Dokumenti opstanka: (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa)
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Bosnian |
Veröffentlicht: |
Zenica
Muzej Grada Zenice
2005
|
Ausgabe: | 1. izd. |
Schriftenreihe: | Radovi / Muzej Grada Zenice
15 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Abstract |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references (p. 885-904) |
Beschreibung: | 918 S. zahlr. Ill. 28 cm |
ISBN: | 9958941325 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Dokumenti opstanka |b (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) |c Sabira Husedžinović |
250 | |a 1. izd. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Zenica |b Muzej Grada Zenice |c 2005 | |
300 | |a 918 S. |b zahlr. Ill. |c 28 cm | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
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490 | 1 | |a Radovi / Muzej Grada Zenice |v 15 | |
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references (p. 885-904) | ||
650 | 4 | |a Islamic architecture / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka | |
650 | 4 | |a Mosques / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka | |
650 | 4 | |a Cultural property / Protection / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka | |
650 | 4 | |a Art treasures in war / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka | |
650 | 4 | |a Architektur | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Islamische Architektur |0 (DE-588)4362670-1 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
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650 | 0 | 7 | |a Moschee |0 (DE-588)4040320-8 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
651 | 4 | |a Banja Luka (Bosnia and Hercegovina) / Buildings, structures, etc | |
651 | 7 | |a Bosnien-Herzegowina |0 (DE-588)4088119-2 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf | |
651 | 7 | |a Banja Luka |0 (DE-588)4454278-1 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf | |
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856 | 4 | 2 | |m Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 2 |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024157427&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Abstract |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1818594467646537728 |
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adam_text |
SADRŽAJ
MIŠLJENJA
О
KNJIZI
.5
PREDGOVOR
.9
UVOD
.13
BANJA LUKA PRIJE OSMANSKIH OSVAJANJA
(1527g.)
.31
Najstariji tragovi naselja na prostoru Banja Luke, arheološki ostaci rimskih
gradevina,
potvrda postojanja antičke kulture
.33
Srednjovjekovne fortifikacije sa podgradima, okosnica budućeg urbanog razvoja
.48
Kršćanski sakralni objekti
XIV
vijeka, fokusni elementi naselja
.62
TRANSFORMACIJE SREDNJOVJEKOVNOG NASELJA POD UTJECAJEM ORIJENTALNOG
URBANIZMA
.69
Historijske i političke prilike u Bosni i Banjoj Luci poslije uspostavljanja osmanske vlasti
.71
Uloga države i vakufa u izgradnji orijentalnih naselja, a posebno Banja Luke
.85
Sofi Mehmed-pašine zadužbine, okosnica izgradnje Gornjeg Šehera
.91
Graditeljske aktivnosti Ferhad-paše Sokolovića, osnova izgradnje
Banje Luke kao središta Bosanskog ejaleta
.105
Izgradnja ostalih džamija i mahala na obalama Vrbasa
.127
Nastanak i razvoj dvojnih čaršija i stambenih mikrorejona, mahala sa dućanima i kućama
kao osnovnim elementima strukture
.151
Bosanska kuća u Banjoj Luci
.163
Banja Luka u
XIX
vijeku, utjecaj evropskih gradova na urbanu strukturu
.191
ISLAMSKA SAKRALNA ARHITEKTURA
.207
DŽAMIJE SA KAMENOM MUNAROM
.209
Sofi Mehmed-pašina džamija
. 209
Historijski izvori
о
autentičnom objektu
. 209
Arhitektonske i prostorne karakteristike obnovljene džamije
. 213
Pretpostavljeni izgled prvobitne džamije
. 219
913
SADRŽAJ
222
Ferhadija
džamija
.
Historijski izvori
о
izgradnji džamije, kameni natpis iznad portala
.222
Arhitektonske i stilske karakteristike Ferhadije džamije
.■.229
Prostorno-plastične vrijednsoti i konstrukcija centralnog kupolnog prostora
.261
Tehnika građenja, vanjska i unutrašnja obrada, kamena plastika
.269
Elementi interijera
.277
Slikarstvo i kaligrafija
.289
Stilske karakteristike Ferhadije džamije u poredenju sa nekim objektima
islamske arhitekture izgrađemih u Turskoj
.297
Komparativna analiza prostornih i arhitektonskih elemenata Ferhadije džamije sa
Muradija
džamijom u
Manisi i drugim djelima velikog arhitekte Osmanskog carstva Kodže Mimar-Sinana
.302
Sinanove džamije gdje se kupola oslanja na četiri glavna oslonca
.310
Sinanove džamije na heksagonalnoj osnovi
.311
Sinanove džamije na oktogonalnoj osnovi
.313
Objekti u kompleksu Ferhadije džamije
. 334
Šadrvan
. 334
Ferhad-pašino turbe
. 337
Turbe Ferhad-pašina barjaktara
. 340
Safi-kadunino turbe
. 344
Ograde, portal i česma
. 345
Harem
. 348
Sahat-kula
. 354
Povijesni izvori
о
nastanku Sahat-kule
. 354
Transformacija izgleda Sahat-kule
. 362
Tehnika građenja
. 365
Arhitektonske i stilske vrijednosti Sahar-kule u komparaciji sa sličnim objektima kod nas
. 365
Arnaudija džamija
.374
Osnivač i doba
.374
Arhitektura džamije, stilske vrijednsoti i prostorni značaj
.377
Tehnika građenja i kamena plastika
.401
Sastavni elementi interijera
. 405
Vrijednost objekta kompleksa (turbe osnivača, ezan-taš, česma, harem)
.416
Gazanferija džamija
. 429
Historija
о
izgradnji, pretpostavljeni izgled prvobitnog objekta, transformacije
. 429
Tehnika građenja, obrada interijera
.
43g
Vrijednost objekata kompleksa
.
44g
914
SADRŽAJ
Daudija
ili Medreska džamija
. 451
Simidija džamija
. 454
Opće stilske i prostorne karakteristike džamija sa kamenom munarom
. 455
Arhitektonske vrijednosti i stilske specifičnosti potkupolnih džamija
. 455
Graditeljske vrijednosti džamija sa četverovodnim krovom i kamenom munarom
. 460
Kamena plastika, stalaktitni ukrasi, portali i trijemovi banjalučkih džamija sa
kamenom munarom
. 462
Elementi interijera, sličnosti i osobitosti
. 465
Specifičnost kamenih munara
. 469
DŽAMIJE SA DRVENOM MUNAROM
. 471
Opće vrijednosti
. 471
Osnivači
. 474
Izbor lokacije i vrste situacionih rješenja
. 478
Tipološka rješenja džamija sa drvenom munarom
. 485
Tehnika građenja, vrste materijala, utjecaji etnograditeljstva
. 499
Drveni trijemovi, sofe, portali, tipovi drvenih munara
. 500
Specifičnosti i opće vrijednosti unutrašnjosti džamija
. 511
Haremi uz džamije sa drvenom munarom
. 521
Halil-pašino turbe
. 532
Arhitektonske i stilske vrijednosti
. 532
Transformacije objekta
. 532
RUŠENJE SAKRALNIH GRAĐEVINA ISLAMSKE ARHITEKTURE
BANJE LUKE KROZ HISTORIJU
. 535
Ratna pustošenja austrijskih vojni u
XVII
i
XVIII
vijeku u Banjoj Luci
. 537
Oštećenja i rušenja džamija od kraja
XIX
vijeka do njihove zakonske zaštite
. 555
Zemljotresi
1969.
i
1981.
u Banjoj Luci (oštećenja i rušenja)
. 567
Miniranje i paljenje islamskih sakralnih i memorijalnih objekata u
Banjoj Luci tokom agresije
1992-1995. 576
REKONSTRUKCIJA I RESTAURACIJA OBJEKATA KULTURNOG
NASLIJEĐA U SVIJETU
. 613
Međunarodne povelje i pravni akti u vezi za očuvanjem i
zaštitom kulturno-historijskog naslijeđa
. 615
Neki primjeri rekonstruiranih objekata u Evropi koji su bili teško oštećeni ili
srušeni ratnim razaranjima
. 623
Značajniji
restauratorski
zahvati u državama islamskog svijeta
. 641
Djelatnost Fondacije Aga
Khan
. 641
Aktivnost Centra za konzervaciju i zaštitu islamskog kulturnog naslijeđa (CIAH)
. 647
915
SADRŽAJ
SANACIONO-RESTAURATORSKI RADOVI NA ZNAČAJNIM
OBJEKTIMA KULTURNOG NASLIJEĐA U NEKIM
DRŽAVAMA JUGOISTOČNE EVROPE
POSLIJE DRUGOG SVJETSKOG RATA
.
