A COLLECTIVE BIOGRAPHY STUDY OF MUSICIANS:
PATTERNS, NETWORKS AND MUSIC AS A “PROFESSION”
IN THE LATE OTTOMAN ERA AND THE EARLY REPUBLICAN
Y
This dissertation focuses on the musicians of Istanbul who experienced the
transitional period from the late Ottoman to the Early Republican years in Turkey.
By focusing on their career trajectories, the thesis seeks to understand the ways in
which musicians responded to broader socio-political changes.
The thesis offers a wide range of quantitative analyses that were generated in IBM
SPSS Statistics 23.0 (Statistical Package for Social Sciences). The thesis explores the
geographical origins, birth dates, family backgrounds, education patterns, language
proficiency, occupational distribution with a view to bring the common as well as
the distinct features of musicians under investigation to light.
The study gives emphasis to the musicians’ mobility in Istanbul in order to enhance
the geographical understanding of music. The frequency analysis enabled this study
to identify the most frequented neighborhoods by musicians as well as the musical
interactions among the neighborhoods. Gephi, which is software to visualize social
connections, was used to show the most musically connected neighborhoods to
understand how the urban music was generated at the local level.
By addressing the issue of music education, the thesis aimed to show that musicians
were not monolithic but diverse and reflected different values about music. Many
modes of learning music lead to the formation of different musical identities. For
v
the majority of musicians, it was perceived as part of the urban culture, and thereby
they built a non-professional (non-profit) relationship with it.
The dissertation pays particular attention to the emergence of music schools after
1909 and the radio broadcasts in 1927 to uncover the interactions between state
policies and music. The study perceives the role of these two institutions as a
turning point in music in terms of the transition from plurality in music-tradition to
cultural uniformity, the emergence of music as a “profession”, the re-organization
of musicians’ social status, and the remaking of women in music.
Keywords: Ottoman, Istanbul, musician, social history
vi
ÖZ
GEÇ OSMANLI VE ERKEN CUMHURİYET DÖNEMLERİNDE
İSTANBULLU MÜZİSYENLERİN SOSYAL PROFİL ANALİZİ:
SOSYAL AĞLAR VE BİR “MESLEK” OLARAK MÜZİK
Öner, Onur.
Tarih Doktora Programı
Tez Danışmanı: Prof. L. Cem Behar
Ocak 2019, 288 sayfa
Bu tez Geç Dönem Osmanlı Devleti’nden Erken Cumhuriyet’e uzanan bir zaman
diliminde İstanbul’da yaşamış olan bir grup müzisyeni konu edinmiştir.
Müzisyenlerin tanığı oldukları sosyo-politik ve kültürel değişimlere verdikleri
tepkileri analiz etmek tezin öncelikli meselelerinden birisidir.
Tez odağına aldığı 257 müzisyenin sosyal profillerini ortaya çıkarmak için SPSS veri
analiz yazılımı üzerinden çok sayıda niceliksel analize başvurmaktadır. Müzisyenlerin
coğrafi dağılımları, ailelerinin sosyo-ekonomik durumu, eğitim düzeyleri ve
meslekleri sahip oldukları benzerlikler ve farklılıkları tartışmak için bir zemin
oluşturmaktadır.
Bu çalışma İstanbul’un söz konusu zaman aralığındaki müzik haritasını oluşturmaya
çalışmıştır. Müzisyenlerin şehir içerisindeki hareketliliği tespit etmek için başvurulan
yoğunluk analiz metodu, mekân ve müzik arasındaki ilişkiler ağını ortaya çıkarmak
içindir. Gephi yazılımı kullanılarak ortaya çıkarılan ağ analizleri, müziğin en yoğun
olarak duyulduğu daireler (ilçeler) ve bunların birbirleriyle müzik üzerinden
kurdukları ilişki biçimlerini anlamamıza yardımcı olmaktadır. Dairelerde bulunan
tiyatrolar, gazinolar, tavernalar, semaî kahveleri, kıraathâneler, tekkeler,
müzisyenlerin evleri ve meşk toplantılarının niceliksel analizleri şehir müziğinin yerel
düzeyde nasıl üretildiğini göstermektedir.
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Birbirinden farklı müzik eğitim süreçlerine odaklanmak müzisyenlerin aslında
yekpare bir yapıda değerlendirilmemeleri gerektiğini ortaya koymaktadır. Müzisyen
olma süreçleri müzikal kimliklerini de şekillendirmekteydi. Analiz edilen
müzisyenlerin önemli bir kısmı için müzik sahip oldukları şehir kültürünün bir
parçası; tamamlayıcısıydı ve müzikle kurdukları ilişki biçimi de kâr odaklı değildi.
Fakat 20. yüzyılın başlangıcıyla hızlanan politik krizler müzisyenlerin hayatında
büyük değişimlere neden olacaktı. Bu çalışma politik değişimlerin müzikteki
izdüşümlerini müzik okulları (1909 ertesi) ve radyo yayıncılığı (1927) üzerinden
göstermeye çalışmaktadır. Müzik tarihi için köşe taşları olarak düşündüğüm bu iki
kurum, imparatorluk müziğine has çeşitlilikten yeknesaklığa adım, müziğin
profesyonelleşmeye ve müzisyenliğin sosyal statü kazanmaya başlaması ve müzik
içerisinde değişen kadın rolleri gibi pek çok açıdan tartışmaya açılmaktadır.
Anahtar Kelimeler: Osmanlı, İstanbul, müzisyen, sosyal tarih
viii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Numerous people made this work possible. Many academics, musicians and friends
have contributed to this dissertation but some deserve special mention for their
invaluable support, guidance and encouragement. Firstly, I would like to express my
special thanks and appreciation to my PhD supervisor Prof. Cem Behar, who has
encouraged me to work on this interdisciplinary project all along. Without his
guidance, this dissertation would not have been written. His studies in Ottoman
music have inspired me to write a thesis on the social history of music. Moreover, I
have truly benefited from his profound knowledge not only in Ottoman music
history, but also in demography. Otherwise, the author of this thesis whose
familiarity with statistics was limited would probably have gotten lost in the
numbers throughout this research project.
I would like to thank Prof. Abdulhamit Kırmızı for what I have learned from him
throughout my past seven years at Sehir University. His immense interest on
historical biographies and endeavor to employ them in his works helped me to
formulate this thesis, which substantially based on the musicians’ biographies. His
academic advice and critics were extremely important. I thank him for being a
constant source of encouragement.
I would like to thank all the members of the History Department at Şehir University
who introduced me to many of the issues in the field of Ottoman studies and
provided a global perspective to approach Ottoman history, society and culture. I
would always remember the classes held by Prof. Engin Deniz Akarlı whose
expertise, enthusiasim in teaching and critical approach taught me a lot about
history writing. Moreover, his clarifications and suggestions were valuable at the
initial stages of this thesis. I would also like to thank Asst. Prof. Yunus Uğur, who is
also one of the members of the thesis committee, and Assoc. Prof. Abdurrahman
Atçıl for their crucial feedbacks throughout my graduate studies and at different
stages of this research.
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Three years project on the non-Muslim official functionaries in the late Ottoman
era, which was conducted by Abdulhamit Kırmızı, and supported by TÜBİTAK (No.
113K156) between 2013 and 2016, was a milestone for my academic career. This
project introduced me to statistical data analysis and SPSS (The Statistical Package
for the Statistical Analysis). I would like to extend my special thanks to Ayşe
Hümeyra Tüysüz, who also took in the same research project, for the practical
advices on using the SPSS. I am also grateful to Asst. Prof. Zübeyir Nişancı and Asst.
Prof. Reyyan Bilge, two members of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences
at Şehir University, and Abdul Basit Adeel, a PhD candidate in Political Sciences at
Binghamton University, who have generously provided assistance when I was
grappling with data analysis in SPSS.
I thank to two other members of the thesis committee, Assoc. Prof. M. Erdem
Kabadayı at Koç University and Assoc. Prof. O. Güneş Ayas at Yıldız University, for
their significant contributions.
My warm thanks go to Zeynep Eroğlu, Zeynep Elif Öztaner and Hande Güçyılmaz
from the Center for Urban Studies at Sehir University, who drew the historical maps
in the thesis. I would also like to thank Büşra Parça Küçükkgöz and Halit Topçu from
the Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Sehir University for their
technical support and assistance throughout the course of this thesis.
I would like to express my gratitude to the staff of many archives, research
institutions, and libraries: Başbakanlık Osmanlı Arşivleri (BOA), İslam Araştırmaları
Merkezi (İSAM), İstanbul Şehir University Library, İstanbul Araştırmaları Enstitüsü,
and İBB Atatürk Kitaplığı.
I have to express my sincere gratitude to Asst. Prof. Deborah Rohr, the author of the
book, The Careers of British Musicians, 1750-1850, A Profession of Artisans, which I
have read over and over again throughout my thesis research.
x
I will always remember the academic and moral support of Prof. Georgios Ploumidis
during my MA Thesis in Ioannina University, Greece between 2007 and 2009. He
was probably the first person to persuade me for an academic future.
Old friends afforded constant moral support, which was decisive to complete this
dissertation. I am genuinely indebted to Asst. Prof. Muzaffer Şenel, Asst. Prof.
Yakoob Ahmed, Eymen Gürtan, Ertuğrul İnanç, Ahmet Emre Polat, Ubeydullah
Kısacık, Savaş Yelkenci and İsmail Hakkı Kumbasar. Over the past several years, I
have enjoyed the friendship of my colleagues. I cordially thank to Mustafa Batman,
Hümeyra Bostan, Emine Öztaner, Büşranur Kocaer, Cankat Kaplan, Fikri Çiçek, M.
Akif Berber, Fikriye Karaman and Ayşegül Çimen.
