Details
Place of printing
Istanbul
Author
Prep. By Edhem Eldem.
Publishers
Homer Kitabevi
Size
4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall
Keyword
ORT G TRAVEL BIOGRAPHY OF THE MEMOIRS MEMOIR MEMORY MEMORIES, ERINNERUNGEN MÉMOIRES MEMORIE MEMORIAS MEMOARER EGODOCUMENT, EGODOCUMENTS EGO DOCUMENT DOCUMENTS EGODOCUMENTOS EGODOKUMENT, EGO-DOKUMENT ARCHAEOLOGY ARCHEOLOGY ARCHÉOLOGIE ARCHEOLOGIA, ARQUEOLOGÍA ARKEOLOGI TURKEY TÜRKEI TURQUIE TURCHIA TURQUÍA, KALKUN TURKISH TÜRKISCH TURC TURQUE TURCO TYRKISK EXCAVATION, EXCAVATIONS AUSHUBARBEITEN LAVORI DI SCAVO EXCAVACIÓN GRAVING, ANATOLIAN CIVILIZATIONS CIVILISATIONS ANATOLISCHE ZIVILISATIONEN, CIVILTÀ ANATOLICHE CIVILIZACIONES DE ANATOLIA ANATOLISKE, SIVILISASJONER PREHISTORY PRE-HISTORY PREHISTORIA VORGESCHICHTE, URGESCHICHTE PRÉHISTOIRE PREISTORIA FORHISTORIE HISTORY ART, KUNSTGESCHICHTE HISTOIRE L'ART STORIA DELL'ARTE HISTORIA DEL, ARTE KUNSTHISTORIEN COLLECTION SAMMLUNG KOLLEKTION ABHOLUNG, COLLEZIONE RACCOLTA COLECCIÓN COLECTA SAMLING, Archeology & Ancient history
Binding description
Soft cover
Description
New English Paperback. Pbo. 4to. (31 x 24 cm). In English and Turkish. Color and b/w ills. 304 p. Personal logs and memoirs of Osman Hamdi's daughter, Nazli between 1907-1911. An ego-documentary study enlightened Turkish archaeology, painting, history of arts, and social life at the beginning of 20th Century in late Ottoman period. "This book focuses on the guestbook of Nazli Hamdi, which consists of dedications by her father Osman Hamdi Bey's circle of relatives, close friends, colleagues, or just acquaintances. The exhibition aims to shed light on the cultural environment of the era following the signatures in the notebook that belong to the leading intellectuals of the period; including the famous archaeologist- spy Gertrude Bell, founder of the illustrated magazine Servet-i Fünun, Ahmed Ihsan, the crown prince of Bavaria Rupprecht and one of the greatest poetess of late Ottoman literature, Nigar Hanim among many others Nazli Hamdi was the youngest child of Osman Hamdi Bey and his wife Marie/Naile Hanim. Born in 1893, Nazli kept a guestbook between 1907 and 1911, for visitors to sign alongside a few kind words, much like her peers. It is this guestbook, bearing traces of over thirty individuals, that constitutes the backbone of the exhibition. The display attempts to present, identify, and relate to Nazli and Osman Hamdi, or even to one another, this mix of visitors; locals and foreigners, men and women, archaeologists, authors, artists, diplomats At the same time, it examines the story of a woman, grew up in a Westernized elite family, whose life extends from the late Ottoman period up through the early years of the Republic of Turkey.".