659
-Hrvatska
.
661
-Srbija
.
669
-
Slovenija
. "
-
Crna Gora
.
676
-Makedonija
.
678
SANACIONO
RESTAURATORSKI
RADOVI NA
OBJEKTIMA KULTURNOG NASLIJEĐA U BOSNI I HERCEGOVINI
PRIJE I POSLIJE RATA
1992-95.681
-
Radovi na sanaciji, restauraciji, rekonstrukciji i revitalizaciji objekata kulturnog
naslijeđa u Bosni i Hercegovini do rata
1992-1995.683
-
Sanaciono-restauratorski i rekonstruktivni zahvati na objektima
kulturno-historijskog naslijeđa u Federaciji Bosne i Hercegovine poslije rata
1992-95.
godine
.703
-
Opći pregled najznačajnijih zahvata
. 703
-Mostar
. 711
-Sarajevo
. 737
-Maglaj
. 758
-Prusac
. 760
-
Podmilačje kod Jajca
. 762
REKONSTRUKCIJA I RESTAURACIJA SAKRALNIH I
MEMORIJALNIH OBJEKATA ISLAMSKE ARHITEKTURE
BANJE LUKE
.765
Rješenja
о
zaštiti srušenih objekata kulturno-povijesnog naslijeđa Banje Luke
s
njihovom kategorizacijom
.763
Prikaz sanacijskih i restauratorskih zahvata na islamskim sakralnim objektima
Banje Luke kroz povijest
.770
Principi i mogućnosti rekonstrukcije i restauracije srušenih sakralnih i memorijalnih
građevina u Banjoj Luci
.799
Valorizacija sačuvane tehničke i fotodokumentacije, osnova za izradu projekata
restauracije i rekonstrukcije
.
839
Utvrđivanje svih ostalih elemenata potrebnih za izradu projekata restauracije i
rekonstrukcije, prijedlog mjera zaštite
.842
916
SADRŽAJ
ZAKLJUČAK
. 844
Sinopsis
. 851
Prilozi
. 869
Tumač manje poznatih riječi
. 873
Bibliografija
. 885
Ostali izvori
. 905
Izvori ilustracija
. 908
KARTE (Osnova geodetskih karata iz
1884.)
A. Karta sa
45
lokacija džamija izgrađenih od
1528.
do kraja
XIX
stoljeća
B. Karta sa lokacijama džamija na geodetskoj karti iz
1884.
C. Rušenje džamija kroz povijest
D. Džamije koje su postojale do rata
1992-95.
917
We have witnessed the terrible war events in Bosnia and Herzegovina in which a
significant segment of the overall hardships is the damage inflicted on the
cultural heritage. By shelling and burning the mosques, churches and
monasteries, clock towers and libraries, museum collections, public and
residential buildings, many of which had the monumental value, the aggressor was destroying
the centres of the religious and ethnic life of the peoples whose spirituality was deeply rooted
therein and for whom they were priceless.
Such behaviour of the aggressors indicates that their aim was to destroy, by the planned
destruction of the space and material culture, the identity and spirit of those peoples, to
"cleanse" the territory and annex it to their corpus.
The systematic pulling down of the
Banja Luka
mosques started in
1918
and by the Second
World War nine mosques had been pulled down. It continued after the Second World War until
1959,
when another fourteen mosques, four medresahs (secondary Islamic schools) and many
mektebs (elementary Islamic schools) were pulled down. From
9
April,
1993
to
15
December the
same year, fifteen mosques, six turbehs
-
Muslim tombs, five fountains, a large number of
graveyards and clock towers were destroyed. During that period,
205
mosques were pulled down
in the
Banja Luka muftidom.
The valuable complexes of the Ferhadija and Arnaudija Mosques were erased and uprooted
from the urban tissue of
Banja Luka.
The remains of the other mosques were also mechanically
destroyed, even their foundations were dug out, gravestones were destroyed in order to
completely obliterate the existence of such buildings there.
Banja Luka,
in its centuries-long existence, had often found itself on the borders of foreign
empires, being the first town, the first city of the East on the way towards the West and vice
verad,
whose influences clashed and intertwined with the local tradition, leaving their imprints and
specific features on the architectural heritage, confirming its identity in this way. The buildings
of Islamic architecture made the major part
ofthat
architectural heritage, in which the mosques
excelled in their beauty, harmony and the distinctiveness of style.
In written records,
Banja Luka
was first mentioned on
6
February,
1494
in a document of the
Croato-Hungarian king Vladislav II
Jagelović,
but it is quite certain that this area had been
inhabited several millennia ago. This is confirmed by many archaeological findings and remains
851
DOKUMENTI OPSTANKA
of the material culture of the ancient inhabitants of
Banja Luka
who belonged to various
populations, which here succeeded intensively one another as a result of numerous historic events.
The history of the urbanised
Banja Luka
actually began in the 1st century
A.D.
when these
regions fell under the Roman rule. To connect their provinces and strengthen the
newly-established administration, the Romans built a network of roads in Bosnia, like in other
newly-conquered regions. Among such roads, a special place belonged to the road running
Salona
-
Servitium
(Solin - Bosanska Gradiška),
connecting
Dalmaţia
and
Panonia.
It was one of the most
important and longest communications built in those regions during the rule of Emperor
Tiberius and his ambitious governor Dollabella. Additionally, that was the shortest possible
connection between
Solin
and the newly-conquered
Panonia.
Servitium was an important point
and crossing over the River
Sava,
and a connection with other regions. It was a river fleet seat and
an important trade and communications centre. On that axis, a number of forts were erected,
Castra
(Banja Luka)
being one of them, which, like others, was included in the Tabula
Peutingeriana (the Castorius Map) between the places of Ad fines
(Laktaši)
and Lamatis
(Šljivno).
Presence of the Roman culture is proved by the finding of a Roman altar dedicated to
Jupiter, found at the foot of the fort
Kastel
when the supports of the bridge over the rivulet
Crkvena
were being repaired in
1895,
which was, at the same time, the first written monument
from this region. The inscription shows that the endower, Sicinius Macrinus, was a consular
beneficiary of the place, and we can presume that in the vicinity of the altar there was the Jupiter
temple as the central sacral building in the settlement.
Although the investigations carried out so far have given only indications of the antiquity
culture in the area of
Banja Luka,
it is, nevertheless, clear that the existence of a Roman military
camp, probably in the area of the fort
Kastel,
as a significant fortress in the defence limes along
the route
Salona
-
Servitium, conditioned the development of a major civilian settlement with
the elements of urban culture in the quarters surrounding the fortress, which would have
indisputable impact on the town's further urban development.
As to how this area developed in the medieval period, among archaeologists and historians
there are different assumptions and disagreements about the fortresses therein in the period of
the Bosnian state's independence.
