Andrew Burke - Digital Construction since 1994

On Twitter

On Facebook


andrewburke.ca - Istanbul: Hagia Sophia

 

Posted on: 2010-07-04 07:23:19

Previous: The Streets of Istanbul - II Next: Istanbul's Basilica Cistern: Gorgeous, Creepy, Nerdy

I'm a 21st century person. I've seen a lot of huge architecture, including sports stadiums, huge airports like Toronto Pearson's Terminal 1, and giant structures like the CN Tower and the Gateway Arch in St. Louis. None of this prepared me for the overwhelming scale of Hagia Sophia.

Of course, it isn't as big as these more modern structures - I think what made it overwhelming was the scale of history in this building. If you multiplied the volume of this ancient building by its age, measured in millenia, by the amount of history that has happened beneath its dome, by the historical figures who have walked through its giant front door, by its central importance to empires, by the number of legends and stories attached to every stone in the place, this would likely be the most massive structure on earth.

Dome of Hagia Sophia

After the previous basilica on this site had been destroyed in a theological-political sports riot, the Roman/Byzantine emperor Justinian had the present building built to replace it, completed in 537 A.D. (A lot of Istanbul's history happened in years with three digits).

For almost a thousand years it was the religious heart of the Byzantine Empire. In the 13th century, it spent 60 years as a Catholic Cathedral when Constantinople was owned by Italians - and even then it hosted the coronation of an emperor. When the Ottomans took over Constantinople, Mehmet the Conqueror immediately converted it to the most important mosque in his empire, which it remained until the founding of the Republic of Turkey in the 1920s.

The chief engineer had previously taught at the Academy in Athens - the same Academy that, centuries before, had been founded by Plato. This makes the building a living relic of classical antiquity, a transmission across history from a different world. When you look at the shapes and the stonework, you are looking at the geometry of Euclid and a direct architectural lineage that includes the greatest structures of ancient Greece and Rome.

The many different kinds of stone and marble were brought from across the Empire, and many of the columns were taken from older buildings. We aren't just looking at a Christian church or Islamic mosque, but pieces of ancient temples to Apollo and Athena.

No building - certainly no church - had ever been built in this form or at this scale before. The genius of the design is not just it's height (you could fit a 12-story building underneath it) but in the way that the semi-domes on each side open up the space and allow the main dome to be seen from anywhere in the building. My architecture, history, and ceramic tile obsessed guidebook points out that while the dome of St. Peter's in Rome is bigger, you can only see it if you're standing underneath it. This dome floats over the entire space, always present, like the eye of God.

This architecture was so striking and powerful that it influenced the design of all of the great Ottoman mosques of the city. As you walk around the city, you see echoes of Hagia Sophia (or Ayasofia) bubbling over the cityscape in all directions.

This is one of the few times in my life where a building has given me goosebumps. The scale and glory of place is awe-inspiring, even to someone like me who has seen a lot of majestic architecture - it is difficult to imagine what it must have been like for the original worshippers, or even more so for some visitor from dark ages Europe, where the knowledge of how to build at this scale had been utterly lost.

After my visit, I felt I had a better understanding of Yeats' lines, from "Byzantium":

"A starlit or a moonlit dome disdains
All that man is"

Dome of Hagia Sophia

While we're discussing Yeats' "Byzantium" I was also reminded of these lines:

"Miracle, bird or golden handiwork,
More miracle than bird or handiwork,
Planted on the star-lit golden bough,"

Bird in Hagia Sophia

...by the birds who live inside the building, who perch in the capitals of the columns:

To see more of my pictures of Hagia Sophia and the very pretty Ottoman mausoleums nearby,
look at my Flickr set.