Lastly, all the members of my extended family were always with me and supported
my academic pursuit. I thank to my brother Olgun, mother Rukiye and father Hasan
Öner. I am deeply grateful to my wife Gülfer whose love, understanding and
patience were vitally important. My two daughters, Yasemin Nur and Süreyya Elif,
were born during my PhD dissertation and have been our source of joy. They were
the source of my motivation to write this thesis; thereby this dissertation is truly
dedicated to them.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Abstract ......................................................................................................................... iv
Öz .................................................................................................................................. vi
Acknowledgements ..................................................................................................... viii
List of Tables ................................................................................................................ xiv
List of Figures ............................................................................................................. xvii
List of Photos .............................................................................................................. xvii
List of Maps ................................................................................................................. xix
Abbreviations ............................................................................................................... xx
CHAPTERS
1.INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................... 1
1.1. Thesis Subject and Research Question ............................................................... 1
1.2. Historical Framework .......................................................................................... 4
1.3. Terminological Framework ................................................................................. 7
1.4. Methodological Framework .............................................................................. 12
1.5. Key Sources ....................................................................................................... 16
1.5.1. The Assessment of İbnülemin’s Hoş Sadâ...................................................... 21
1.6. Thesis Structure ................................................................................................. 25
2.HISTORIOGRAPHY ..................................................................................................... 27
2.1. Scholarship on the Late Ottoman Music ........................................................... 27
2.1.1. Literature on the Nationalization of Ottoman Music .................................... 28
2.1.2. Emphasis on Non-Muslim Presence in Music Literature ............................... 31
2.2. What Do the Biographical Dictionaries of Past Mean for Collective Biography
Studies? .................................................................................................................... 34
2.2.1. The Biographical Turn and Its Influence on Collective Biography Study ....... 36
2.3. Literature Review on Some Collective Biography Studies in the History of
Music ........................................................................................................................ 39
3.THE DEMOGRAPHICS OF MUSICIANS ....................................................................... 44
3.1. Age Composition Characteristics ...................................................................... 44
3.2. Geographical Origins ......................................................................................... 49
3.3. Education Patterns ............................................................................................ 55
3.3.1. Primary Education ...................................................................................... 56
3.3.2. Secondary Education .................................................................................. 57
3.3.3. Higher Education ........................................................................................ 61
3.3.4. Private Tutorage ......................................................................................... 65
xii
3.3.5. Learning a Language................................................................................... 69
3.4. Occupational Continuity.................................................................................... 73
3.5. Musicians’ Profession ........................................................................................ 81
3.6. Musicians’ Career Paths in the Ottoman Bureaucracy ..................................... 86
3.6.1. Education Records of Musicians in the Ottoman State Service ................. 88
3.6.2. Career Patterns of Musicians in the Ottoman State Service ..................... 92
3.7. Causes of Mortality ........................................................................................... 96
3.8. Lives Struck by Poverty ..................................................................................... 99
3.9. Conclusion .......................................................................................................103
4.MUSIC AND GEOGRAPHY: MUSICIANS ON THE MOVE ...........................................105
4.1. The Musical Setting of Istanbul .......................................................................105
4.2. Eyüp: The Sense of Locality .............................................................................118
4.3. Üsküdar: The Composite Structure .................................................................122
4.4. Beyoğlu or an Essential Tour from Pera to Galata ..........................................134
4.5. Fatih: The Musical Stronghold of the City .......................................................147
4.6. Conclusion .......................................................................................................162
5.CULTIVATING MUSIC ...............................................................................................167
5.1. Distribution Based on Musical Instrument .....................................................167
5.2. The Age of Music Education ............................................................................176
5.3. Non-Muslim Musicians and Music Education .................................................187
5.3.1. Musical Specialty Questioned .................................................................188
5.3.2. Who Teaches Whom Among the Non-Muslim Musicians? .....................193
5.4. Social Analysis of Muslim Musicians ...............................................................195
5.4.1. Debating the Religious Character of Music through Sheikh Cemaleddin
Efendi (1870-1937) .............................................................................................196
5.4.2. Musicians with Religious School Education and Reciters of Qur’an ........201
5.5. A Sociocultural Analysis of Musicians with Sufi Affiliation .............................206
5.5.1. Mevlevî Musicians Reconsidered .............................................................207
5.5.2. The Sufi Impact on the Music Education .................................................208
5.5.3. A Brief Social History of Ney and the Players...........................................212
5.6. Hamparsum Knowledge Among Musicians ....................................................216
5.7. Exploring Musicians’ Networks: Who Teaches Whom? .................................221
5.8. Conclusion .......................................................................................................227
6.RECONSIDERING CHANGE AND CONTINUITY IN MUSIC THROUGH THE CAREER
PATHS OF MUSICIANS ................................................................................................229
6.1. Interpreting the Career Changes.....................................................................229
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6.1.1. Change in Career Patterns Towards Music ..............................................230
6.1.2. The Consistent Musicians ........................................................................234
6.2. The Social Basis of the Music Schools .............................................................238
6.3. Radio Broadcast: An Opportunity or Threat to Ottoman Music? ...................244
7.CONCLUSION ...........................................................................................................251
BIBLIOGRAPHY............................................................................................................258
APPENDIX ...................................................................................................................278
A. The Full List Of Musicians Under Study (names are listed in date of birth order)278
VITA ............................................................................................................................287
xiv
LIST OF TABLES
Table 3.1. Birth dates by periods……………………………………………………………………………46
Table 3.2. Death dates by periods………………………………………………………………………….46
Table 3.3. Age composition of musicians, 1906……………………………………………………..48
Table 3.4. Musicians’ birthplaces…………………………………………………………………………..50
Table 3.5. Non-Istanbul born musicians – If resided in Istanbul……………………………..52
Table 3.6. Fathers’ occupation - Fathers settled in Istanbul……………………………………55
Table 3.7. Primary (ibtidâî) school attendance……………………………………………………….57
Table 3.8. Lower secondary (rüşdî) school attendance…………………………………………..58
Table 3.9. Upper secondary (idadî and sultanî) school attendance………………………..60
Table 3.10. The list of attended schools…………………………………………………………………63
Table 3.11. Father occupations compared to children’s higher education……………..64
Table 3.12. Privately taught musicians’ family profile…………………………………………….67
Table 3.13. Subjects of tutorage…………………………………………………………………………….68
Table 3.14. Most popular languages………………………………………………………………………70
Table 3.15. Other language combinations……………………………………………………………..72
Table 3.16. Occupations of fathers………………………………………………………………………..74
Table 3.17. Fathers’ occupations – income source of children……………………………….75
Table 3.18. Fathers’ occupations – Education level of children………………………………78
Table 3.19. Musicians’ principal source of income…………………………………………………83
Table 3.20. Musicians with multiple income sources……………………………………………..84
Table 3.21. Fathers’ income source compared to offspring’s…………………………………86
Table 3.22. Official functionaries’ birthplaces………………………………………………………..88
Table 3.23. Official’s education levels compared to overall statistics…………………….89
Table 3.24. Civil officials’ language familiarity……………………………………………………….90
Table 3.25. Ministries of first appointments………………………………………………………….95
Table 3.26. Causes of mortality……………………………………………………………………………..98
Table 4.1. The districts in which musicians have resided most…………………………….106
Table 4.2. Locations of musicians’ activities…………………………………………………………110
Table 4.3. Locations of musicians’ activities recorded in the city…………………………112
Table 4.4. Musicians’ living quarters and the location of
xv
musical activities in number………………………………………………………………………………..113
Table 4.5. Musical events of musicians in the district they resided………………………115
Table 4.6. The Sufi affiliation in certain districts…………………………………………………..118
Table 4.7. The density of local involvement as compared to
total activities in districts…………………………………………………………………………………….123
Table 4.8. Musicians’ local music activities
compared to the outside activities………………………………………………………………………125
Table 4.9. The real income source of Üsküdar’s musicians…………………………………..127
Table 4.10. Places in which music was performed in Üsküdar
between 1895-1916…………………………………………………………………………………………….130
Table 4.11. Overall musical activities in the city…………………………………………………..137
Table 4.12. A list of places where music was performed at Beyoğlu
between 1895 and 1916………………………………………………………………………………………142
Table 4.13. Birthplaces of musicians who resided in Fatih……………………………………148
Table 4.14. Income sources of musicians who resided in Fatih…………………………….149
Table 4.15. Musicians with multiple income sources who resided in Fatih…………..150
Table 4.16. The occupational continuity………………………………………………………………154
Table 4.17. Affiliation to a Sufi order among the musicians of Fatih…………………….156
Table 4.18. Places in which music was held in Fatih
between 1895 and 1916………………………………………………………………………………………158
Table 5.1. Musical specialty…………………………………………………………………………………168
Table 5.2. Oud combined with other instruments……………………………………………….171
Table 5.3. The chief income source of oud and violin players………………………………172
Table 5.4. Pianists’ family background…………………………………………………………………175
Table 5.5. Age of music education……………………………………………………………………….177
Table 5.6. Family impact among the age categories…………………………………………….178
Table 5.7. Private tutorage distributed to age categories…………………………………….178
Table 5.8. Types of learning in the earlier than 10 years of age……………………………180
Table 5.9. Birthplace compared to age categories……………………………………………….183
Table 5.10. Instrumental distribution to age categories (by frequency)……………….186
Table 5.11. Instrumental distribution among the non-Muslim musicians…………….188
Table 5.12. The chief source of income for Muslim and
xvi
non-Muslim musicians…………………………………………………………………………………………190
Table 5.13. Fathers’ professions of Muslim and
non-Muslim musicians compared………………………………………………………………………..191
Table 5.14. Musical specialty compared to source of income………………………………192
Table 5.15. Religious functionaries who instructed music……………………………………198
Table 5.16. Profession of reciters’ fathers……………………………………………………………202
Table 5.17. Main income source of reciters…………………………………………………………204
Table 5.18. Reciters’ musical specialty…………………………………………………………………205
Table 5.19. Sufi involvement distributed to orders………………………………………………206
Table 5.20. Music education types among Sufi musicians……………………………………209
Table 5.21. Musical specialty among Sufi musicians…………………………………………….210
Table 5.22. Musical specialty among Moi group………………………………………………….211
Table 5.23. Profession of ney players’ fathers……………………………………………………..213
Table 5.24. Income source of ney players…………………………………………………………….215
Table 5.25. Most popular music teachers…………………………………………………………….222
Table 6.1. Career changes towards music……………………………………………………………230
Table 6.2. Continuity observed among the occupational groups………………………….235
Table 6.3. Musicians’ distribution between Istanbul and Ankara radios………………246
xvii
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1.1. The network map of musicians under study..............................................2
Figure 1.2. The proportion of the biographical material adequacy…………………………20
Figure 3.1. Histogram of birthdate distribution……………………………………………………..45
Figure 3.2. Histogram of death date distribution……………………………………………………45
Figure 3.3. Complete distribution of educational outcomes…………………………………..62
Figure 3.4. Language frequency……………………………………………………………………………..72
Figure 3.5. Age of death composition…………………………………………………………………….99
Figure 4.1. Residential centers of musicians in Istanbul……………………………………….114
Figure 4.2. Performance centers in Istanbul…………………………………………………………115
Figure 4.3. Comparison of local and visiting musicians’ participation
in Kadıköy and Eyüp…………………………………………………………………………………………….121
Figure 4.4. The activity directions of Üsküdar’s musicians……………………………………124
Figure 4.5. The location of musicians who made music in the Beyoğlu district…….138
Figure 4.6. The activity map of musicians to Fatih and
from Faith to other district…………………………………………………………………………………..147
Figure 5.1. Musical sources of Sheikh Cemal Efendi and his students…………………..199
Figure 5.2. İsmail Hakkı Bey’s (1865-1927) teaching network………………………………223
Figure 5.3. Ahmet Irsoy’s (1869-1943) teaching network…………………………………….224
Figure 5.4. Zekai Dede’s (1824-1897) teaching network………………………………………224
Figure 5.5. Cemil Bey’s (1872-1916) teaching network…………………………………………225
Figure 5.6. Rauf Yekta Bey’s (1871-1935) teaching network…………………………………225
Figure 5.7. Hacı Kiramî Efendi’s (1840-1909) teaching network……………………………226
Figure 5.8. Hüseyin Fahreddin Dede’s (1853-1911) teaching network………………….226
Figure 5.9. Leon Hanciyan’s (1860-1947) teaching network…………………………………227
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LIST OF PHOTOS
Photo 1.1. A group of musicians from the late Ottoman Istanbul………………………….19
Photo 4.1. Bahariye Mevlevî Lodge in Eyüp
at the beginning of the twentieth century……………………………………………………………120
Photo 4.2.The Sweet Waters of Kağıthane, Abdullah Fréres, ca. 1890…………………132
Photo 4.3. Sheikh Ataullah Dede posed with his dervishes
in front of Galata Mevlevî Lodge at Beyoğlu before 1910…………………………………….140
Photo 4.4. Violinist Bülbülî Salih Efendi (d. 1923)…………………………………………………144
Photo 4.5. Refik Fersan, Cemil Bey and Musa Süreyya in 1914…………………………….152
Photo 4.6. A general view of Direklerarası Street
at Fatih in the Late Ottoman Istanbul………………………………………………………………….160
Photo 5.1. Santurî Ziya Bey (1868-1952) posed with his daughter……………………….179
Photo 5.2. The members of the Şark Musikî Cemiyeti………………………………………….185
Photo 5.3. Ercüment Batanay (1927-2004) posed with tanbur
adjusted to his age………………………………………………………………………………………………187
Photo 5.4. Sheikh Cemal Efendi of Kasımpaşa (1870-1937)………………………………….197
Photo 5.5. Ney, the principal instrument of Mevlevî music………………………………….212
Photo 5.6. Leon Hanciyan (1860-1947, on the left)
poses with Hamparsum notation…………………………………………………………………………221
Photo 6.1. The musicians of Anadolu Music School, 1920……………………………………232
Photo 6.2. İsmail Hakkı Bey (1865-1927) and his Musikî-i Osmanî School…………….242
Photo 6.3. Musicians of Istanbul radio in the early period……………………………………248
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LIST OF MAPS
Map 4.1. Frequency map for Istanbul’s musical setting……………………………………….117
Map 4.2. Tentative arrangements of musical places at Direklerarası……………………161
xx
ABBREVIATIONS
BOA : Başbakanlık Osmanlı Arşivi
DİA : Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı İslam Ansiklopedisi
Ed. : Editor
Gephi : The Open Graph Viz Platform
ibid. : In the same source
MEB : Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı
MOI : More than one income source
Moi : More than one instrument player
NPI : Not playing an instrument
NSL : No second language
SPSS : IBM SPSS Statistics 23.0 (Statistical Package for Social Sciences)
Trans. : Translator
TRT : Turkish Radio and Television
TTK : Türk Tarih Kurumu
Unknown : Not available data
Note: Abbreviations for the primary sources are provided in the Bibliography.