The existence of two fortresses within the closer area of
Banja Luka
had often been quoted
in the written documents back in the early 17th century, when this region was visited by various
spies, travel writers, the Pope's visitors or royal envoys.
What kind of fortresses are they actually? Today in
Banja Luka
there is only the
Kastel
fortress, whose current appearance dates from the 18th century, and at
Gornji Šeher
(Upper
Town), formerly
Stara Banja Luka
(Old
Banja Luka),
there are some remains of a wall or a tower
at the confluence of the small river Suturlija and the
Vrbas.
Therefore, the lower town, as claimed
852
SYNOPSIS
by Hajji
Kalfa,
the well-known Turkish historian, is actually the
Kastel
fortress, while the upper
town was probably the fortress
Banja Luka,
which, as has been mentioned, was traced first in the
historical sources in
1494.
There are
secerai
reliable proofs that it is indeed the fortress
Banja Luka.
Namely, after the fall
of the Bosnian Kingdom in
1463,
the Croato-Hungarian king Matija
Korvin
regained, in the same
year, a part of the Bosnian state territory with many towns and formed a frontier territory thereof,
the Banate of
Jajce.
The Hungarian Court took on the care of the fortresses in the River
Vrbas
valley
(Jajce, Bočac, Zvečaj, Vrbački grad)
which made a strong defence line against the ever-fiercer
invasion of the Ottomans. Although the Ottoman pressure on those parts increased, the fortress
Banja Luka
was not mentioned until the victory of Sultan's army at
Krbavsko polje
(9
September,
1493),
and, according to historical sources, it probably had not been yet built. It is presumed that
King Vladislav II
Jagelović
started the construction of the fortress
Banja Luka
after that battle.
At the strategic place with a dominant position where the
Vrbas
canyon opens into a wide
valley, having a position to control the whole area, the fortress
Banja Luka
with the already
existing and new fortifications along the River
Vrbas
made part of the defence belt against the
Ottoman invasion. Its natural frame was made up of mounts Sehitluci and
Šibovi,
the
Vrbas
and
Suturlija rivers, and the thermal springs.
In the medieval period, the fortress
Banja Luka
had the role of the urban nucleus around
which the quarters with the market developed. Later, with the establishment of the Ottoman
administration, when the Imperial Mosque was erected with shops and the endowments of
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha, two
čarsijas
(crafts and trade centres) developed, connected with a bridge from
where other building activity would continue in the times to come.
Another fortress mentioned in historical sources, but as an arsenal of weapons from
1574,
is
the
Kastel
fortress. Actually, at that site Ferhad-pasha built a cannon foundry at the time.
However, it is quite certain that a fortress had existed there before that. This is indicated by
archaeological remains, but it is questionable whether it was there. So far, its name has not been
established with certainty.
The existence of Catholic churches in the area of
Banja Luka
in the first years of the
Ottoman administration leads to the conclusion that they had been built there prior to the
Ottoman conquest, i.e., they had already been there; besides the fortresses, as the basic centres
around which the surrounding quarters developed and fairgrounds formed, they made
important points around which settlements developed.
In its history,
Banja Luka
saw its greatest urban development in the
16'
and
17'
centuries,
following the growth and rise of the Ottoman Empire, initially as the capital of the Bosnian
Sanjak, and later as the centre of the Bosnian Pashalik. From a small medieval market town, it
developed into the largest city in the
Bosanska krajina
(the Bosnian Border) and became the
853
DOKUMENTI OPSTANKA
second biggest and most important city in the Bosnian Eyalet. Benefiting from all the
advantages provided by its military and political status, as well as by its geographical position, it
became the social, military, political, cultural, and trade centre of that part of Bosnia.
With
Gazi
Husrev-bey's victory over the Hungarian army in
1527,
with his seizure of
Jajce,
and then of all other fortresses of the
Jajce
Báñate,
these areas became part of the Ottoman
Empire. The fortress
Banja Luka
was then captured as well, where the Ottomans housed their
garrisons. Following their tradition of settlement building, in the quarters below it, in
accordance with the state needs, they erected a mosque dedicated to Sultan Suleiman El-Kanuni
(1520-1566).
It was named the
Hunkarija
or Imperial Mosque.
All the analyses made confirm the importance of this first Imperial Mosque which through
history changed its appearance, but whose importance in spatial, urban and spiritual sense
remained the same all the time. Following this principle, in the period from the late
15'
to the
early 16th centuries, twenty-five Imperial mosques were built in Bosnia, which determined the
establishment and development of the future kasabas
-
provincial towns.
In attempting to revive the deserted area and ensure its economic growth, and thus create
safe and peaceful areas, where they would establish their power, and for the sake of further
expansion towards the West, the Ottoman Empire established towns according to plan. They
would be its main footings, not only because all the bodies of the state power were concentrated
in towns, but also because they made a basis for the development of economy and crafts, whose
products were needed by the army and by the ever-increasing town population. Thus, besides the
existing population accepting Islam, the Ottoman authorities colonised new inhabitants from
other towns, especially craftsmen and traders, who built shops and workshops by the first
mosques and formed the economic centres of settlements
-
čarsijas.
Around the
čaršija,
the
residential micro-quarters
-
mahalas developed, consisting of houses and gardens. The centres of
these were again mosques.
As stated earlier, the Ottoman authorities started to form settlements, kasabas
-
provincial
towns, by building a mosque by order from the Sultan, which is how it derived its name.
The construction of such mosques, their officials, and later repairs were not financed from
Sultan's funds but from the state budget. The construction of this kind of mosques, actually,
expressed the need of the state to develop settlements, so that the site of the mosque itself as the
future urban centre was carefully selected according to plan. It was usually in the vicinity of a
medieval market or fairground, by a road or a river, below an already existing fortress, or a place
of strategic and communication importance.
Apart from this initial factor important for the formation of a settlement according to the
Oriental urban concept, an important factor was also the institution of
vakuf
-
endowment,
854
SYNOPSIS
both for
Banja Luka
and for other towns throughout the Ottoman Empire, and other states of
Islamic world.
The
vakuf
system as endowment activity, originating back in the times of the Prophet
Muhammed,
gradually developed through the life practice of the Arabs, and, according to the
general view of Orientalists, in no other society, nor in any other religion has it played such an
important role as it has in Islam. Numerous religious, educational, social, communal, economic
buildings were erected from the
vakuf
funds. Such funds were provided from proceeds of the
economic facilities, shops, cloth markets
-
bezistans, khans
-
hostelries, and land from the same
testator. This system of closely tied up groups of buildings, with its administration and
mutevelli
-
trustee, has ensured the survival of some vakufs to the present day. Keeping to the
Qur'an percepts that "to build a mosque is to build oneself a house in Paradise" or "One's own
deeds are one's best offspring", many testators from various social structures established vakufs
in
Banja Luka.
Among the first was
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha
(1554-1555)/
and then Ferhad-pasha
Sokolović
(1587)
followed by Osman-shah
(1563),
Sefer spahi
(161$, Mahmud
Čelebi
(Іб1*1
с),
Hasan
defterdár
-
finance minister
(1595),
Apardi-pasha
(1595),
Gazanfer spahi (16th a), hajji Perviz
(1630-1638),
Kubad
vojvoda
(16th
с),
hajji
Baba
(1638),
Fehima
Ćekić
(19th
с),
Selim Džinić
(19th c), Jusuf Šibić
(19th c), and many others.
