|
This year (1999) Turkey is celebrating the 700th anniversary
of the establishment of the Ottoman Empire, which survived for a remarkable
six centuries, and for five of those centuries was the largest empire
in the world. It was founded by a minor Turkish chieftain, Osman Bey,
leader of the Kayı clan which had migrated into Anatolia from Central
Asia. In 1299 the clan made its home in the small western town of Söğüt,
and gradually this small principality grew to dominate first Anatolia,
then much of Eastern Europe and the Middle East.
Social life under the Ottomans combined the traditions
of Central Asia and those of Islam, and was family centred with a strong
sense of privacy. Public festivities in celebration of various events
such were an excuse for people to drop their customary reserve and let
out their energies, much like the carnivals of Christian countries.
During these festivities the usual strict regulations were suspended
and women were able to wander freely in the streets.
Festivities to mark religious events were held on the
two bayram feasts, one marking the end of Ramazan and the other the
Sacrificial Bayram, the mevlid kandili marking the birth of the Prophet,
and the setting out of the great Sürre procession which carried gifts
from the Ottoman sultan to Mecca. Others were occasions such as the
distribution of money to the soldiers after the accession of a new sultan
to the throne, royal births, weddings of royal princesses, circumcision
of the royal princes, the day that the princes started school, the procession
of the new sultan’s mother to the palace and so on. In some cases festivities
were organised in honour of foreign ambassadors to put on a display
of the empire’s splendour.
Known as donanma, these festivities often lasted
for several days or even weeks in the capital city Istanbul, and featured
displays on water, such as large illuminated models floating down the
Golden Horn or the Bosphorus, reenactments of assaults on castles and
firework displays. The entire city would be lit up with lamps, torches,
and candles at night.
The
most magnificent of all festivities were circumcision feasts for the
royal princes. Although wedding festivities were held for the daughters
of the sultans, the sultan and other male members of the royal dynasty
did not normally marry their consorts. Of all the circumcision festivities
over the centuries the most splendid of all was held in 1582 for Şehzade
Mehmed (later Mehmed III) son of Murad III and lasted 55 days and nights.
Hundreds of other boys were circumcised at the same time
as the princes, as at the festivities for Sultan Mehmed IV’s sons Mustafa
and Bayezıt held in Edirne in 1675. These circumcision festivities lasted
fifteen days, and immediately afterwards were followed by the wedding
festivities for five royal princesses. These events were described in
various manuscripts illustrated by celebrated painters like Nakkaş Osman
and Levnî.
When the princes were of an age to be circumcised the
chief black eunuch would inform the sultan, who would go to the Harem
to discuss the details of the festivities and how long they would last
with his principal wife, the Haseki Sultan. The Harem eunuchs would
also be consulted. The Harem would be decorated, and female musicians
play the kanun, an instrument resembling a zither. The following day
the Haseki Sultan would distribute gifts to the şehzades and women of
the harem, and that night a Chinese style lantern procession would take
place in the Harem gardens. Troupes of girls dressed in colourful costumes
would dance, palace dwarfs would do comic turns and jugglers and conjurers
would perform for the sultan and his family. There followed the public
festivities to which eminent foreigners in the city were invited as
the sultan’s guests.
When held in Istanbul, the festivities centred around
Topkapı Palace, events taking place in the Hippodrome, İncili Köşk,
Yalı Köşk and Alay Köşk, but they also took place on open spaces on
the shore of the Golden Horn such as Aynalıkavak and Kağıthane, or on
Dolmabahçe meadow on the Bosphorus. Here great pavillion tents would
be erected for palace officials and eminent guests, with latticed sections
for the women to see out of without being observed. Roundabouts, swingboats,
bigwheels and seesaws were set up for the children and young people
to ride on, and entertainers such as puppeteers with giant puppets and
tightrope walkers would prepare their shows.
The scale of organisation required for these events was
phenomenal. All the city shops put up decorations and remained open
day and night, and restrictions on drinking wine and other alcoholic
drinks were lifted for the occasion. So that public order was kept the
city was policed by guards known as kolcu, to prevent thieving, fighting
and other disruption to the peace.
Feasting
was an important part of the festivities, and meals cooked in great
outdoor kitchens were served regularly. Horns and drums announced the
beginning of meals and the hungry public were organised in queues by
officials known as tulumcu. Meals consisted of rice pilaf, roast mutton,
and muhallebi, a ground rice pudding with almonds. Fruit drinks known
as sherbet were distributed.The sultan and his guests ate and watched
the festivities from pavillions if in the city or tents when in the
countryside. There were also separate festivities for the janissaries,
naval seamen, judges, mollahs and other groups, and pupils from Muslim,
Greek, Armenian and Catholic schools were invited.
Each morning the festivities began with the arrival of
the sultan, who would spend the time until noon receiving high ranking
state officials. After the noon meal there would be cirit (jereed) matches
played between teams on horseback throwing short javelins, and guild
processions. Each guild of tradesmen prepared a float on which artisans
sometimes actually produced items of their particular trade as it moved
along or displayed examples. Others marched along holding the articles
they made and tall tree-like decorations known as nahil hung with sugar
decorations in the form of fruits and flowers. The tradesmen included
the farmers, millers, bakers, butchers, kebab cooks, grocers, confectioners,
greengrocers, chandlers, barbers, architects, shoemakers, reed pen makers,
bow and arrow makers, swordsmiths, blacksmiths, furriers, mirror makers,
felt makers, silk makers, tailors, quilt makers, goldsmiths, harness
makers and so on. These guild processions sometimes lasted for days.
Before and after the procession came dancers, acrobats, jugglers, and
performers with fire and hoops entertained the crowds.
The most spectacular entertainments were at night, when
illuminated tableaux in the form of carriages, dragons or crocodiles
were drawn along on the waters of the Golden Horn, while tightrope walkers
danced and acrobats leapt. On either side of the Bosphorus the houses
would be lit up and rockets fired from the shore to light up the sky.
Illuminated models of naval ships and castles would be pulled along
in front of the houses and the dancers inside entertain the watchers
on shore. The reflections of the lights in the water were a marvellous
sight. Another form of illumination was in the form of words created
by many lamps arranged on strings between poles, and sometimes these
were made to move on a pully system.Guests, statesmen and the public
would present gifts to the sultan whose value added up to far more than
even the prodigious sums spent on the celebrations (some of these gifts
can be seen today at Topkapı Palace). Finally the participants would
be presented with ceremonial kaftans known as hilat, the tents would
be dismantled, and the sultan and his sons return to the palace.
* By Şegül Aydıngün *Miniatures Sabine Buchmann Yamanlar
* Şengül Aydıngün is an archaeologist and art historian.
|