1
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
1.1. Thesis Subject and Research Question
The study will exclusively deal with musicians, who individually as well as
collectively have generated an imperial culture, namely the Ottoman music. In
other words, the thesis will not investigate the history of music but the history of
musicians. Because they were part of the cultural life during the late Ottoman era
and many of them experienced the process of the cultural reordering in the Early
Republican period. Therefore, in order to contribute to the social history of music,
some issues appear to be highly significant and would be at the center throughout
the study: The social aspects of the lives of musicians (singers, instrumentalists and
above all, composers), the interaction of musicians (network analysis, see Figure
1.1.) and the ways they adapt to social change they went through.
The collective biography analysis will be applied to 257 musicians gathered from a
number of historical sources. The sources that the study relies on will be discussed
in detail in this chapter. Methodologically, the study will apply quantitative analysis
to to reveal the social profiles of musicians. The statistical outcomes will be
supported by the individual life stories to better grasp the typical as well as atypical
features generated by musicians. The thesis will heavily rely upon computer-based
programs for this purpose: IBM SPSS Statistics 23.0 (Statistical Package for Social
Sciences) for the quantitative analysis and Gephi to visualize the social networks of
musicians. The historical maps will be instrumental to explore the musical setting of
Istanbul at the turn of the twentieth century. Yet the visual power of photography
would be instrumental to further reinforce the narrative. I will critically discuss their
methodological advantages as well as their limits in this chapter.
2
Figure 1.1. The network map of musicians under study
Figure 1.1 illustrates the social networks of 257 musicians under study and may be
regarded as a glimpse of the musicians’ milieu in Istanbul. Transmitting musical
knowledge to one another interconnected them. The principal reason of applying
collective biography analysis is to explore this immense interaction among the
musicians.
On the part of the musicians’ social profile, the thesis will focus on a range of issues,
including family background, the way they were raised and educated, occupational
continuity, age composition characteristics, and the real sources of income.
Although historical sources rarely mention the financial gains out of music, they still
provided insights –albeit implicitly, into the financial state of musicians. The thesis
considers this critical since it argues that music could hardly be described as a
profession given the limited financial opportunities music has provided. I argue that
music was a part of the overall urban culture in the late nineteenth century Istanbul
and hence it cannot be considered in professional terms. Musicians’ social profile
analysis confirms the argument that the significant number of them did not derive
3
income out of music and revealed the diverse socioeconomic backgrounds that
musicians had.
The study will emphasize how musicians struggled against economic hurdles by
highlighting ups and downs in their careers. I consider the financial conditions that
musicians had in their lifetime as reliable indicators for their socio-economic status.
Although musician biographies contribute significantly to the problem, it seems that
the topic has not yet drawn scholarly attention.
Geographically, the thesis will explore Istanbul through musical activities. The
central question is to what extent the overall urban music is shaped in the
neighborhoods of the city. While forming the urban music of Istanbul collectively,
did they reveal characteristic differences at the local level? Maps and visualizations
through Gephi (I will elaborate on the program in the “methodological framework”
section) will support statistical analysis measuring the musical activities as well as
the interactions among neighborhoods of the city. The geographical approach to
music will hopefully bring new understanding tothe issue and will provide novel
perspectives into the Ottoman urban studies as well.
How to become a musician in the late Ottoman Istanbul is another question that
the study seeks to adress. Exploring the cultivation of music through more
frequented and less common training models, the issue will also underscore the
interactions between the Muslim and non-Muslim musicians. I argue that the
imperial music has been refined with the contributions of innumerable people with
various ethno-religious backgrounds. The involvement of Muslim and non-Muslim
musicians in the music education process will be linked to the broader argument
that it will allow us to consider the everyday interactions between different
religious groups in Istanbul from a musical perspective.
Yet the thesis will call into question the Ottoman bureaucracy from a musical
perspective since the majority of musicians were official functionaries. I argue that
they did not resort to the government jobs to resolve their economic problems. In
4
fact, the reverse seems to be the case. Based on the biographical accounts of
musicians who served in the public offices, I would argue that the bureaucratic
culture and music were inseparable, and they were part and parcel of the Ottoman
urban culture. The social as well as the musical side of the argument will be further
developed in the relevant chapters.
1.2. Historical Framework
The context and the structure of the Ottoman music witnessed changes that paved
the way to the emergence of the new organizations from the turn of the twentieth
century all the way to the Early Republican years. Even if it is not in the sense that
Adorno describes, the music industry was about to create itself in Istanbul.1 In other
words, music in Istanbul was steadily becoming a profession and hence the
musicians as professionals. The musicians who constituted the research data
predominantly lived in these time periods and experienced the sociocultural
change.
Particularly at the beginnings of the twentieth century, music schools were opened.
Various amateur choruses emerged in different districts of Istanbul, most of which
were related to those music schools.2 With the emergence of music schools music
began to create itself novel spaces, a wider audience and new types of patronage,
which meant that musicians depended less and less on the older patterns of
1 Adorno’s writings on popular culture and culture industry suggests that any product of
popular culture that ranges from film making to music production primarily aimed to
entertain the mass consumers in the late capitalism. The artistic forms are light, easy to
digest by masses and subject to the profit-making concerns and political power. Therefore,
one of the main goals of the culture industry is to make profit, "Culture Industry:
Enlightenment as Mass Deception", Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno, Dialectic of
Enlightenment, Continuum, New York, 2002, 1-34.
2 Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî (1912), Dârü’l-Bedayî (1914), Dârü’l-Feyz-i Musikî (1915), Dârü’l-
Elhân (1917), Şark Musikî Cemiyeti (1918), Türk Musikîsi Ocağı (1923), Gülşen-i Musikî
(1925), Süleymaniye Musikî Mektebi (1927). These largely privately held music schools not
only provided music education, indeed helped the expansion of public concerts. Certainly a
new space for Ottoman music, Güntekin Oransay, “Cumhuriyetin İlk Elli Yılında Geleneksel
Sanat Musikimiz”, Cumhuriyet Dönemi Türkiye Ansiklopedisi, Cilt VI, İletişim, İstanbul, 1983.
5
support. In other words, music and hence musicians now began to be supported by
public. However, it did not essentially mean the new totally replaced the older
ones, but the old types were clearly in a downturn trend.3
Even though the publishing of sheet music in the form of fasıl, and in separate
sheets began by the last quarter of the nineteenth century. It became more popular
by the turn of the century in parallel to the growth of the publishing sector.4 The
dissemination of sheet music should not only be considered within the increased
commercialization of music. It was critical for the Ottoman music due to the fact
that the training process was overwhelmingly relied on memory from the very
beginning, which faced the threat of staff notation.5 The time period also witnessed
an increased interest in musical researches and polemical articles, which were
published in journals and daily news.6
3 Mes’ud Cemil, Tanburi Cemil Bey’in Hayatı, (ed. Uğur Derman), Kubbealtı, İstanbul, (Third
Edition) 2012. The memoir explicitly indicates the older types of artistic patronage in the
life account of Cemil Bey (1872-1916). However, the expansion of the novel financial
support mechanisms were more and more apparent in terms of public concert series,
employment in the music schools and making contracts with record companies.
4 İsmet Süleyman Yayını Fasıl Defteri (1875), Notacı Emin Fasıl Defterleri (1876), Mahzen-i
Esrar-ı Musıkî (1897), Udî Halil Bey’s Fasıl Defterleri (1901), Şamlı Selim Fasıl Dizisi (1901),
(1910), İskender Kutmanî Fasıl Derfterleri (1915), Arşak Çömlekciyan Fasıl Defterleri (1924),
Onnik Zadoryan Fasıl Defterleri (1926), Güntekin Oransay, “Türkiye'de Defter ve Dergi
Biçiminde Fasıl Yayınları (1875-1976)”, Ankara Üniversitesi İlahiyat Fakültesi Dergisi, Vol. 22,
1978; pp. 277-295; “Cumhuriyetin İlk Elli Yılında Geleneksel Sanat Musikimiz”, Cumhuriyet
Dönemi Türkiye Ansiklopedisi, Issue 6, İletişim, İstanbul, 1983, 1496-1509; Gönül Paçacı,
Osmanlı Müziğini Okumak (Neşriyât-ı Musıki), T.C. Kültür ve Turizm Bakanığı Yayını,
İstanbul, 2010, pp. 217-309; “Notacı Hacı Emin Efendi”, Dârülelhan Mecmuası, İÜ OMAR,
2017, İstanbul, pp. 23-37.
5 Cem Behar, Aşk Olmayınca Meşk Olmaz: Geleneksel Osmanlı/Türk Müziğinde Öğretim ve
İntikal, YKY, Sixth Edition, İstanbul, 2016.
6 Âhenk (1908), Dârü’l-Elhân (1925), Nota (1933), Türk Musikîsi Dergisi (1947), Musikî
Mecmuası (1952), Musikî ve Nota (1969), Güntekin Oransay, “Cumhuriyetin İlk Elli Yılında
Geleneksel Sanat Musikimiz”, p. 255-56; Bora Keskiner, “Arap Harfli Türkçe Süreli Yayınlarda
Türk Musikisi Teorisi Bibliyografyası”, TALİD, Vol. 7, No. 14, 2009, pp. 377-378. Also see
footnotes 5 and 8, above.
6
The impact of sound recording, the phonograph, should also be noted since there is
an abundant literature about it.7 Rauf Yekta Bey (1871-1935) described the way the
phonograph companies operated in Istanbul in the beginning of the twentieth
century, and the value of musical reproduction through the new technology. He
underlined the interest of ordinary people for phonographs, and the coming of new
record companies one after the other from the Western countries. What he
criticized was the repertoire chosen by these companies. He considered the
overwhelming majority of recorded pieces had no value (âsâr-ı mübtezel), and were
played by incapable musicians, and thus did not represent the classical (sic)
Ottoman music.8 His rather elegant stance against the operational ways of record
companies is noteworthy, however, his expression acknowledges the commercial
success of those companies. The business, while creating job opportunities for
musicians would also widen the musical audience.9 The list of important events in
the history of music should also include the foundation of state radio in Istanbul
(1927) and Ankara (1938). However, the thesis approaches cautiously to the statesponsored
radio not on the ground that it broadcasted music to wider audience but
7 Pekka Gronow, “The Record Industry Comes to the Orient”, Ethnomusicology, Vol. 25, No.
2, 1981, pp. 251-284; John Morgan O’Connell, “Song Cycle: the Life and Death of the
Turkish Gazel: A Review Essay”, Ethnomusicology, Vol. 47, No. 3, 2003, pp. 399-414; Cemal
Ünlü, Git Zaman Gel Zaman, Pan Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 2004; Peter Wicke, The Art of
Phonography: Sound, Technology and Music, (trans. from German by Derek B. Scott), The
Ashgate Research Companion to Popular Musicology, (ed. Derek B. Scott), Ashgate, 2009, p.
147-168; Peter Wicke, “The Art of Phonography: Sound, Technology and Music”, (trans.
from German by Derek B. Scott), The Ashgate Research Companion to Popular Musicology,
(ed. Derek B. Scott), Ashgate, 2009, pp. 147-168; Aristomenis Kaliviotis, İzmir Rumlarının
Müziği 1900-1922: Eğlence, Müzik Dükkânları, Plak Kayıtları, Yılmaz Okyay (trans.), YKY,
İstanbul, 2013.
8 Rauf Yekta, “Gramofon ve Mûsıkî-i Osmânî”, İkdam, No. 4223, 13 Muharrem 1324 (9
March 1906).
9 The Gramophone Co recorded the first phonographs in Istanbul, May 1900. It had a great
impact on the making and listening of music. Yet many musicians developed recording
careers with the outset of sound recording industry. However, this innovation was largely
related to advances in the recording technology and barely to the internal dynamics of the
Ottoman state. First experimental recordings was done in 1877 by Edison and the
innovation had to wait two more decades for worldwide market sales, Cemal Ünlü, Git
Zaman Gel Zaman: fonograf – gramofon – taş plak, p. 138-156.
7
more on institutional grounds that it attempted to impose cultural uniformity on
music and thus musicians. I will elaborate on this point further in the sixth chapter.
Eventually, the thesis will evaluate the weight of those events in the history of
Ottoman music. It will question to what extent the musicians were affected by
those changes that they have experienced. In other words, the collective biography
analysis of musicians will seek to answer whether there is a valid ground to consider
all those events as turning points in the history of Ottoman music.