All of them, respecting this centuries-long Islamic tradition, had various kinds of social,
religious, educational, welfare, economic, and communal facilities built, among which the
mosque always had the most important place. Depending on the size of the mosque, its
importance and position in relation to the river or/a road, the mosque determined the
disposition of other urban structures and directions of communications. In addition to this
role, the mosque is important for the overall landscape appearance, where the minaret does not
only mark the centre of the settlement but it ensures identification of each
mahala
-
residential
quarter in the general image of town. In this, the Ferhadija Mosque definitely had the most
important place, which by its dimensions, spatial disposition and significance, together with
other buildings in this valuable complex, affected the shaping of the big
Banja Luka čaršija
-
crafts and trade centre, and of the complete area of
Donji Šeher
-
Lower Town as well. It was also
the beginning of the creation of Mala
čaršija
(the small craft and trade centre) on the right bank,
where the small wooden Talina Mosque was the cer/tre. This urban development of dual
čaršijas
on two banks connected by a bridge was used in/Gornji
Šeher
-
Upper Town, where the
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha's and Imperial Mosques were the/centres of their respective
čaršijas.
After
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha, the governor of the Bosnian Sanjak, had decided in
1553
to
transfer the centre of the military and administrative authorities there, especially after numerous
endowments had been built,
Banja Luka
acquired the status of a city
-
šeher.
This testator's
mosque was built in
1554.
It is presumed to have had a dome until the end of the
17'
century,
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DOKUMENTI OPSTANKA
when in the
Austro-Ottoman
wars it changed its appearance and got the four-slope roof. It was
assumed that the first mosque had been built by the great Ottoman Empire's architect
Mimar
Sinan. The assumption was based on the inclusion of this mosque in the published lists of the
buildings erected by the great architect. However, some researchers found that this referred to
the Karadoz-bey's Mosque in
Mostar.
As the original
Sofi Mehmed-pasha's
Mosque was
destroyed in the 17th century, this has been only an assumption, but with prospects to be proved,
since there is some evidence that the great architect built the
Carnata
(Black) Mosque in Sofia for
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha. This means that this governor contacted the great architect.
With the appointment of Ferhad-pasha, a member of the famous
Sokolović
family, as the
Bosnian sanjak-bey
(1574),
and later on as the beyler-bey
(1580),
Banja Luka
became the centre of
the Bosnian Eyalet, which enabled its further fast urban development. Further
2.5
km
downstream from Old
Banja Luka, Gornji
Seher, Ferhad-pasha
built
215
buildings, including a
mosque, a gun foundry, a clock tower, a caravanserai, two stone bridges, water mills, and many
shops. The
Banja Luka čarsija
developed around these structures.
Two friends of Ferhad-pasha's, Gazanfer who was
a voivoda
-
a war lord and a feudal lord,
and Hasan
defterdár,
the finance minister of the Bosnian Pashalik, built two mosques on two
opposite banks of the River
Vrbas,
connected by a communication. Those were the Arnaudija
and the Gazanferija Mosques.
Besides the Ferhadija and Arnaudija Mosques, as well as the
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha Mosque,
probably the Gazanferija Mosque was also domed, which later was covered with a four-slope roof
with a wooden painted dome underneath it. With the two stone turbehs connected with a wall, it
gave the impression of a small fortified area.
The major part of the
Banja Luka
architectural heritage was mosques with wooden minarets,
having the characteristics and construction style of the local architecture. The most important
among them was the Behram-effendi's Mosque, built in the early 17th century, interesting for the
added turbeh, and kuija
-
the small room which the founder used to pray in.
Irrespective of the materials they were built of, the mosques had always been the centres of
each
mahala
and
čaršija
respectively, which were built along the River
Vrbas
on the right or left
bank, connected by bridges and forming the cell-shaped urban structure in
Gornji Šeher
-
Upper
Town, and radial and orthogonal in the flat, Lower Town
-
Donji Šeher.
The position of the mosque, whether it was located at the crossroads, had a market at its
entrance, was within a shop cluster of the
čaršija,
on the very river bank or on the hill top, would
affect the spatial arrangement and position of other surrounding buildings, houses or shops.
The mosque became the cause of all architectural events.
The analyses made on the basis of the documents preserved, as well as direct research on the
site at the time the mosques still existed, point to another relevant conclusion concerning the
856
SYNOPSIS
intensive and fast development of
Banja Luka
in the 16th and 17th centuries, which refers to the
strong artistic and architectural influences of the metropolis. Those influences spread over all
towns of the Empire, especially over the centres of military and administrative authorities, as
Banja Luka
was at the time.
That was the time of the greatest rise of the Ottoman architecture when, in these parts,
according to the already established practice, defined and clear solutions were used for all kinds
of public and sacral buildings, and the mosque as the most important achievement of Islamic
architecture reached the peak of its development. Thus the centuries-long Seljuk and Ottoman
experience in the building of towns and cities ensured the fast development of
Banja Luka,
too,
i.e. of
Gornji
and
Donji Šeher
-
Upper and Lower Towns.
The construction of the
Banja Luka
monumental mosques had its specific features. The
researches have shown that four domed mosques were probably built in
Banja Luka,
considerably different from each other. So the
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha's Mosque was built in the
early Istanbul style, it had a dome and a semi-dome, the Gazanferija and Arnaudija Mosques
were built in the classical Istanbul style with one dome and three small domes surmounting the
porch, while the Ferhadija itself had a poly-domed system. The broken base with side extensions,
which otherwise was used in the Zavia mosques for the reception of travelling dervishes, as was
the case with the
Gazi
Husrev-bey's Mosque in Sarajevo, in the Ferhadija Mosque it was the result
of an architectural idea.
The Ferhadija Mosque, the central building of
Čaršija,
was one of the most successful
architectural achievements of Islamic architecture of the
16і
century in our parts. With the
harmony of its forms and the proportions of its mass, and with its specific pyramidal
composition, whose centre was the dome, and verticality was marked by the minaret, it attracted
and inspired its visitors, travel writers, historians, chance travellers. The special features of its
spatial disposition had always classified the Ferhadija mosque among the interesting and rare
buildings of our architecture. Although at that time the classical Istanbul style had often been
used on our soil in the construction of one-space mosques with a dome surmounting the central
part, the Ferhadija Mosque had a more complex solution. It was reflected in the broken base,
where the central prayer space was surmounted with a dome supported by pendentives, the side
extensions were surmounted by ceilings, and the mihrab (the prayer niche indicating the
direction of prayer) by a semi-dome.
The overall composition and architectural disposition of the Ferhadija Mosque slender
forms were reminiscent of the most beautiful Islamic structures of the metropolis. All the
elements of the building gradually agreed and interconnected in a unique but dynamic
architectural expression. These features of high merits are emphasized by the way of
construction, masterfully dressed blocks, wherein the
Dubrovnik
masters also took part.
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DOKUMENTI OPSTANKA
The
architecture
of the Ferhadija Mosque was not incidental. We should remember that at
the time
Banja Luka
was the centre of the Bosnian Pashalik, that Ferhad-pasha
Sokolović
was a
member of this powerful family in which the most prominent place was taken by
Mehmed-pasha, as the grand vizier serving three sultans, whose ties and influence definitely
provided the participation of the best architects of the Empire in the development of
Banja
Luka.
This is more probable with the historically established fact that the leading architects from
the metropolis did build in Bosnian towns. It is known that the Persian
Ajam
Asir
Ali,
predecessor of Sinan as the chief architect of the Empire, built the
Gazi Husrev-bey's
Mosque,
that Ramadan-aga
-
Sinan's representative built the
Aladža
Mosque in
Foča,
Mimar
Hajredin
-
Sinan's disciple built the Old Bridge in
Mostar
and the bridge on the
Trebišnjica,
and that Sinan
himself built the
Sokolovića
Bridge in
Visegrád.