Previous: The Streets of Istanbul - II Next: Istanbul's Basilica Cistern: Gorgeous, Creepy, Nerdy

Other Blog Posts:
- Nova Scotia and Auld Scotland
- Edinburgh: Stratigraphic Culture
- Edinburgh Without Expectations
- EasyJet: Discount Class Conflict
- Berlin: World Cup
- World of Donairs
- Berliner Ensemble
- Berlin: Museums
- Berlin: Ghosts of the Past, Visions of the Future
- Flâneur in Berlin
- Berlin: Finding the Best Wurst
- Istanbul: Overwhelmed by History in the Hippodrome
- Istanbul: That dolphin-torn, that gong-tormented sea
- Istanbul: The Topkapi Palace and Harem
- Istanbul: Mosques
- Istanbul's Basilica Cistern: Gorgeous, Creepy, Nerdy
- Istanbul: Hagia Sophia
- The Streets of Istanbul - II
- The Streets of Istanbul - I
- Munich Airport: Legoland mit Bier und NapCab
- Heathrow Airport: You Are In A Maze Of Twisty Little Passages, All Different
- Getting Ready to Travel
- Quick Advice on Canadian Indie Music
- My Favourite Roadside Sign
- Well That Explains a Lot...
- Poland: Gear from the Army Museum
- Poland: Warsaw's Palace of Culture and the University Library
- Poland: Warsaw
- Poland: Winged Hussars
- Poland
- What's awesome about Toronto
- Possibly the best sentence in the English language
- QUOTE: We Shouldn't Have Music Anxiety
- Now *that's* Santa Cruz
- Small Town Newspaper Headline Dada
- Great Quote from Seth Godin
- McSweeney's: My Pet Peeves
- Shindig!
- Dresden Dolls / Die Mannequin / Friendly Rich at the Phoenix
- In Store for 2008: Wailing and Gnashing of Teeth?!
- Coffee Updates: Urbana and Far Coast
- Canadian: Walking to Tim Horton's Through a Blizzard
- Lighting as language
- TSOT Ruby/Rails Project Night
- IE is pants, pure and simple
- Passport Canada's Secure Enterprise Software
- DemoCampToronto16
- Faulty By Design
- Buynlarge.com - brilliant!
- Joey Starts at TSOT and Jeff goes 37Signals
- How To Doom Your Own Industry
- It's Sigmoidal, Stupid!
- Quick Update on Secured OS X Mail
- Alpha Geeks and Jedi Hooligans
- Now Fake Steve is Getting Close To Home
- Nice Rant on the Sanctity of Farming
- They Must Have Been Reading This Blog
- Well, so much for Reddit
- Zipcar: My Other Car is a Mini Convertible Named Munster
- XKCD Job Interview
- John C. Dvorak Misses It
- Protecting Your OS X Mail With Encrypted Volumes
- Fake Steve Jobs hits it
- My Favorite Bit From Herodotus
- Enterprise Software - like on the spaceship, right?
- So why, again, are you taking so long?
- That sounds about right for Oberlin
- Music, With Occasional City
- How to do Google Maps-Style Scrolling Windows with JavaScript and DHTML
- The Young Gods Play Kurt Weill
- Want a Rails Job?
- Quote of the Day
- Witty and Vibrant, Sensitive and Cranky
- Facebook, already - geez
- The Bolivarian Republic of Wednesday and Pudge
- Here are the real links for the previous post
- Venezuela: How To Have A Good Party
- It's a PHONE that runs UNIX!
- Congratulations Pat & Chris!
- About Venezuela: Traffic
- Venezuela Stuff Coming Later - But While I'm Recovering...
- My most popular posts are un-published!
- ... that creepy ass botox-phenomenon
- Prototype Library and JavaScript
- Godin LG Hmb - my new guitar
- Safari For Windows - What Apple Missed
- Joel Corrects Himself In Mid-Post
- Yorkville's Summer of Love with Gucci
- Update: Coffee
- RJS / AJAX Highlight Colouring in Rails
- Looking Real Good!
- Post-something Post on Big Bags
- Disclaimer
- Analgesic Code: Backtrack
- Baby Steps With EMACS
- Back in Santa Cruz
- You know, I agree that we should worry about Global Warming...
- Life Tip: Digitize Your Documents
- Nifty OS X Finder Enhancement With Little AppleScripts
- Toronto DemoCamp 12

All Blog Entries

RSS Feed


Back