1.3. Terminological Framework
For the sake of clarity, it has to be stated that in this study the “Ottoman cultural
life” should not necessarily be associated with the high/elite culture or the Ottoman
court. I do not undervalue the noble patrons of the arts. On the part of the musical
patronage, the Ottoman court occasionally held music in high esteem. For instance,
the literature praises the favor of Selim III (r. 1789-1807) to music and musicians at
the beginning of the nineteenth century.10 However, music was also held in various
places and different contexts in the Ottoman realm. In fact, Western music concerts
and opera were frequently performed in the palace and in Pera from 1830s onward,
on which there is a growing scholarly interest.11 Yet, the overemphasis on palace
10 On the Selim III’s music and courtly patronage, see Rauf Yektâ, "Selîm-i Sâlis Mûsıkîşinâs",
Yeni Mecmua, sy. 16 (İstanbul 1917), pp. 309-312; Şevket Gavsî, “Sultan Selim-i Sâlis”,
Peyam, Kişisel Arşivlerde İstanbul Belleği, Taha Toros Arşivi, 001511371006; Ferid Ruşen
Kam, “Selim III”, Radyo Mecmûası, C. 5, No. 49, Ankara, 1949; The recent historiography has
not yet provided a new perspective on the musician sultan and his courtly support to music,
see M. Fatih Salgar, III. Selim Hayatı-Sanatı-Eserleri, Ötüken Neşriyet, İstanbul 2001; Kâşif
Yılmaz, III. Selim (İlhâmî): Hayatı, Edebî Kişiliği ve Dîvânın Tenkitli Metni, Trakya Üniversitesi
Rektörlüğü Yayınları, No. 52, Edirne, 2001, pp. CXLIV-CLXV; Mehmet Güntekin, “Dâhi Bir
Sanatkâr”, III. Selim: İki Asrın Dönemecinde İstanbul, Coşkun Yılmaz (ed.), Avrupa Kültür
Başkenti Yayını, İstanbul, 2010, pp. 197-207; Ferdi Koç, “Musicians Educated at the Music
School of Sultan III. Selim”, Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 174, 2015, pp.
2166– 2173.
11 Mahmut Ragıp Kösemihal’s monography on the relations between Ottoman court and
Western music is still a valuable source, Türkiye – Avrupa Musiki Münasebetleri (1600-
1875), Vol. 1, İstanbul Nümune Matbaası, 1939, see particularly the third chapter, pp. 95-
157; Vedat Kosal, “Osmanlı İmparatorluğu’nda Klasik Batı Müziği”, Osmanlı, Vol. 10, Gülen
Eren (ed.), Yeni Türkiye Yayınları, Ankara, 1999, pp. 639-652; Emre Aracı, Donizetti Paşa:
Osmanlı Sarayının İtalyan Maestrosu, YKY Yayınları, İstanbul, 2006; Naum Tiyatrosu; 19
Yüzyıl İstanbul'unun İtalyan Operası, YKY Yayınları, İstanbul, 2010; “Piyanist Hünkâr: Sultan
V. Murad ve Ailesinin Avrupaî Müzik Kültürü”, Türkiye’de Müzik Kültürü Kongresi Bildirileri,
8
would severely weaken the inclusiveness of this thesis, and would subordinate the
value of other private and public settings, mekâns, in which music was performed.
These were dervish lodges, again not necessarily the Mevlevî ones, the house
gatherings, coffee houses, music halls, theatres and so on.12 Therefore, there is no
need for a taxonomic hierarchy in-between. Last but not least, for the time period
on which this dissertation will partly dwell, the Ottoman court played a quite
insignificant role in terms of patronage relations to music.13
How to describe this music is a highly debated topic in the Ottoman cultural
historiography. This issue needs to be touched upon in order to provide justification
for the term I will use throughout this thesis. There is a vast array of phrases in
literature, which I will briefly mention -albeit it is not the chief concern of this study.
The most popular ones were Enderûn Musikîsi, Saray Musikîsi, Dîvân Musikîsi (they
all associate music with noble culture, which imply that it was the music of a
particular group of people and did not belong to ordinary people), Bizans Musikîsi
(Byzantine music), Meyhane Musikîsi (tavern music), Ekalliyet Musikîsi (music of
non-Muslims), Teksesli Musikî (monophonic music, implying primitiveness versus
polyphonic Western music). Politically and culturally loaded phrases used by
Oğuz Elbaş, Mehmet Kalpaklı, Okan Murat Öztürk (eds.), Atatürk Kültür Merkezi Yayınları,
İstanbul, 2011, pp. 403-408; Ömer Eğecioğlu, Müzisyen Strausslar ve Osmanlı Hanedanı,
YKY Yayınları, İstanbul, 2012.
12 Cemal Kafadar emphasizes the inclusiveness of the “Ottoman” identity in terms of
elements that formed it. He suggests that being an Ottoman should not be merely
attributed to being a member of the Porte and the elite circles. The interests based on
either economic, political or cultural factors, were not merely shared within a restricted
group of people but with numerous others, “The Ottomans and Europe”, Handbook of
European History 1400-1600: Late Middle Ages, Renaissance and Reformation, Thomas A.
Brady Jr, Heiko A. Oberman, James D. Tracy (eds.), Vol. I, William B. Eerdmans Publishing
Company, Michigan, 1994, p. 619-20.
13Abdülhamid II rather enjoyed to listen Western music and preferred opera performances.
He even got constructed a theater house in the compound of the Yıldız Palace in 1889,
where the members of the royal family and even the foreign dignataries were invited to
watch the performances alongside the Sultan, see Fatih Akyüz, “II. Abdülhamid’in Modern
Eğlencesi: Yıldız Tiyatrosu”, II. Abdülhamid: Modernleşme Sürecinde İstanbul, Coşkun Yılmaz
(ed.), İstanbul 2010 Avrupa Kültür Başkenti Yayını, İstanbul, 2010, pp. 447-454; see also
Mahmut Ragıp Gazimihal’s Türkiye – Avrupa Musiki Münasebetleri on the Abdülhamid II
and music, pp. 147-156.
9
different parties within different contexts in the first two decades of the twentieth
century and continued to be discussed vehemently in the Early Republican era.14
The discourse implied that this music was produced by the Ottoman cultural
institutions, and was only meaningful in this distinctive atmosphere. Therefore,
republican cultural establishment had to give way to its novel artistic inspirations on
music. In this fashion, the terms mentioned above bore negative connotations, and
mainly served to deprecate this music and its practitioners.15 Interestingly, the term
“court” was associated with another traditional music called gagaku, the old
Japanese music, which the recent scholarship further questions its authenticity.16
Sanat Müziği (Art Music) or Türk Sanat Müziği (Turkish Art Music) was the more
14 The articles below indicate the controversial debates on the Ottoman music at the time
period in question, Necîb Âsım, “Türk Mûsikîsi”, Mâlûmât, 5 Teşrin-i Evvel 1313 [1897], sy.
103, p. 1065, quoted from Faysal Arpaguş, “Mâlûmât” Mecmuası’nın 1-500 Sayılarında Yer
Alan Türk Mûsikîsi ile İlgili Makâleler, MA Thesis, Marmara Üniversitesi, SBE, İstanbul, 2004;
Süleyman Cevad, “Rauf Yektâ Bey ile Mülâkat, Dergah Mecmûası, 5 Teşrînisâni 1338, No.
38, pp. 19-22; Halil Bedii, “Millî Musıkîmiz”, Dârülelhân, No. 3, Sene 1, 1 Haziran 1340;
Musa Süreyya, “Savtî Musıki”, Dârülelhân, No. 5, Sene 1, 1 Şubat 1341; Rauf Yektâ Bey,
“Musıkimiz Aleyhine Yanlış Fikirler”, Vakit, 1 Mart 1926; “Türk Musıkisi Müzeye
Kaldırılamaz” Vakit, 24 Mart 1926; Musa Süreyya, “Necati Bey Merhum ve Musıkî
Tedrisatı”, Musıki Bahsi Köşesi, Milliyet, 10 Kanunusâni, 1929, p. 4; Ziya Gökalp,
Türkçülüğün Esasları, Mehmet Kaplan (ed.), MEB Yayınları, İstanbul, 1970, pp. 33-34, 145-
147.
15 Peyami Safa’s inteviews held with fiftheen intellectuals and artists mirror the
contemporary cultural pluralities on the Ottoman music. The interviews were published in
Cumhuriyet newspaper in episodes during December 1932. I am indebted to Prof. Cem
Behar for letting me know about it. Mesud Cemil states the undervaluation of Ottoman
music in the republican elite circles of 1930s, see Mesud Cemil’le Bir Konuşma, 20. Asır, Vol.
2, No. 28, 21 February 1953, quoted from Cemal Ünlü, Git Zaman Gel Zaman: fonograf –
gramofon – taş plak, pp. 540-44.
16 The history of this music goes back to the ceremony of Buddhist monks performed in the
memory of Prince Shotokou (574-622) in the mid-seventh century. Only by the mid-tenth
century the Palace performed and developed this music in the Imperial Music Office.
Historically, main part of the original ceremony has not survived to this day due to the
constant warfare periods in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. In the period of Meiji
restoration in 1868, it was revived again after generations but mostly as a re-construct of
the late nineteenth century systematization in the Japanese music. Yet, the Meiji
bureaucracy made it more bound to imperial institution and to Shinto in order to reduce its
association with Buddhism, which was considered as a foreign religion, Steven G. Nelson,
“Court and religious music (1): history of gagaku and shõmyõ”, The Ashgate Research
Companion to Japanese Music, Alison McQueen Tokita and David W. Hughes (ed.), Ashgate,
2008, pp. 35-48.
10
recent description and it is even in popular use today. From 1920s onward, Sadettin
Arel’s overemphasis on the Turkish character of the Ottoman music and his
endeavor to prove that there are no historical links with either Byzantine or Arabic
musical cultures provided the intellectual basis the republican period needed. In his
re-construction, he had to relegate the non-Muslims’ role into an inferior position.
Arel’s schema was in parallel to the mainstream nationalist historical understanding
of the Ottoman past and thus was happily accepted by the cultural elite of the
period.17
This thesis will seek to explore the social background of musicians –composers,
singers, instrumentalists, and teacher - in order to come up with a more
comprehensive term to define this music. Did these people belong to a particular
social class with similar family backgrounds and educational patterns or did socially
detached individuals constitute musicians? Searching adequate answers to these
questions will help to develop more reliable terminology about music. Paying
attention to all terms and their connotations indicated above, I argue that the term
(urban) “Ottoman music” (mûsikî-i Osmanî) seems more representative to others.
The “urban” indicates its multiple sources/traditions, which were gradually refined
chiefly in Istanbul; the contribution of some other urban centers, such as Edirne,
Bursa, İzmir and Manisa, in the Ottoman Empire was limited.18 The term, without
dictating any hierarchical disposition, will include the older patterns of patronage –
courtly, aristocratic- and new spaces of music, as well as individuals of distinct social
17 Hüseyin Saadettin Arel published his well-known study, “Türk Musikisi Kimindir?” in his
own journal, Türklük: Milliyetçi Kültür Mecmuası, İstanbul (lasted 15 issues in 1939-40), in
episodes. The articles re-published in Musıki Mecmuası, İstanbul, owned by Laika Karabey
between 16th (1 June 1949) and 52th issues (1 June 1952) in an extended form. The book
version published in 1969, Türk Musikisi Kimindir?, Türk Musikisini Araştırma ve
Değerlendirme Komisyonu Yayınları, İstanbul, 1969; the formative basis of this study is
revealed in his conference paper, “Türk Musikisi Üzerine Birinci Konferans”, İstanbul, 1927,
quoted from Cumhuriyet’in Sesleri, Gönül Paçacı (ed.), Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, İstanbul,
1999, pp. 108-113.
18 My research findings based on the quantitative analysis underpins the argument, which I
will share in the following chapters. A polemical article on the subject matter, see Bülent
Aksoy, “Orta Doğu Klasik Musikîsinin Bir Merkezi; İstanbul”, Osmanlı, Vol. 10, Yeni Türkiye
Yayınları, Ankara, 1999, p. 801-813.
11
classes such as people of high rank and title, official functionaries, traders,
dervishes, and artisans as the participants of it.
Last but not least, a critically vital issue is the word “musicians”. Who would
constitute the musician group that I will construct? Were they professional or
amateur musicians, and which criteria would separate one from other in the
Ottoman context? If one thinks about the social structure of music at the turn of the
twentieth century, one would see the complex matrix of activities that makes it
difficult for neat definitions. On the financial side, my sampling showed that the
overwhelming majority of Ottoman musicians were “amateurs” who did not
essentially engage in music as a paid occupation and had to perform other jobs in
order to support themselves and their families. Amongst the musicians there were
many official functionaries, dervishes, artisans, merchants, etc. Interestingly, the
same issue is at stake regarding the late nineteenth century English musicians.