This is why the hypothesis of Sinan's activity in
Banja Luka,
or some of his best associates, either on the
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha's Mosque or,
particularly, on the Ferhadija Mosque, is difficult to rule out without further research.
Because of the similarity of the spatial disposition of the
Muradija
Mosque in Manissa,
built in
1586
nearby Izmir and designed by Khodja
Mimar
Sinan, and the Ferhadija Mosque,
there is the idea that the
Banja Luka
Mosque was designed in the great architect's Istanbul studio.
The connection between the
Muradija
Mosque in Manissa and the Ferhadija Mosque
imposes a need for further research and looking for the true answer to the question as to how the
Ferhadija Mosque had the same spatial disposition, construction and architectural structure
seven years before this work of Sinan's.
The modernity of the Ferhadija Mosque solution with all of its merits ranked the
Banja
Luka
major house of worship among Islamic top sacral buildings in the Balkans.
All the buildings around the Ferhadija Mosque
-
turbehs, graveyard, fountain, portal and
drinking fountains, were supplemental to these merits. The nearby Clock Tower made one unit
with the Ferhadija, especially in the trade centre outlook, where the Ferhadija minaret and the
clock tower had been present in tandem for centuries against the
Banja Luka
skyline. The clock
tower was an interesting and important building in
Banja Luka:
interesting for its absolutely
obscure and unresearched origin, as some historians related it to the Middle Ages, and
important because it was the first public timepiece in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Its varied stone
structure with a multitude of Roman
spolia
provided it a special place in the overall heritage of
this town.
Although the Hasan defterdar's Mosque, built
15
years after the Ferhadija, was built in the
classical Istanbul style, with noble proportions and remarkably slender lines, it had the archaic
spirit of the old Davgnados Mosque. It had only one dome above the prayer area and three small
domes over the porch, and the load was supported by
trompes.
With a turbeh within the
mosque, it was one of the rare grave mosques, and the small fenced minaret lent particularity to
the whole complex.
858
SYNOPSIS
Although the Ferhadija and Arnaudija Mosques differed in their spatial and construction
solutions, their similarity, however, was noticeable in the way of construction, even more so in
the elements of the decorative stone plastic, where Hasan
defterdár
took the mosque of his pasha
as a model. What connected these two structures in terms of space is the communication which
had existed back in the period of the mediaeval market place and which gained a special
importance at Ferhad-pasha's time. Both mosques with their minarets were specific landmarks at
the ends of this communication, marking that important direction and lending the
characteristic identity to the central part of
Banja Luka.
The Gazanferija Mosque was the third mosque built in the classical Istanbul style, which was
indicated by the preserved minaret. As it probably got the wooden dome back in the 18th
century, it became part of its identity. The author's suggestion of the possible original
appearance of the Gazanferija and
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha's Mosques given in this book is founded
on the investigations of proportions, as well as of the established practice of the relation of the
heights of domes and minarets, and of other parts of the structures. These analyses should
confirm the hypothesis of their former appearance, but they are not a basis for their
reconstruction.
So, while the Ferhadija and Arnaudija Mosques bore the characteristics of the classical
Istanbul style, pertaining directly to the models of the metropolis, the mosques with the
four-slope roofs have elements of the traditional architecture. It was felt already at the
Medresa
and Simidije Mosques (pulled down after the Second World War), but it was even more
noticeable in the mosques with wooden minarets, which have a considerable share in the
architectural heritage of
Banja Luka.
Although they have their roots in Anatolia, they have their
own specific features. They all were built from stone, had massive walls, wooden sofas (raised
porch floors) and wide wooden minarets rising up from the steep shingle roof. Among these,
there were also some rare narrow, wooden minarets built on the model of the stone ones. These
mosques were an important factor both in the formation of mahalas and in the creation of the
image of the whole complexes in the urban structure. Each one of them special in its own way,
with its proportions and appearance, merged with the adjacent residential architecture of the
white walls and small windows with a multitude of wooden features. Their spatial and spiritual
relevance with the graveyard surrounding them provided for these mosques a special place in the
image of such settlements. The wooden minaret with a poplar or another tree by its side gave
rhythm to the urban structure of the
mahala,
and the visual articulation to the whole area, thus
achieving that particular ambience beauty. The most important among them was the
Behram-effendi's Mosque, built early in the 17th c, interesting for its added turbeh and small
kuija serving as the prayer place for the founder.
A separate, but no less interesting, group of mosques in
Banja Luka
were the mosques with a
dome under the four-slope roof. We could say that such solutions, introduced with the
859
DOKUMENTI OPSTANKA
Gazanferija
Mosque
after it had been pulled down in the 18th century, and with the
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha's Mosque after the
1969
earthquake, had particular associations of the original
appearance. Although the dome of the Gazanferija Mosque was wooden, and the dome of the
Sofi
Mehmed-pasha's Mosque was of concrete, they left the impression of monumental space.
Such solutions are found in other mosques in Bosnia and Herzegovina as well, often like the
architect's original idea, and so they became part of the local tradition and they had special
relevance.
Although these buildings changed their appearance through history, or were pulled down,
never prior to
1993
had that been carried out according to a prepared plan, thoroughly and
completely. Numerous wars between the
Habsburg
Monarchy and the Ottoman Empire, whose
consequences were the ravages of the Austrian campaigns in
1688
or in the late
17і
century, and
then in
1737, 1878
respectively, caused damages only to some individual mosques as a
consequence of shelling, but not with the aim to wipe out their existence.
The motive to reconstruct the structures of the cultural and historical heritage destroyed in
Bosnia and Herzegovina during this war arose not only from the need to obtain sacral of
functional spaces or to restore the symbols of the national identity, or to reconstruct the
valuable buildings of the cultural and historical heritage, although these are also important
factors, but also because of the need to re-establish the spatial relations within the urban
structures which once existed in them, shaping one another for centuries.
The reconstruction of the heritage is a process intended to restore a part of the lost
historical identity to the environment that has merged with the heritage and coherence to the
structures and environment that were destroyed or damaged.
In that process, a great role will be played by two essential components, which are present
and which will affect the beginning and development of the reconstruction activities. The level
of damage of the heritage is the first component, while the other is societal conscience and
financial possibilities of the State. The records and estimates of the damage with the respective
documentation will be the basic insight into the condition of the heritage, while financial
possibilities will make a basis on which it will be possible to carry out the reconstruction.
Relying on the experience of conservation and restoration practice, and on the postulates of
the active protection which tell of restoration and possible reconstruction of these buildings
when they are suddenly pulled down in a war or natural disasters, provided that all necessary
documentation exists, this reconstruction is viable. It is an important element in preserving the
identity of a people and ensuring its survival. This finds its confirmation in the latest
declaration of the General Assembly of the organisation
Europa
Nostra,
passed in Vienna on
25
April
1996.
The Declaration supports the reconstruction and rehabilitation of religious and
ethnic buildings pulled down in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, and it urges cooperation
and assistance from the Council of Europe,
EU
and UNESCO.
860
SYNOPSIS
Scientific principles of protection of architectural heritage require, as the starting point,
first of all the same approach to all historical layers and equal treatment thereof, but, if
necessary, a particular layer may be accentuated if it is relevant for the building itself and the
spatial ambience it is located in. This is why, in reconstructing a building, it is necessary to take
account of the relations of the building and its environment, which has to be resolved integrally.
All analyses made and researches carried out, especially those on the site, as well as the
knowledge from scientific sources and conclusions about the destroyed mosques of
Banja Luka,
make a firm basis for their reconstruction. Added to this are numerous technical documents,
architectural surveys, rehabilitation designs, technical details, historical and contemporary
photographic documents, geodetic maps. The study and compilation thereof will provide a firm
knowledge of those achievements and open the gate to their rehabilitation, restoration,
re-composition, reconstruction or new modular construction.
