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| Anıtkabir
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Since the construction of a monumental tomb appropriate to the memory of this great man was going to take years, he was first buried at the Ethnographic Museum in Ankara. Selecting a site for the mausoleum was entrusted to a preliminary committee established on 6 December 1938. They proposed eight alternative sites in the capital, including the district of Çankaya of which Atatürk had been so fond, and this was the location favoured by most people. However, the committee set up by parliament to make the final decision chose Rasattepe, a hill then empty apart from a meteorological station, on the advice of Mithat Aydın, member of parliament for Trabzon and an engineer. Rasattepe was visible from as far away as Dikmen and Etlik on the outskirts of the city.
After construction was well under way a second competition was organised for the statues, reliefs, and inscriptions, which were to illustrate the War of Independence and Atatürk’s reforms.The mausoleum was completed on 9 November 1953, and on 10 November 1953, just 15 years after his death, Atatürk’s body was moved from the Ethnographic Museum to the mausoleum.
The road leads into an open square measuring 80 by 130 metres which can accommodate forty thousand people on ceremonial occasions. Flights of steps at both left and right lead up to the great hall (Hall of Honour) of the mausoleum.The great Hall of Honour, with its huge 20 metre high columns (8 each at the front and back, and 14 each along the sides), is reached by a flight of 42 steps 44 metres in length. In the centre of the steps is an inscription bearing Atatürk’s famous words, ‘Sovereignty belongs unconditionally to the nation’. Atatürk lies in a grave dug in the earth beneath the green and gold mosaic floor of the octagonal room under the great hall. Around the grave are jars containing soil from each of Turkey’s provinces. Official ceremonies are held in the great hall, where there is a symbolic marble sarcophagus, in front of which those attending the ceremonies stand in silence as a gesture of respect. The sarcophagus is made of a single block of red, black and white marble weighing 32 tons quarried in Gümüşhane in northeastern Turkey. Behind the sarcophagus is an enormous window admitting light which falls directly on the sarcophagus, so rendering it the focal point of attention as you enter. Ankara Castle is visible from the window. The depressed vaults over the area containing the sarcophagus are ornamented with a design of kilim motifs worked in gilded mosaic.
Upon leaving the great hall of the mausoleum, you see a 33.5 m high steel flag pole sent by a Turkish citizen living in the United States, and the mausoleum’s imposing towers. These eight towers are named after concepts and events relating to Turkey’s struggle for independence and establishment of the Turkish Republic: the Mehmetçik (‘Little Mehmet’, Turkish private soldiers), Müdafaa-i Hukuk (Legitimate Defence), Zafer (Victory), Barış (Peace), 23 Nisan (23 April 1920, when the Turkish parliament in Ankara opened for the first time), Misak-ı Milli (the National Pact of 1920), İnkilap (Reform) and Cumhuriyet (Republic). The ceremonial square is surrounded by colonnades, behind which is the museum where many of Atatürk’s personal possessions are displayed, an exhibition gallery and offices.Atatürk’s Mausoleum is a graceful, clear-lined example of Turkish 1940s and 1950s architecture, characterised by a departure from foreign architectural movements. In this modern building Turkish architects and sculptors drew for inspiration on Turkey’s past cultures to create a building befitting the last resting place of the founder of modern Turkey, and which transforms the grief felt at his loss into an intense love tangible to all who visit the mausoleum. * By Şengül Aydıngün
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