Paula Gillet argues that a very small group of musicians were professionals, whose
musical careers fundamentally depended on the larger amateur musician circles.
The author points out that both groups shared more or less the same music space
and their positions were interchangeable. 19 Albeit the musical opportunities
gradually increased in the first two decades of the twentieth century, still only a
small amount of Ottoman musicians could solely depend on music for a living. And
for this reason, the study did not consider economical aspects as a criterion while
constructing the musician sample. The primary criterion is related to music and is
based on musical production. In other words, the sampling merely included
musicians who composed music. The thesis took Es’ad Efendi (1685-1753) as a role
model who clearly prioritized composers while constructing the only biographical
dictionary on the eighteenth century Ottoman musicians.20 Indeed, my musician
19Paula Gillet, “Ambivalent Friendships: Music-lovers, Amateurs, and Professional Musicians
in the Late Nineteenth Century”, Music and British Culture, 1785-1914 (Essays in honour of
Cyril Ehrlich), Christina Bashford and Leanne Langley (eds.), Oxford University Press, 2000,
pp. 321-340.
20 Sadettin Nüzhet Ergun refers the publishing of Veled Çelebi (İzbudak) in episodes in the
Mekteb Mecmuası in 1893, which appears as the first reproduction of the text in the
nineteenth century, see, Türk Musikisi Antolojisi: Dinî Eserler, 2 Vol., İstanbul Üniversitesi
12
group contains a wide array of people from well-known ones to “insignificant”
members of the Ottoman music culture and I will seek to avoid establishing a
hierarchical order amongst them. The issue will be discussed in more detail when
the key sources of this research are introduced.
1.4. Methodological Framework
My methodology would be to conduct a prosopographic (according to the ancient
historians), or collective biography analysis (more recent usage of the term by social
historians) on a group of musicians, who contributed to the Ottoman music during
the late Ottoman Istanbul.
The collective biography study or prosopography is a historical research method in
order to reveal common characteristics of a particular group of people within a
particular historical context. The constructed group of people, more or less
distinctive in the society, may belong to the same profession, as musicians in our
case, or be members of any union, fraternity, party, team, etc. It is to be noted that,
since the biographical data is methodologically vital, the definition of a targeted
group is a challenging task for the social historians. Once the research initiative
identifies the group to be focused upon, there starts the process of collecting any
sort of relevant biographical information. The next phase is to prepare a set of
questions to be asked to the members of the group. A kind of questionnaire will be
used to obtain information on each individual’s family background, educational
qualifications, religion, profession, financial situation, and so on. The idea here is to
present an intelligible picture of the group on the one hand, and indicate the typical
and exceptional sides of individuals on the other. In other words, prosopography
Edebiyat Fakültesi Yayınları, İstanbul, 1942-43, pp. 788-89; Hüseyin Sadeddin Arel published
the text in episodes, Türk Bestekârlarının Tercemeihalleri, Musiki Mecmuası, Volumes 9-24
(November 1948 – February 1950); Hakkı Tekin, Şeyhülislam Esad Efendi ve Atrabü'l-Asar fi
Tezkiret-i Urefail-Edvar, MA Thesis, Erciyes Üniversitesi, SBE, İslam Tarihi ve Sanatları
Anabilim Dalı, Kayseri, 1993; Muhammet Nur Doğan, “Esad Efendi, Ebûishakzâde”, TDVİA,
pp. 338-340; The most recent publication belongs to Cem Behar, who explored the text by
adopting a collective biography research strategy. I will write more on the text in the latter
part of this paper, Şeyhülislam'ın Müziği: 18. Yüzyılda Osmanlı/Türk Musikisi ve Şeyhülislam
Es'ad Efendi'nin Atrabü'l-Âsâr'ı, Yapı Kredi Yayınları, İstanbul, 2010.
13
primarily underlines the similarities and the differences within the targeted group
of people.21
Since the collective biography analysis entails a large amount of biographical data,
the group members have to be well recorded and documented either by the state
archives or by individuals themselves. Correspondingly, if the questionnaire is not
filled sufficiently due to the lack of biographical data, this would cause a misleading
account, called dark number. Therefore, the representativeness of the selected
people would be questioned. Stone underlines that the people of lower strata in a
given society are usually poorly documented. Hence, it naturally explains why the
overwhelming majority of the prosopographical analyses deal with the elite/high
status people.22
The problem of “too much historical emphasis” on certain individuals at the
expense of people with a minimum historical record within the constructed group is
another issue. The plenty of historical accounts on some particular ones, like
autobiographies, biographies, reported speeches, different sort of official or
privately kept records and visual sources, would lead a more profound
understanding of their individual’s inner world and the limits of interaction with the
world outside. However, these accounts may easily dominate the historical
narrative. Awareness on this problem, may serve to the development of wellbalanced
narrative on the collective biography study.23
The study has to take into consideration the existing secondary literature and
properly use it as a complement to the biographical accounts at hand. More
importantly, the study should provide insights for historical actors’ motivations
behind their actions and choices. Therefore, the figures would only become
21 Lawrence Stone, “Prosopography”, Daedalus, 100/1 (1971), pp. 46-47.
22 ibid, pp. 58-59.
23 Krista Cowman, “Collective Biography”, Simon Gunn and Lucy Faire (ed.), Research
Methods for History, Edinburgh University Press, 2012, pp. 83-100, see pp. 94-95.
14
meaningful in the light of the family backgrounds, social conditions and the
networks within the group as well as in terms of the group’s relations with the
outside world. Put differently, the right strategy appears as combining the
quantitative and qualitative methods in a well-prepared prosopographical
framework.24
The critical issue for the collective biography is setting the criteria for selection of
the group members. How does the compiler decide to include or exclude someone
into the group and therefore make him/her focus of analysis is an important
question. The criteria for selection would vary and depend on many conditions,
from personal affiliation to intellectual bias and from political to the economical
circumstances or sometimes the combination of all these factors. In any case, it is
hard to say that any collective biographical work equally and fairly approached its
subject matter.
The thesis has benefited extensively from IBM SPSS Statistics 23.0 (Statistical
Package for Social Sciences). To do that, I gathered the biographical material of 257
musicians and organized a questionnaire (a set of standart questions). Answers
derived from the questionnaire were entered into the SPSS to transform the data
into the quantitative form. In between, I prepared the syntax (formulas) necessary
for the programme. Regarding the time schedule of the thesis, selecting musicians’
biographies, processing 257 biographies through questionnaire and running the
data into SPPS in order to transform it into quantitative data took two years after
the comprehensive exam.
Methodologically, I applied more comprehensive and flexible categories, which
helped to increase the possibility of analyzing rather more complex life patterns. I
underlined the most common patterns but did not overlook the individual life
stories that revealed reverse directions as compared to conventional patterns.
24 Verboven Koenraad, Miriam Carlier, and Jan Dumolyn, “A Short Manual to the Art of
Prosopography”, Prosopography Approaches and Applications. A Handbook, (ed.) K. S. B.
Keats-Rohan, The University of Oxford, 2007, pp. 35-70, see p. 47.
15
Indeed, I underscored the musicians who could not be placed into one category. For
example, when the study statistically analyzed the occupational distribution or main
source of income, the multiple ones were grouped in a separate category and hence
were treated accordingly.
The outcomes generated by SPSS predominantly indicated in the form of table and
rarely through the chart. However, some outcomes needed an alternative way of
display due to the difficulty of following the numbers. To avoid complexity of
numbers, I benefited from a visual program that runs in parallel with the
mechanism of SPSS. It is called Gephi, which is an open-source and free platform
(see gephi.org) that explores and visualizes all kinds of social relations and maps
these connections. The program did not only help to better exhibit the quantitative
results but also provided new perspectives for the study. As I became more familiar
with the program, I realized that following the interaction of musicians or
transmitting of musical knowledge in between musician community would be easier
and the results would be exhibited in more appropriate ways. History projects that
applied the programme provided novel thinking ways to social networks of targeted
groups.25
25 See some of the related web sites dealing with the social network analysis as part of their
research projects,
Vizualizing Historical Networks, Center for History and Economics, Harvard University,
http://histecon.fas.harvard.edu/visualizing/index.html (accessed on 1 September 2018).
Matthew Jockers, Computing and Visualizing the 19th-Century Literary Genome, Stanford
University, 2012,
http://www.dh2012.uni-hamburg.de/conference/programme/abstracts/computing-andvisualizing-
the-19th-century-literary-genome/ (accessed on 20 October 2018).
Mapping the Republic of Letters, Stanford Humanities Center, Stanford University,
http://republicofletters.stanford.edu/casestudies/voltairepub.html (accessed on 20
October 2018).
Maximilian Schich, Mapping Notes And Nodes: Building A Multi-Layered Network For A
History Of The Cultural Industry,
http://dh2015.org/abstracts/xml/HEUVEL_Charles_van_den_Mapping_Notes_And_Nodes_
_B/HEUVEL_Charles_van_den_Mapping_Notes_And_Nodes__Buildin.html (accessed on 28
October 2018).
16
The photography will be another visual tool of the thesis. Discussion of the history
of photography as a product of modernity and its popularity in the late Ottoman
Istanbul26 is beyond the scope of this thesis, but it has to be briefly mentioned that
only recently historians have realized the historical significance of photography and
its visual contribution to the historical studies of the late Ottoman period.27 Hence,
photography for this study is not a supplement to the arguments but an
independent historical source that brings its own narrative.
Eventually, all these methodological approaches will be fundamental for this thesis,
which argues that the social profile analysis of musicians will shed some light on the
internal workings of a past culture as well as its place and role in society. An indepth
investigation into the musicians’ career paths, including the ups and downs in
their careers over time, will show how this group of people in society absorbed the
broader socio-cultural change they faced. The survival strategies of musicians will
not only tell about the complexities of individual experiences, but will also provide a
rare insight into the level of continuity and change in the music culture from the
late nineteenth to the Early Republican years.
1.5. Key Sources
To bring together musicians’ biographical material is not an easy task as biographies
are dispersed in various historical sources. For this reason, credit has to be given to
four books, which assembled musician biographies and provide sources for
collective biography studies. The thesis largely relied on these four books:
26 Engin Çizgen, Photography in the Ottoman Empire, 1839-1919, Haşet, İstanbul, 1987;
Bahattin Öztuncay, James Robertson: Pioneer of Photography in the Ottom”na Empire,
Eren, 1992; Bahattin Öztuncay, Vasilaki Kargopulo: Hazret-i Padişâhî’nin Serfotoğrafı, BOS,
İstanbul, 2000.
27 Camera Ottomana: Osmanlı İmparatorluğu’nda Fotoğraf ve Modernite, 1840-1940,
Zeynep Çelik and Edhem Eldem (ed.), KÜY, İstanbul, 2015; Edhem Eldem, “The Search for an
Ottoman Vernacular Photography”, in The Indigenous Lens: Early Photography in the Near
and Middle East, Markuss Ritter and Staci Gem Scheiwiller (eds.), De Gruyter GmbH,
Berlin/Boston, 2018, pp. 29-56.
17
İbnülemin Mahmut Kemal İnal’s Hoş Sadâ,28 Mustafa Rona’s 50 Yıllık Türk Musıkisi,29
Sadettin Nüzhet Ergun’s Türk Musikisi Antolojisi30 and Suphi Ezgi’s Nazarî ve Amelî
Türk Musikisi.31 Although their reliability, their representativeness and approaches
are open to question in terms of the modern historiographical standards, a
collective biography study cannot still ignore their contributions. When I will
critically discuss the book of İbnülemin, I will also emphasize its intertextuality with
other biographical sources in the following section.
Apart from the dictionaries of musicians, which merely gathered the biographies
without the purpose of conducting a group analysis, this study will attempt to
identify and interpret the patterns generated by musicians. Apart from Cem Behar’s
collective biographical analysis on the Es’ad Efendi’s dictionary of musicians, there
has not yet been a study to fully apply the methodology in the Ottoman music
history. To be noted that, Cem Behar’s analysis relied on a biographical dictionary,
which did Es’ad Efendi compile it. However, this study reveals a more complex
structure regarding the assembling mechanism.
