

    palaces residences.

    Now, contrasting this idea to the structural designs of Sinans mosques

    there are significant differences between the architectural designs. Sinans main

    concern in his builds was a sense of harmony and space (History 240). In the

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    11/12

    11

    Suleymaniye complex, the mosque was built as a symbol of paradise (100).

    The vast open spaces of this mosque, with the high dome, was designed to be

    illuminated by divine light from the heavens. These mosques, as well as many

    others built by Sinan express a pressure-free, spacious environment where one

    can pray and mediate to and for God.

    The layered meaning of the Sultans importance is now set in an encircled

    form of representation. The palace is a symbol of the embodiment of the Sultan

    as the State. Within this embodiment there are the microcosmic bodies that hold

    specific positions within the palace. The mosque; the Harem; each of these

    within his power; his circumference of thought, with only various outlets from his

    imprisoned soul. The Harem can be an analogy of the opium used by women to

    release the pressures of ruling by the Saltan; not quite a European brothel, but

    similar in many functions the Harem was visited by the men of the court. The

    mosque one the other hand was his way of release by communicating with God

    through prayer and satisfied his soul from any angst he might have to endure. All

    of these reflect ideological symbols that start with the Muslim religious doctrines

    that believe expansion of holy power is through the bringing forth of new life and

    to claim territory that he believes God gave to him as the ruler of his state. The

    Sultan communicated his power through the design and expense of his royal

    palaces, the architects held a very important position, and the ideology of the

    Harem reflects many meanings and can be read as a symbol charged with many

    meanings as it has been pointed out in this essay.

  • 8/7/2019 The Enigmas

    12/12

    12

    Goodwin, Godfrey. The Private World of Ottoman Women. London: Saqi Books:

    1997.

    Zilfi, Madeline, C. Women In The Ottoman Empire: Middle Eastern Women in the

    Early Era. New York: Brill 1997.

    Itzkiwitz, Norman. Ottoman Empire and Islamic Tradition. London: 1972