This complex task should be entrusted to a multidisciplinary expert team. The
reconstruction itself has to be thoroughly studied and based on scientific methods. The
following activities should be carried out:
1.
protection of the sites of the destroyed or damaged buildings (fencing off and
conservation of the remains);
2.
investigation of the sites where the debris were dumped and their recovery,
classification, marking, and investigation of their quality for the re-use in building (adequate
drying of the damp stone debris);
3.
scientific research into and study of the debris of the structures on the site with the
preparation of research projects, particularly of bearing capacity of the remaining foundations,
and the preparation of geostatic design;
4.
ensuring architectural, photographic, technical, and geodetic and other
documentation, and setting up a documentation centre;
5.
preparation of designs for rehabilitation, restoration, re-composition or
reconstruction, using the fully authentic building elements respecting its all dimensions and
features;
6.
ensuring the materials for execution with the use of the old technologies.
In applying this approach, it is important to:
find a quarry with the authentic stone and to test it in laboratory;
manufacture bricks according to the authentic sample;
slake lime in a traditional way to be used for making mortar;
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DOKUMENTI OPSTANKA
do the laboratory testing of all found materials, especially of the mortar so as to
manufacture them in the same way in the new procedure;
determine the authentic way of building in stone blocks with pouring lead to bind them;
lay the base for the blocks on the lime mortar prepared in a traditional way;
make authentically lead slabs to serve as covers for the domed constructions;
make a clay layer of different fats that will serve as insulator on the dome and as base for
laying down lead slabs;
ensuring the fitting of lead slabs in the traditional way;
plan the fitting of beams that will serve as the levelling layer and the fastening ring for
which we have to plan the insertion of metal cables and carbon tapes to stabilize the structure;
ensure the wooden beams ring by means of carbon tapes to be laced under the dome;
ensure ventilation for the condensates;
fit ceramic conduits according to the model of the existing ones as load-easing and
resonators;
make a special type of plaster for the interior plastering (which will contain goat's hair or a
special kind of grass) so that the walls could be painted in arabesques;
7.
manufacture foldable scale models of the buildings and castings of some details to
the original scale;
8.
open workshops for the traditional crafts;
9.
organise professional training for the personnel and their practical inclusion in the
reconstruction of the structures with the preparation of documentation for these works which
should be published.
For the reconstruction and restoration of these buildings, we can use as examples the
reconstructed structures violently pulled down during the Second World War in Poland,
Germany and Italy.
After the bombing of Italian towns by the Allies in
1944,
many precious monuments had
been destroyed, but thereafter they were reconstructed. The valuable buildings in Pizza, Naples,
Genoa, Rome, Ravenna, Vicenza,
Ancona, Pula
were reconstructed in this way.
Particularly interesting for us is the procedure for the reconstruction of the Benedictine
monastery Monte
Cassino,
which was completely destroyed in the Allies' bombardment, but
thanks to its monumental, and especially cultural and historic merits, it was reconstructed
according to the facsimile system.
862
SYNOPSIS
There are also examples of the reconstructed bridges: Santa
Trinita in
Florence,
Ponte Pietre
and
Castel
Vecchio in
Verona, the Bossano Bridge on the River
Brento.
Besides these individual samples of reconstruction, there are several towns in Europe,
especially in Germany and Poland, reconstructed to their past appearance after they had been
destroyed during the Second World War. Complete city quarters in
Warszawa,
Nürnberg,
München, Hildsheim
were reconstructed in this way. Especially interesting is the reconstruction
procedure of the historic core of
Warszawa,
where the reconstruction, as a rehabilitation method,
established itself and gained its place in the protection practice despite the criticisms from some
experts. "The Poles opted for reconstruction to the original forms, but also to the socio-political
demands of their capital city as a symbol of their national independence". Thanks to the rich
photographic and architectural documentation, the reconstruction could be fully carried out.
Among the reconstructed buildings in
Warszawa,
the Royal Palace has a special place and
importance. The approach to and methods of reconstruction of this monument, which was
pulled down to the ground by Germans, and which has special national, cultural and historic
relevance for Poland, may serve as an example to follow in the reconstruction of the destroyed
heritage buildings in the world, and in our country as well. The thorough preparation for the
reconstruction, the use of the preserved authentic materials, and the rich photographic
documentation, the making of numerous palace models and education of professionals, and the
training of old crafts masters, resulted in the precisely reconstructed building.
Besides these successfully reconstructed buildings, and historic cities and towns which were
mostly carried out in Europe, such interventions are very important in the states of Islamic
world. The
Aga
Khan Foundation, especially, did much on the reconstruction of the cultural
heritage, namely the Foundation's particular programme implementers that deal with the
reconstruction of the most valuable historic cities and towns (HCSHP). This programme covers
the protection and reconstruction of several historic towns in Afghanistan, Uzbekistan,
Pakistan, Egypt, and Syria. In Egypt, the intervention in the reconstruction of the complex
within the Ayyubid's Walls, as part of the 12th century fortress, was especially important. Besides
in Egypt, the Centre for Conservation and Protection of Islamic Cultural Heritage (CIAH),
although its seat is in Cairo, works in other parts of the world: Gaza, Sidon, Balbek, Cypress,
Tripoli, and Saudi Arabia.
A special chapter is dedicated to the rehabilitation and restoration of the heritage buildings
in Croatia, Serbia, Macedonia, and Slovenia. There is a mention of many buildings
reconstructed according to the scientific methodological procedure, especially in
Dubrovnik,
such as
St Vlaho
and St Spas Churches, the
Sponza
and the Duke's Palaces; described are the
most important interventions in the reconstruction of the Diocletian's Palace, i.e. the
reconstruction of the Palace cellars, in Split as an important antiquity communication. The
reconstruction of the City Hall in
Šibenik,
which was totally destroyed in World War Two, was
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DOKUMENTI"! OPSTANKA
interesting. It was carried out according to the facsimile method, respecting its outer
architectural appearance.
In the book, we can find the most relevant reconstructed monasteries in Serbia, where
methodological approach and meticulousness were fully achieved, especially in the
Gradac,
Studenica,
Sopoćani, Đurdevi Stupovi, St
Nicholas near
Kuršumlija
Monasteries, etc.
The cases of the reconstructed heritage buildings in Slovenia and Macedonia are also
presented.
Before the
1992-1995
war, in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the
Hadžimuratovićes'
daire
-
storerooms,
Morića
khan
-
hostelry, turned into a national restaurant, were adapted and
reconstructed. Very successful and methodologically appropriate was the reconstruction of the
shops around the
Brusa bezistan,
which restored their 16th century authentic appearance. The
Gazi Husrev-bey's
bezistan was also reconstructed with the same scientific approach, preserving
its original purpose.
A prominent place in the book is taken by other reconstructed heritage buildings outside
Sarajevo, such as the Mehmed-pasha
Sokolović's
Bridge in
Visegrád,
the
Sisman
Ibrahim-pasha's
Medresa
in
Počitelj,
the
Glavica
Mosque in Livno, and St Luke's Tower in
Jajce.