For the most part, my group of musicians will coincide with the musicians in these
four books, however, I will add names that were, for one reason or another,
excluded in these collective biography books. Considering the number of musicians
in those dictionaries, this thesis will study 257 musicians’ biographies. In the
appendix, I will provide a full list of those 257 musicians together with the
birthplaces, the dates of birth and death. Meanwhile, İbnülemin’s book collected
158 musician biographies, whereas Rona had 181. The number issue is a critical one
28 İbnülemin Mahmut Kemal İnal, Hoş Sadâ: Son Asır Türk Musıkişinasları, Türkiye İş Bankası
Kültür Yayınları, Maarif Basımevi, İstanbul, 1958.
29 Mustafa Rona, 50 Yıllık Türk Musıkisi: Bestekârları, Besteleri Güftelerile, 2. Edition, Türkiye
Yayınevi, İstanbul, 1960.
30 Sadettin Nüzhet Ergun, Türk Musikisi Antolojisi: Dinî Eserler, 2 Vol., İstanbul Üniversitesi
Edebiyat Fakültesi Yayınları, İstanbul, 1942-43.
31 Doktor Suphi (Ezgi), Nazarî ve Amelî Türk Musikisi, İstanbul Konservatuarı Yayını, İstanbul,
5 Vol., 1933-1953.
18
for the collective biography analysis. There are two types of methodological
approaches in general, which I will discuss in more detail in the historiography part
with the examples from Ottoman and non-Ottoman studies. In brief, one deals with
all the members of the targeted group, whereas the latter forms a sampling to show
what the whole is like. The first is often applied to the groups whose complete
number is precisely defined and recorded. The sampling method, on the other
hand, seems more appropriate for the groups whose overall populace could not be
estimated in the light of the historical sources. Therefore, it would not be wrong to
say that the number of 257 is largely the consequence of available historical data
that I mentioned above. Hopefully, the research findings will provide a glimpse of
the musicians’ social environment in Istanbul from the Late Ottoman to the Early
Republican years.
The study has relied on Ottoman official personal records (Sicill-i Ahvâl) to reinforce
the musicians’ biographies that served in the public offices. The Ministry of Interior
(Dahiliye Nezâreti) produced these biographies for the officials who were in state
service between 1879 and 1914. The official material consisted of 51,698
biographies in total. These sources contain a range of valuable data, including birth
date, birthplace, education record, language skill, and the detailed report of career
trajectory. Indeed, these accounts bear the detailed reports of investigations into
the malpractices and abuse of power, a valuable source for social historians for the
period. Nevertheless, these primary sources are available for the musicians who
served as government officials, which roughly makes one third of the musicians
under study. On the part of the secondary sources, most of the biographies were
supported by alternative sources such as books and journals for the biographical
material they contained.32
32 The books are the selection of the whole, which I will fully list them in the bibliography:
İbrahim Alâettin Gövsa, Türk Meşhurları Ansiklopedisi, Yenigün Neşriyat, İstanbul, 1945;
Musiki Mecmuası (journal), Hüseyin Sadeddin Arel (ed.), İleri Türk Musikisi Konservatuarı
Derneği Yayını, İstanbul, 1948; Χρίστος Τσιαμούλης, Παύλος Ερευνίδης, Ρωμηοί συνθέτες
της Πόλης (17ος-20ός αι.) [The Rum Composers of Istanbul (from 17th to 20th centuries)],
Εκδόσεις Δόμος, Αθήνα, 1998; M. Nazmi Özalp, Türk Mûsikîsi Tarihi, Vol. 2, MEB, İstanbul,
2000; Kevork Pamukciyan, Biyografileriyle Ermeniler / Ermeni Kaynaklarından Tarihe
Katkılar-IV, Aras Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 2003; Türk Sanat Müziğinde Ermeni Besteciler, Nazar
19
The number of female musicians among the musicians under investigation is 23,
which the number makes 8.9 % of the total. All these female musicians were
Muslim. Regarding the religious distribution among the 257 musicians under study,
the number of Muslim musicians was 229 (89.1 %), alongside 21 Armenians (8.2 %),
four Greek Orthodox Christians (1.6 %), and three Jewish musicians (1.2 %).
Considering the performers of Istanbul during the early twentieth century, perhaps
the number of non-Muslims should have been more than the study asserted.33 As
mentioned previously, the under-representation is largely due to their inadequate
presence in the contemporary sources and partly due to the shortcomings of the
conventional historiography of music. The picture below, for instance, illustrates
this argument. The biographical material on the first three non-Muslim musicians
(Ovakim, Hakanik and Karakaş) was so inadequate that even though one can
encounter their names often in the contemporary sources, I could not include them
in my sampling.
Özsahakyan (ed.), Avrupa Kültür Başkenti Yayını, İstanbul, 2010.
33 Münir Nurettin Beken, “Ethnicity and Identity in Music – A Case Study: Professional
Musicians in Istanbul”, Manifold Identities: Studies on Music and Minorities, Ursula
Hemetek, Gerda Lechleitner, Inna Naroditskaya and Anna Czekanowska (eds.), Cambridge
Scholars Press, London, 2004, pp. 182-183; Ruşen Kam, “İnce Saz Takımları”, Radyo
Mecmuası, Vol. 1, Issue 12, Ankara, 15 Sonteşrîn 1942, pp. 16-24; Ruhi Kalender,
“Yüzyılımızın Başlarında İstanbul’un Musiki Hayatı”, AÜİFD, XXIII (1978), pp. 414-437; Burak
Çetintaş, “İncesaz Takımları Üzerine Birkaç Söz ve Şinasi Akbatu’nun Kaleminden “60 Yıl
Önce İstanbul’da İncesaz Takımları”, Musikişinas, BÜTMK, Vol. 11, İstanbul, 2010, pp. 207-
243; Χρίστος Τσιαμούλης, Παύλος Ερευνίδης, Ρωμηοί συνθέτες της Πόλης (17ος-20ός αι.)
[The Rum Composers of Istanbul (from 17th to 20th centuries)], Εκδόσεις Δόμος, Αθήνα,
1998, pp. 32-40.
20
Photo 1.1. A group of musicians from the late Ottoman Istanbul
Form left to right, Tanburî Ovakim, hanende Hakanik, hanende Karakaş, kanunî (sic)
Tatyos and kanunî Şemsi,
Source: Ruşen Kam, “İnce Saz Takımları”, Radyo Mecmuası, Vol. 1, Issue 12, Ankara,
15 Sonteşrîn 1942.
Figure 1.2. The proportion of the biographical material adequacy
21
Figure 1.2 shows the names of gazino musicians in the contemporary daily news
and portrays the availability of their biographical material. The visual indicates the
limits of studying Ottoman music history through biographical accounts. For the
most of the musicians above, I could not reach anything but their names during the
course of my research. Besides, I even had to exclude some musicians in the “exist”
network partly due to incomplete biographical data and partly owing to the doubts
about source authenticity.
1.5.1. The Assessment of İbnülemin’s Hoş Sadâ
To explain in brief the reason why I will only discuss the book of İbnülemin in more
detail is that the way it collected musician biographies was in parallel with the way
Sadettin Nüzhet Ergun organized his dictionary. In other words, İbnülemin wrote
about the musicians in his environment, the musicians who were in the official
service just like him and the musicians that he personally knew, whom I will discuss
in further detail below. The case of Ergun was very similar to that. Since Ergun was a
Sufi sheikh, he overwhelmingly collected musician biographies that belonged to the
Sufi circles of Istanbul. Nevertheless, my study did not benefit from Ergun’s book as
much as it did from İbnülemin due to the fact that Ergun provided limited
biographical material. The book of Ergun, on the other hand, is a valuable source to
uncover the social networks of musicians as well as the interactions between
innumerable Sufi lodges in Istanbul. Mustafa Rona’s book interacts explicitly with
the İbnülemin’s Hoş Sada, whereas the primary aim of Suphi Ezgi was to write the
music theory. However, the book still included musician biographies, albeit to a
limited extent.
İbnülemin’s book, Hoş Sadâ, in many respects overlaps with the scholarly critics
against the historical biographies underlined above.34 Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar’s
foreword to the book frankly stated that whatever the subject matter of his books
was, the reader would strongly feel that it is İbnülemin himself that he was writing
about. Put differently, he was the chief actor in his narratives, in which events were
34 İbnülemin Mahmut Kemal İnal, Hoş Sadâ: Son Asır Türk Musıkişinasları.
22
reconstructed around his character. Yet, attributing importance to someone solely
depended on his personal opinions.35
The question of who wrote this book is a reasonable one when one learns the story
about the compilation process of the book. İbnülemin could not finish his book, Hoş
Sadâ. When he died in 1957, he had sent only the one third of the book to the
publishing house. More precisely, he entered the data of only forty-one musicians
out of hundred and fifty-eight musicians for the collection. Hasan Âli Yücel states
that he together with İbnülemin’s son-in-law worked three days in the house
İbnülemin in order to gather the missing material. Amidst thousands of notes and
papers they did not find much but pieces of information on a bunch of musicians.
The relevant material collected in his house was later delivered to Avni Aktunç.36 It
is hard to say if Aktunç completed the book with his own notes. Aktunç did not
write anything about the process, therefore, it can be assumed that he basically
classified the material and made it ready for the present book. Nevertheless, there
is kind of a clue in the words of Hasan Âli Yücel. According to his statement, when
seeking the missing material after İbnülemin’s death they found only a single page
on Dede. His words explicitly indicated his disappointment: “Dedeye ancak bir
sahifelik yazı vardı. Lâkin Dede bir sahifelik mi idi?”37 Despite that, the “Dede
Efendi” entry is the longest one written for a musician in the book, which reaches
up to almost forty pages (pp. 133-170). When one considers the average number of
pages devoted to each entry, about two, one evidently thinks that Aktunç felt free
to put extra material into the book.
To construct musician biographies, İbnülemin mainly applied to Rauf Yekta’s Esatiz-i
Elhân, Nüzhet Ergun’s Türk Musıkisi Antolojisi, Subhi Ezgi’s Amelî ve Nazarî Türk
35 Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar, “İbnül Emin Mahmut Kemal’e Dair”, Hoş Sadâ: Son Asır Türk
Musıkişinasları, pp. XLVII-LV.
36 Hasan Âli Yücel, “Üstad İbnülemin Mahmut Kemal İnal”, Hoş Sadâ: Son Asır Türk
Musıkişinasları, pp. XXX-XXXIV.
37 Hasan Âli Yücel, “Üstad İbnülemin Mahmut Kemal İnal”, Hoş Sadâ, p. XXXIII.
23
Musıkisi, and Mustafa Rona’s Elli Yıllık Türk. Indeed, he praised the Armenian priest
Aris Dakes Hisarlıyan for his book on the history of the Armenian notation system,
which also included certain Armenian musicians’ life stories. Finally, he emphasized
some biographical material published in various journals and newspapers on
cultural life and music.38
Reading the biographies one after another, one realizes that he used a very
unsystematic and complicated reference system. İbnülemin sometimes addressed a
lost source, sometimes a person who died long ago who gave him the information
orally. In many places in the text he uses the expression “from my own notes”, and
pays attention to well-circled rumours on musicians (like how one ended up in
alcoholism or economic obstacles faced by musicians, etc.). The rather long entries
were supported with the combination of all these sources. Furthermore, he
resorted to journals, daily papers and books by giving full reference to author, date
and number, etc. Official documents, such as salnames, records of payments from
palace to musicians, and sicill-i ahval records were frequently referred to. His
accounts were supported by many different sources; he occasionally found
discrepancies between them and noted this problem. Another frequent way of
gathering information was to ask musicians to write on their life stories expressed
in their own words. He published the ones who had sent the requested material but
one never knows if there are omissions. Taking all these reservations into
consideration, the reference system he used appears problematic in terms of the
academic reference standards of today.
After all, the accounts on his contemporaries give the idea that he wrote more
confidently and used more references from journals and newspapers. Furthermore,
he personally knew the majority of his contemporaries and was aware of their
musical ability. However, this paved the way to the same problem: His personal
opinion many times were equipped with unreasonable judgments about a person,
group, organization, etc. The main criterion was precisely formulated in his words:
38 İbnülemin Mahmut Kemal İnal, Hoş Sadâ: pp. 12-13
24
“He always treated me with high respect”, (hakkımda hürmet-i kâmilede
bulunurdu).
İbnülemin stated that his book focused mainly on composers, instrumentalists, and
hanendes (naathâns, durakçıs, and âyinhans). He did not mention any criterion for
being a good musician, such as “a musician has to compose”, or “an instrumentalist
has to play this or that piece”. However, he was impressed by a broad repertoire of
a musician, whether he was a singer (hânende) or an instrumentalist. The talent in
performing an improvisation (taksim) was another measure for deciding about the
quality of a musician. The musician portraits show that whether they were hafız,
hanende or instrumentalist, they were primarily composers. To note that, no
priority was explicitly set in the classification of the musicians, such as Muslim
musicians, Christian ones, Sufis, the musicians of palace/Pashas or in terms of
musical specialization; the composers, hafızs, and instrument players.
Even though the subtitle of the book is problematic, Son Asır Türk Musıkişinasları, it
covers 16 non-Muslim musicians’ biographies out of 158. There are obviously many
other non-Muslims that were excluded from the collection (see Figure 1.2).
However, it is important to see that the book did not have a full-fledged notion of
Turkifying the Ottoman music. Furthermore, he did not hesitate to indicate non-
Muslim musicians as the teachers of Muslim musicians or vice-versa. The cultural
interaction between the musicians that belonged to different religions was
expressed without bias. On the other hand, the book well presented the Sufi
musicians’ life stories, which formed the critical part of the Ottoman music, with
plenty of biographical material.
The musician stories in the book reveal the close relation between bureaucracy and
music, which appears as one promising research subject. A noticeable amount of
musicians who held other professions, all served in various government offices. The
career patterns of those musicians were somehow similar to each other. The aim
was to serve in Istanbul rather than being assigned to provincial posts. If they were
assigned to provincial posts, they either sought ways for a change of office (tahvil,
25
nakil, becayiş) or simply resigned and held other jobs. Living in Istanbul was
essential for musicians for being in the musical circles.
1.6. Thesis Structure
This first intrductory chapter deals with the thesis question, terminological and
methodological concerns and the thesis structure. The second chapter is devoted to
historiographical debates on music. Yet the second chapter will critically discuss the
collective biography studies produced by Ottoman historians.
The third chapter will interpret the biographical data to explore the social
background of musicians by underlining the common characteristics as well as their
distinctive features. I will present statistical analysis on many issues such as
birthplaces, places of residence, fathers’ professions, religions and ethnicities of
musicians, education patterns, language skills, age compositions in the form of
tables and charts. Economic challenges such as the limited job opportunities as well
as the financial insecurities of musicians will be discussed to understand the social
world in which musicians lived. The chapter will also focus on the Ottoman
bureaucracy to understand why musicians’ career choices noticeably inclined to it.
May the situation be regarded as a model of patronage? The discussion is critical to
grasp how music was perceived in the late Ottoman urban society, of which the
government officials were the significant parts.
The fourth chapter will deal with the relation between music and the city. The
reason why the geographical approach will particularly focus on Istanbul but not
other cities is because Istanbul was the main center of music. Secondly, the
availability of data about the musicians in Istanbul determined the focus. Based on
the statistical data about the residences of musicians and the musical activities
throughout Istanbul, I will discuss whether any of the city’s neighborhoods
possessed a particular musical identity. Indeed, by emphasizing the musical
interaction among the neighborhoods and the network of musicians, my aim is to
draw the musical map of Istanbul.
26
The fifth chapter will focus on various forms of music education. The relationship
between the age of learning and models of training will be explored to understand
the stages to become a musician. Indeed, the chapter will question the musical
integration between Muslim and non-Muslim musicians, particularly during the
process of music education. The religious character of music will be debated by
focusing on the networks of musicians with upper level religious school education,
the reciters of Qur’an and the musicians from various Sufi orders. The dissemination
and the usage of Hamparsum notation is another issue analyzed in the chapter.
Finally, the last section will reveal the most prominent sources of musical
knowledge in Istanbul from the late Ottoman to the Early Republican years through
the network analysis by Gephi.
The sixth chapter will follow the career paths of musicians towards the Early
Republican era. The aim of the chapter is to revisit change and continuity in music
through a new approach. The reorganization of the Ottoman bureaucracy in 1909
will be interpreted within the musical context. The sociological basis of the music
schools and the emergence of radio in 1927 will be dealt with, as the statistical
evidence reveal that musicians were connected to these institutions in many ways.
Addresing the roles music schools and radio played in music will provide insights
into the paths that musicians and hence the Ottoman music navigated. Finally, The
chapter will attempt to integrate a gender-perspective into the research to better
analyze the changing roles of women in music after the turn of the century.
The final chapter will evaluate the research findings in order to emphasize the ways
in which the thesis contributes to the social history of Istanbul in the late Ottoman
period and in the Early Republican years.
27
CHAPTER 2
HISTORIOGRAPHY
2.1. Scholarship on the Late Ottoman Music
The period after the turn of the twentieth century is distinguished from the
previous ones, by opening new music spaces and bringing in new problems. What is
promising about the recent literature is it treats music as a socio-cultural issue, and
pays particular attention to its practitioners within the perception that these
changes might be indicated and interpreted through the individual lives. Yet, not
many in number, it is the growing interest of the recent scholarship to grasp the
sweeping changes, which a positivist musicological approach seems incapable to
analyze.39
Cem Behar mainly focuses, among other issues, on the oral transmission of music,
meşk, to emphasize not only the traditional aspect of it but to better understand
the social relations in the Ottoman music world. He focused on the value system of
musicians, the possibility of transmitting the musical knowledge from one person to
other and from one generation to another, and how the aesthetical canons were
established historically through the process of meşk in the Ottoman music.40 The
39 The positivist musicology clearly emphasized the verifiable sources. Manuscripts were
discovered in the archives and were decoded. The musical output of a composer was
considered independent, as it had no interaction with the socio-cultural world in which it
was produced, and was treated purely as a esthetic matter, David Beard and Kenneth
Gloag, Musicology: The Key Concepts, Routledge, USA, 2005, pp. 102-3. Many studies and
critical publications fall into this musicological approach on Ottoman music, see Şükrü Elçin,
Ali Ufkî: Hayatı, eserleri ve Mecmuâ-i Sâz-ı Söz, Milli Eğitim Basımevi, Ankara, 1976;
Kantemiroğlu, Kitabu 'İlmi'l-Musiki 'ala vechi'l-Hurufat, Musikiyi harflerle tesbit ve icra
ilminin kitabı, Yalçın Tura, (ed.) 2 Vol., YKY, İstanbul, 2001; Nâsır Abdülbâki Dede, Tedkîk ü
Tahkîk, İnceleme ve Gerçeği Araştırma, Yalçın Tura (ed.), Pan Yayıncılık, 2006; Emrah
Hatipoğlu, “Mevlevihâneler Döneminde Bestelendiği Tespit Edilmiş 46 Ayinin Makâm ve
Geçki Açısından Tahlili”, Unpublished PhD Dissertation, Asst. Prof. Bayram Akdoğan
(Superviser), Ankara Üniversitesi, SBE, İslâm Tarihi ve Sanatları Anabilim Dalı (Türk Din
Musıkisi), Ankara, 2010.
40 Cem Behar, Aşk Olmadan Meşk Olmaz: Geleneksel Osmanlı/Türk Müziğinde Öğretim ve
İntikal, YKY, İstanbul, Third Edition, 2006; “Text and Memory in Ottoman/Turkish Musical
Tradition”, Ottoman Intimacies, Balkan Musical Realities, Risto Pekka Pennanen, Panagiotis
28
perspective put forth in his studies had impact on younger scholars. Poulos, for
instance, investigates the transmission issue during the Early Republican era and in
modern Turkey while stressing the tension with secularization and Westernization
processes. He asserts that the Ottoman musical heritage was not marginalized in
modern Turkey, and rather situated itself in an “in-between” space through the
state institutions such as the radio and television (TRT), conservatoires, and musical
gatherings in the houses of urban people.41
2.1.1. Literature on the Nationalization of Ottoman Music
Walter Feldman points out that two main opposite parties dominated the musical
discourse in the first two decades of the twentieth century. Rauf Yekta Bey (1871-
1935) and Ziya Gökalp (1876-1924) were the most active members in two opposite
parties.42 Though the political discourse on music is beyond the scope of this study,
one has to touch upon it, at least briefly, since the substantial amount of debates
until 1960s, related with tradition/modernity, religion/secularization, and
Eastern/Western dichotomies, had an impact on their thoughts. Yekta initially dealt
purely with musicological issues such as collecting repertoire, analysis of modes and
rhythms, and writing up musicians’ biographies. However, he soon was pulled into
the polemical field due to critical assaults on the Ottoman music.43
C. Poulos, Aspasia Thedosiou (ed.), The Finnish Institute of Athens, Vol. XIX, Helsinki, 2013,
pp. 3-16.
41 Panagiotis C. Poulos, “Rethinking Orality in Turkish Classical Music: A Genealogy of
Contemporary Musical Assemblages”, Middle Eastern Journal of Culture and
Communication, Vol. 4, Brill, 2011, pp. 164-183, “Private Spaces, Public Concerns: Music
House-gatherings in Istanbul from the late Ottoman Empire to the Turkish Republic”,
lectured in ARIT (The American Research Institute in Turkey), Istanbul, 23 September 2013.
42 Walter Feldman, “Cultural Authority and Authenticity in the Turkish Repertoire”, Asian
Music, Vol. 22, No. 1, (Autumn, 1990 – Winter, 1991), p. 96.
43 Rauf Yekta Bey was a prolific writer. Thanks to the couple of MA thesis which listed his
articles published in various journals and newspapers, it is easier to access to the majority
of his writings, see Muhammed Ali Çergel, “Rauf Yektâ Bey’in İkdam Gazetesi’nde
Neşredilen Türk Mûsikîsi Konulu Makaleleri”, MA Thesis, Marmara Üniversitesi, SBE,
İstanbul, 2007; Hüseyin Özdemir, “Rauf Yektâ Bey'in Resimli Gazete, Yeni Ses ve Vakit
Gazetelerinde Mûsikî İle İlgili Makalelerinin İncelenmesi”, MA Thesis, Marmara Üniversitesi,
SBE, İstanbul, 2010; Mehmet Öncel, “Rauf Yektâ Bey'in Ati, Yeni Mecmûa, Resimli Kitap ve
Şehbâl Adlı Mecmûalarda Mûsikî İle İlgili Makalelerinin İncelenmesi”, MA Thesis, Marmara
29
On the other side, Gökalp was a sociologist, who did not have the technical
expertise on music. He built his sociological analysis on the tension between
civilization and culture. In his formulation, the Eastern civilization to which the
Ottomans attribute their roots belonged to the Byzantine not to Islam. Therefore,
he made a distinction between Turks and Ottomans. He perceived the Ottomans as
the ruling elites, and Turks as the commoners. The entire cultural heritage
cultivated in the Ottoman court was hybrid, outdated, and not essentially Turkish.
In terms of music, Gökalp slightly mentioned about its Byzantine, Arabic
associations and highlighted its Eastern feature, however, he was not musically
qualified enough to substantiate his arguments. Without any structural base, he
suggested the rural music of Anatolian people reflected the true Turkish identity
and it has to be technically supported by the Western music standards. His
sociology was helpful to establish new cultural codes, which the newly founded
Turkish republic badly needed.44
Today a considerable amount of scholars still deal with the Turkish state’s music
reforms. The nationalization process, attempts to create a national music, searching
for pan-Turkish links in the Ottoman music, the ways in which the musical heritage
was dealt with in the national-state are frequently debated issues by post-modern
cultural historians, musicologists, and sociologists. Füsun Üstel investigates the
political discourse created by the state’s embedded intellectuals in the 1920s and
Üniversitesi, SBE, İstanbul, 2010; Süleyman Erguner, Rauf Yektâ Bey: neyzen – müzikolog –
bestekâr, Kitabevi, 2003, İstanbul ; Bora Keskiner’s cataloque is also helpful to researchers,
“Arap Harfli Türkçe Süreli Yayınlarda Türk Musikisi Teorisi Bibliyografyası”, TALİD, Vol. 7, No.
14, 2009, pp. 375-415.