The cultural and historical heritage in Bosnia and Herzegovina was seriously damaged in
the
1992-1995
period. Destruction by the shelling of valuable buildings of cultural heritage, such
as the Old Bridge in
Mostar,
the Main Post Office, and the Institute for Oriental Studies with its
valuable manuscripts, the Town Hall housing the National and University Library, the
Gazi
Husrev-bey's Mosque, Old Orthodox Church, Ashkenazi Synagogue, Jewish Cemetery,
Cathedral of Sacred Heart in Sarajevo, then the
Žitomislići
Monastery, Old and New Orthodox
Churches in
Mostar,
the Church of St John the Baptist at Podmilaqe near
Jajce,
and the
Arnaudija and Ferhadija Mosques in
Banja Luka,
the Kalaun Jusuf-pasha's in
Maglaj,
Town
Mosque in
Stolac, Aladža
Mosque in
Foča,
Hajji Aliya's in
Počitelj,
Karadoz-bey's and
Koski
Mehmed-pasha's Mosques in
Mostar,
Sinan-bey's in
Čajnice,
the Monastery in
Jajce,
and St
Michael the Evangelist's Monastery in Plehan, Husein-kapetan
Gradaščević's
Tower in
Gradačac,
together with a large number of public and housing units throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina,
should be declared a war crime.
In order to preserve and reconstruct the cultural heritage, a Commission on Preservation of
National Monuments was set up under the Dayton Peace Agreement, whose basic task is laid
down in Article
W
of Annex
8
to the Agreement, which is to make up a unique list of national
monuments in Bosnia and Herzegovina. As the mandate of this Commission, which listed
777
monuments, expired, the
ВІН
Presidency appointed a new Commission whose term is also
5
years; the High Representative for
ВІН
passed the "Law on Implementation of Decisions of the
Commission on Protection of National Monuments Established under Annex
VIII
of the
864
SYNOPSIS
Framework Agreement
on Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina". (Published in the "Official Gazette
of the
ВІН
Federation",
20
June
2002.)
An important role in the Protection Service, fragmented after the
1992-1995
war, besides the
UNESCO, was played by the governments of some countries, many non-governmental
organisations, donors, owners and beneficiaries, religious communities, the Ministries of
Culture of the Entities, and by the Protection Services.
In Bosnia and Herzegovina, many towns were more or less seriously damaged.
Mostar
had the
highest percentage of destroyed buildings of cultural heritage and seriously damaged urban
structure. That is why the preparation of execution projects for its reconstruction started in Old
Town's historic core with the intention to establish the spatial continuity and restore identity to
the historic ensemble. The reconstruction project for the Old Bridge in
Mostar
was one of the
largest interventions of this type in Europe with a large number of participants under the auspices
of the UNESCO. It was led by the Old Bridge Project Coordination Unit. The reconstruction
project applied the facsimile method using authentic masonry, fixing the stone blocks by casting
lead fixings and using the mortar made according to the old technologies. The old towers by the
Bridge were also reconstructed, as well as the trade and crafts centres on both banks.
Besides the reconstruction of public buildings such as the Town Public Bath, the Girls'
School, the Gymnasium building, the Clock-Tower, a large number of buildings of sacral
importance were protected or fully reconstructed. Among them, the Mehmed-bey Karadoz
Mosque occupies a special place, which architecturally was fully rehabilitated and restored,
including the minaret with sherefet
-
balcony respecting its authenticity.
The Nesuh-aga
Vučjaković's
Mosque, whose dome was damaged and the minaret pulled
down to the sherefet was completely reconstructed. This mosque was painted with decorations,
too. Also reconstructed were the Hajji Ahmed-aga
Lakišić's
Mosque and the
Koski
Mehmed-pasha's Mosque. All the works on the reconstruction of these mosques were led by the
Institute for Protection of Cultural, Historical and Natural Heritage in
Mostar.
In the
reconstruction of the
Tabačica
Mosque, and
Čejvan ćehaja's
Mosque, the Institute was joined by
the UNESCO. Those were educational and positive projects in the campaign of reconstruction
of cultural and historical heritage of
Mostar.
A special place is certainly taken by the Nezir-aga's
Mosque, which was destroyed after the Second World War and then reconstructed according to
the facsimile method. These works were led by the Institute for the Protection of Cultural,
Historical and Natural Heritage in
Mostar
in cooperation with IRCIC and the
"Mimar Sinan"
Faculty in Istanbul.
Sarajevo suffered heavy destruction during the
1992-1995
war, when the structures of cultural
and historical heritage suffered especially bad damage. Among the first affected buildings was the
Post Office. Its rehabilitation and reconstruction began immediately after the war. The building
was authentically reconstructed on the basis of its historical documentation. Among the sacral
865
DOKUMENTI OPSTANKA
buildings reconstructed
after the
1992-1995
war are the White Mosque at
Vratnik
and the Keki
Sinan's Mosque at
Bistrik.
The Muslihudin
Čekrekčija's
Mosque was also reconstructed through a
special constructional intervention and the use of carbon tapes. More comprehensive
interventions were on the
Gazi Husref-bey's
Mosque, where constructional interventions and
rehabilitation of the dome damaged in shelling were followed by the painting of the interior. The
authentic fence was pulled down and the new one built of reinforced concrete.
Important interventions were carried out on the
Vratnik
Town gates, especially on the
Visegrád
Gate-Tower. The Magribija Mosque, whose minaret was pulled down in the war, was
reconstructed in cooperation with the UNESCO. Besides these sacral buildings, rehabilitation
was carried out on the Cathedral of Sacred Heart, St Anthony's Church at
Bistrik, St
Joseph's
Church at
Marijin Dvor,
and the Holy Trinity Church. The Old Orthodox Church and the
Orthodox Cathedral with the Metropolitan's Residence were also rehabilitated. Very sensitive
approach to rehabilitation was with the
Alija Đerzelez
House, which was successfully
reconstructed through appropriate methodological procedures. A similar methodology was
used for the rehabilitation of the
Šeher Ćehaja's
Bridge. Its bearing stone arches authentic look
was restored, but the paving departed from the former cobble pavement, and the colour of the
korkaluk stone in the fence is rather different from the old stone arches.
An especially complex task was the reconstruction of the Town Hall building. Beside the
basic static and constructional interventions and roof reconstruction, the works on the
rehabilitation and replacement of columns of the entire hall space were carried out.
Among the mosques which after the
1992-1995
war have preserved their authenticity is the
Kalaun Jusuf-pasha's Mosque in
Maglaj.
The restoration project and supervision over the works
was carried out by the
ВІН
Institute for the Protection of Cultural, Historical and Natural
Heritage in cooperation with the Swedish organisation "Cultural Heritage without Frontiers". In
reconstructing this building, a sensitive scientific approach was used respecting all authentic
elements of the structure. This Institute reconstructed the Hasan Kjafija
Pruščak's
Mosque and
Medresa
in
Prusac,
too.
The Parish Church of St John the Baptist at
Podmilačje
near
Jajce
was pulled down during
the
1992-1995
aggression against
ВІН,
and although at the time it had the appearance from the
191 century, and was in the Historicism style, the reconstruction relied on the church remains
from the
15'
century so that it restored its original Gothic style appearance.
A vigorous campaign for reconstruction of all cultural and historical heritage buildings was
conducted in the town of
Počitelj,
where the rehabilitation of the
Gavrankapetanovića
House
was completed together with many housing units. Also, the Hajji Alija's Mosque was entirely
restored with the use of the authentic stone and meticulous approach to and acknowledgement
of all merits of the building.
866
SYNOPSIS
Using the experience with and analysis of the remains of the
Banja Luka
mosques, the
approach to their reconstruction should be gradually developed, depending on all the factors
pointed so far. Five possible reconstruction levels are given for this purpose. Certainly, the most
demanding is the facsimile reconstruction, which is a true reproduction of the original
appearance. As it is possible to use the preserved remains, too, some of the buildings would be
re-composed, i.e., anastylosis would be applied. Any reconstruction according to the given
proposals has to respect the disposition and construction and use the authentic stone with
well-studied design and photographic documentation.
Proposals are the following:
The first reconstruction level includes the following buildings: the Ferhadija Mosque with
all the buildings within the complex: the Clock Tower, the Arnaudija Mosque and the
Halil-pasha's Turbeh. So, in both the Ferhadija and Arnaudija Mosques, partial re-composition
will be applied, as the remains found will be also used. Certainly, the most important quality of
the reconstruction of this complex with the Clock Tower is not only the restoration of historic,
artistic and architectural values but also the establishment of the interrupted spatial relations
within the urban structures, which had existed for centuries.
The second reconstruction level includes the Gazanferija, Sefer-bey's, Mehdi-bey's, Hajji
Perviz, Hajji Selihija's and Hajji Zulfikar's Mosques. Those mosques were totally destroyed, and
prior to their destruction they had had the authentic disposition and the stone wall
construction. This is the reason for the proposal to reconstruct these mosques according to the
facsimile method, respecting the appearance and materials, using the old technological
procedures, and by opening the outer wooden sofas
-
raised porch floors
-
as they used to be.
In the next group would be the Hajji Osmanija and Hajji Omer's Mosques, whose stone
walls were not preserved, but we have baked-earth bricks and bricks as the main building
materials. The proposal for the reconstruction is to respect the form and disposition of the
building by using the bricks to build the walls and wooden beams as construction elements. In
the Hajji Omer's Mosque, the proposal is to restore its authentic appearance by opening the
sofas and constructing the wooden porch with double mahfil
-
gallery, which is the case with the
Hajji Osmanija Mosque.
The fourth group would be the mosques where only restoration of the building would be
carried out. It concerns only the Behram-effendi's Mosque, whose reconstruction would be done
respecting all authentic elements, just as it was for all buildings that used to be part of this
complex.
It would be certainly difficult, and methodologically incorrect, to use pseudo-
reconstruction for the restoration of the mosques which through history had changed their
appearance several times. They are the
Sofi Mehmed-pasha's
Mosque, Hajji Beg-zade's, Hajji
867
DOKUMENTI OPSTANKA
Kurd, Hajji Šabanaga's
Mosques.
The proposal is, respecting the dimensions of the mosques, to
build new buildings in a modular coordination with the environment, with new architectural
expression, but with the association of the original structure and use of the authentic materials.
A special threat in reconstructing mosques is the use of some new, imported solutions,
which would clash with the ambience and so change the structure and identity of the
settlements. This will happen in
Banja Luka
and other cities and towns in Bosnia and
Herzegovina if interventions are done disregarding the values, both of the historic buildings and
the surrounding environment. That has to be solved integrally. For these reasons, firm
directions about protection have to be followed, priorities and minimum limits set, below which
one could not go without destroying the values of the heritage buildings.
We have to prevent everything that would degrade or break up the space
-
although it is
definitely important to build the new.
The goal of this work will be achieved if the destroyed heritage is included in the priorities
for reconstruction, if the sites are protected and preserved, and the colliding new construction
prevented. Only in this way will the intentions of those who started this war be thwarted and the
relations that dominated this area established; and restoration of identity to architectural
ensembles and people will be made possible.
The spatial continuity is "a link between the past and the future" and it has to be
maintained. It bears all messages of the past indicating the directions of new construction, which
would be confirmation of unbreakable centuries-long links of the people and that space.
Therefore, above all is the task to reconstruct the continuity of spatial relations, restore the
mosques to the settlements they were forcefully uprooted from. Authentic restoration in the
space in any form has to keep the pattern of relations within urban buildings.
868 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Husedžinović, Sabira |
author_facet | Husedžinović, Sabira |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Husedžinović, Sabira |
author_variant | s h sh |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV039139345 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)424449357 (DE-599)BVBBV039139345 |
edition | 1. izd. |
format | Book |
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geographic | Banja Luka (Bosnia and Hercegovina) / Buildings, structures, etc Bosnien-Herzegowina (DE-588)4088119-2 gnd Banja Luka (DE-588)4454278-1 gnd |
geographic_facet | Banja Luka (Bosnia and Hercegovina) / Buildings, structures, etc Bosnien-Herzegowina Banja Luka |
id | DE-604.BV039139345 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-12-16T11:00:34Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9958941325 |
language | Bosnian |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-024157427 |
oclc_num | 424449357 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-Re13 DE-BY-UBR DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-Re13 DE-BY-UBR DE-12 |
physical | 918 S. zahlr. Ill. 28 cm |
publishDate | 2005 |
publishDateSearch | 2005 |
publishDateSort | 2005 |
publisher | Muzej Grada Zenice |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Radovi / Muzej Grada Zenice |
spelling | Husedžinović, Sabira Verfasser aut Dokumenti opstanka (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) Sabira Husedžinović 1. izd. Zenica Muzej Grada Zenice 2005 918 S. zahlr. Ill. 28 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Radovi / Muzej Grada Zenice 15 Includes bibliographical references (p. 885-904) Islamic architecture / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Mosques / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Cultural property / Protection / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Art treasures in war / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Architektur Islamische Architektur (DE-588)4362670-1 gnd rswk-swf Kriegsschaden (DE-588)4165711-1 gnd rswk-swf Kulturgut (DE-588)4139819-1 gnd rswk-swf Moschee (DE-588)4040320-8 gnd rswk-swf Banja Luka (Bosnia and Hercegovina) / Buildings, structures, etc Bosnien-Herzegowina (DE-588)4088119-2 gnd rswk-swf Banja Luka (DE-588)4454278-1 gnd rswk-swf Banja Luka (DE-588)4454278-1 g Islamische Architektur (DE-588)4362670-1 s Kriegsschaden (DE-588)4165711-1 s DE-604 Moschee (DE-588)4040320-8 s Bosnien-Herzegowina (DE-588)4088119-2 g Kulturgut (DE-588)4139819-1 s Muzej Grada Zenice Radovi 15 (DE-604)BV002291258 15 Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 2 application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024157427&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 2 application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024157427&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Abstract |
spellingShingle | Husedžinović, Sabira Dokumenti opstanka (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) Islamic architecture / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Mosques / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Cultural property / Protection / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Art treasures in war / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Architektur Islamische Architektur (DE-588)4362670-1 gnd Kriegsschaden (DE-588)4165711-1 gnd Kulturgut (DE-588)4139819-1 gnd Moschee (DE-588)4040320-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4362670-1 (DE-588)4165711-1 (DE-588)4139819-1 (DE-588)4040320-8 (DE-588)4088119-2 (DE-588)4454278-1 |
title | Dokumenti opstanka (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) |
title_auth | Dokumenti opstanka (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) |
title_exact_search | Dokumenti opstanka (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) |
title_full | Dokumenti opstanka (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) Sabira Husedžinović |
title_fullStr | Dokumenti opstanka (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) Sabira Husedžinović |
title_full_unstemmed | Dokumenti opstanka (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) Sabira Husedžinović |
title_short | Dokumenti opstanka |
title_sort | dokumenti opstanka vrijednosti znacaj rusenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeda |
title_sub | (vrijednosti, značaj, rušenje i obnova kulturnog naslijeđa) |
topic | Islamic architecture / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Mosques / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Cultural property / Protection / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Art treasures in war / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Architektur Islamische Architektur (DE-588)4362670-1 gnd Kriegsschaden (DE-588)4165711-1 gnd Kulturgut (DE-588)4139819-1 gnd Moschee (DE-588)4040320-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Islamic architecture / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Mosques / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Cultural property / Protection / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Art treasures in war / Bosnia and Hercegovina / Banja Luka Architektur Islamische Architektur Kriegsschaden Kulturgut Moschee Banja Luka (Bosnia and Hercegovina) / Buildings, structures, etc Bosnien-Herzegowina Banja Luka |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024157427&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=024157427&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV002291258 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT husedžinovicsabira dokumentiopstankavrijednostiznacajrusenjeiobnovakulturnognaslijeđa |