44 Ziya Gökalp, Türkçülüğün Esasları, Mehmet Kaplan (ed.), MEB Yayınları, İstanbul, 1970,
pp. 39, 45, 33-34, 145-147; Gökalp’s theoretical and practical basis critisized by musicologist
Mahmut Ragıp Gazimihal. For more on his views, see “İlimde Sathîliğin Mahzûrları”,
Mahmut Râgıp Gâzimihal'den Seçme Müzik Makaleleri-II (Türk Harf İnkılâbı Öncesi),
Bahattin Kahraman (ed.), Müzik Eğitimi Yayınları, Ankara, 2014, pp. 27-38. On Rauf Yekta
Bey’s response to Ziya Gökalp, see “Ziya Gökalp Bey ve Millî Musikimiz Hakkındaki Fikirleri III-
III, Servet-i Fünûn, Nos. 1480-81-82, 1340/1925, quoted from İsmail Akçay, Musıki
Tarihimizden Belgeler, İstanbul, 1948, pp. 41-48; Cem Behar, “Ziya Gökalp ve Türk
Musıkisinde Modernleşme/Sentez Arayışları”, Musıkiden Müziğe: Osmanlı/Türk Müziği:
Gelenek ve Modernlik, YKY, İstanbul, (Second Edition) 2008, pp. 271-279.
30
1930s. She stresses that the pillar of the palace was replaced by the state, and the
state’s impact on cultural institutions became deeper with the explicit assistance of
the Republican elites to the state policies in the cultural realm.45
O’Connell focuses on the establishment of the new musical institution in Istanbul,
the Fine Arts Academy (Güzel Sanatlar Akademisi) in 1926. He seeks to comprehend
the way in which the state designed to change the aesthetic preferences through
the motivation of modernization. The institution’s curriculum was heavily equipped
with Western methods of music education and did not have room for Ottoman
music. The author considers the process as the state enforcement to control the
Turkish musical taste. He uses Bourdieu’s doxa concept (accepted discourse of the
dominant structure) to analyze the Kemalist cultural policy. O’Connell points out
that the doxa, dominated by the orthodox views, is also open to heterodox attacks
who wanted to expand the limits of doxa. He contends that Arel’s attempts of
Turkification of Ottoman music, formulated in the dominant republican discourse,
was truly a heterodox attack in order to be heard in the established discourse.46
Ayhan Erol refers to another concept of Bourdieu, the symbolic violence, to
examine the state intervention in music. He underlines that since the Turkish state
adopted “top-down modernization”, music came under the strict supervision of
political elites. The state monopoly on music was constructed either by the
proscription of the traditional music education in the state schools in 1924, or by
the establishment of the state sponsored cultural institutions that promoted
Western music culture such as the foundation of the Fine Arts Academy (Güzel
Sanatlar Akademisi) in 1926 and the radio broadcast in 1927. Indeed, the
elimination of dervish lodges in 1925, which used to be transmission centers of
45 Füsun Üstel, 1920’li ve 30’lu Yıllarda “Milli Musiki” ve “Musıki İnkılabı”, Defter, Metis
Yayınları, İstanbul, No. 22, 1994, pp. 41-53.
46 John Morgan O'Connell, “Fine Art, Fine Music: Controlling Turkish Taste at the Fine Arts
Academy in 1926”, Yearbook for Traditional Music, Vol. 32 (2000), pp. 117-142.
31
musical knowledge, is also interpreted by Erol as the proper forms of symbolic
violence to create national music taste/culture.47
Güneş Ayas’s book, based on his PhD dissertation, is the most recent study so far,
which investigates the impact of the Turkish music reform with Bourdieu’s
theoretical approach. He stresses the very tension between the state policies and
the musicians. The author focuses on the career patterns of certain musicians in
order to show how they responded to the ongoing “othering” practices of the state.
Different forms of survival strategies ranging from benefiting from Western
methods of music teaching to concert performances, and from musicological
researches to adapting Turkish names by non-Muslim musicians provided a basis for
Ayas’s narrative. Ayas concludes that the more the musicians struggled and thus
sought new tactics against the modernization process, the more Ottoman music’s
basis was undermined, which eventually transformed the Ottoman music into
“Turkish Art Music”.48
2.1.2. Emphasis on Non-Muslim Presence in Music Literature
Growing literature on non-Muslim presence in the Ottoman music appears as the
promising facet of the Ottoman cultural historiography, which has long been
sidelined by the mainstream scholarship.
Merih Erol’s book situates the musical discourse at the center, and seeks to find out
how the on-going Westernization and modernization processes affected particularly
the Greek Orthodox community of Istanbul in the second half of the nineteenth
century. She interprets the disputes and conflicts of the Greek elite on their cultural
identity, their historical roots like Byzantine and Greekness and their engagement
47 Ayhan Erol, “Music, Power and Symbolic Violence: The Turkish State’s Music Policies
During the Early Republican Period”, European Journal of Cultural Studies, Vol. 15, 2012, pp.
35–52.
48 Güneş Ayas, Mûsiki İnkılâbı’nın Sosyolojisi: Klasik Türk Müziği Geleneğinde Süreklilik ve
Değişim, Doğu Kitabevi, İstanbul, 2014; see my review of the book, Insight Turkey, Vol. 17,
No. 1, 2015, p. 243.
32
with the Byzantine music of the Orthodox Patriarchate. Her narrative stresses the
cleavages inside the educated Greek elites of Istanbul, which is efficiently revealed
through the musical discourse. The very contribution of her study is indicating that
the Greek Orthodox community of Constantinople was not a monolithical structure.
It was composed of various parties with complex and conflicting interests.49
Kerovpyan and Yılmaz’s book on the Armenian contribution to the Ottoman music is
noteworthy. The book deals with the general history of Armenian Church music
within the Ottoman context, the Armenian notation system (khaz), music education
methods in terms of memory and transmission, and the interactions with the
Ottoman music. Particularly the section on how the notation system of
Hampartzum Limonciyan (1768-1839), with which the considerable part of the
repertoire was written, led to a conflict within the Armenian Church enriches the
historical knowledge on the Ottoman music. The authors argue that certain
Armenian musicians, who were actively engaged in Ottoman music, were either
omitted or their images were distorted in the mainstream narratives of Turkish
music history. Frequently referred contemporary Armenian literature, many of
which were published in Istanbul at the turn of twentieth century, clearly deal the
reconsiderations on Armenian musicians’ biographical accounts, which the Turkish
historiography contained.50
Krikor Çulhayan (1868-1938)’s biography in the book, which deliberately overlaps
with the phases the Ottoman music underwent, gives evidence that historical
narrative based on biography might offer novel perspectives on past. Due to the
49Merih Erol, Greek Orthodox Music in Istanbul: Nation and Community in the Era of
Reform, Indiana University Press, 2015; see also some of her related publications, “Music
and the Nation in Greek and Turkish Contexts (19th – early 20th c.): A paradigm of cultural
transfers”, Startseitei, Vol. 47, No. 2, 2011, pp. 165-175; “The "Musical Question" and the
Educated Elite of Greek Orthodox Society in Late Nineteenth-Century Constantinople”,
Journal of Modern Greek Studies, Vol. 32, No. 1, May 2014, pp. 133-163.
50 Aram Kerovpyan and Altuğ Yılmaz, Klasik Osmanlı Müziği ve Ermeniler, Surp Pırgiç Ermeni
Hastanesi Vakfı Kültür Yayınları, 2010.
33
particular interest of my study with biographical material, I will touch on the issue in
the following pages.51
O’Connell discusses the limits of the religious and national tolerance during the
Early Republican period against the Jewish musicians as the participants of Ottoman
music. The article focuses on the live performance of a Jewish cantor and composer,
İzak Algazi (1889-1950) in Atatürk’s residence in İstanbul, Dolmabahçe Palace. The
author compares Hafız Yaşar (1885-1966)’s memoirs, who was also at the residence
at that night, with Abraham Galanté (1873-1961)’s representation of the same
event. Both narratives seem to prioritize their own goals. Hafız Yaşar judges Algazi’s
use of language during his gazel performance, his way of singing at the top of his
voice, which he claims to be more appropriate for a gazino than a presidential
audience. The critics of Yaşar indicate that new style of musical performance with a
Western style concert dress is more preferred in performing Turkish music from
now on. Galanté, who was supporting the modernizing reforms of Atatürk and the
idea of Jewish participation into the Turkish republic, considered the event as an
opportunity in terms of cultural integration.52
Maureen Jackson’s published doctoral thesis draws special attention to the
Maftirim music of Ottoman Jews. Even though only the first two chapters deal with
Jewish musicians in the late Ottoman period, the study helps to fill the lacunae in
the mainstream Ottoman cultural history. The historical journey of the Jewish
religious music from the late Ottoman era to the present day Turkey, and the
synagogue as the sacred place of musical transmission, where the Maftirim
repertoire is held, remains at the center throughout the book. The author attaches
importance to the cultural interactions between the Jewish musicians and their
Muslim, Armenian and Greek counterparts. A couple of Jewish religious and nonreligious
musicians’ biographies Hayim Moşe Becerano (1846-1931), Nesim Sevilya
51 ibid, pp. 129-133.
52 John Morgan O’Connell, “A Staged Fright: Musical Hybridity and Religious Intolerance in
Turkey 1923-38”, Twentieth Century Music, Vol. 7, No. 1, 2011, pp. 3-28.
34
(1856-1949), and Mısırlı İbrahim Efendi (1878-1948) are vital for Jackson’s narrative,
through which she establishes a historical basis for the Maftirim music. Jackson’s
biographies reveal the way certain Jewish musicians oriented themselves to the
new circumstances, in which music becomes more and more popular and thus it
evolves into a product that is consumed more broadly than ever.53
2.2. What Do the Biographical Dictionaries of Past Mean for Collective Biography
Studies?
The historical significance of constructing biographical dictionaries is a debated
issue among the modern historians. Why have historians compiled these
dictionaries in the past? Were they state sponsored projects or were they product
of mere individual interest, or the combination of both at a certain degree?
Agirreazkuenaga and Urquijo point out that nation states needed to create their
heroic past with their great men that will provide the historical depth for new sociocultural
trends and forms. Therefore, the national biographical dictionaries served
to produce the national identity and generate national pride. It appears that there
are two main types of dictionaries. The first one is supported by the state and
played a role in the nation-building process. Swiss, Dutch, Austrian and German
models mainly followed that path. On the other hand, the Anglophone model,
which had an impact on the American, Australian, and New Zeland dictionaries, was
largely financed by individuals. To make it clearer, one may not call them collective
biography works but rather the collections of biographies in massive volumes, on
which the historians applied the collective biography analysis techniques. For this
reason most of the collective biography studies focused on influential group of
people, the elites, who occupied the top political positions.54
53 Maureen Jackson, Mixing Musics: Turkish Jewry and the Urban Landscape of a Sacred
Song, Stanford University Press, Stanford, California, 2013.
54 Joseba Agirreazkuenaga and Mikel Urquijo, “Collective Biography and Europe’s Cultural
Legacy”, The European Legacy, Vol. 20:4, 2015, pp. 380-381.
35
Leanne Langley sought to find out the motivation behind the first dictionary of
British musicians published in 1824. She considered the period between 1815 and
1837 in England as the pervasive sense of uncertainty in terms of Britishness. There
was ambivalence over national identity, citizenship and civil liberty, in which
musicians were among the other groups to claim recognition in this period. She
argued that John Sainsbury’s Dictionary of Musicians (1824, London) and the Royal
Academy of Music (RAM) founded in 1822 were intimately related manifestations
to promote British music and musicians against the frequent visits of Italian
musicians to London. Yet, it was an enterprise of a businessman, John Davis
Sainsbury (died c. 1862), who might probably be alert to an emerging market.55
The huge project of replacing the Victorian Dictionary of National Biography (DNB)
with the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB), which was published
between 2004 and 2007, offers new perspectives to the history discipline and
benefits from technological advancements such as online archives. The DNB had
biographical material on 38,652 people whereas the ODNB has 55,828 individual
entries. The extended material surely meant the inclusion of new people (over
16,000 new lives, the entries on women trebled and foreigners who played a role in
British life were included) but the interesting thing is that roughly 63 per cent of old
lives were revised and rewritten, considering the latest updates in history discipline.
Regarding the purpose, ODNB stated in its introduction, it is difficult to promote a
single outlook due to around 10,000 contributors (DNB had only 653 writers). The
text claims that it neither carries the idea of national honour anymore, nor the
moral message. Furthermore, the text was put on-line in order to be updated and
extended steadily, which shows the relations between history writing and
technological advancement.56 These historical dictionaries are invaluable sources,
55 Leanne Langley, “Sainsbury’s Dictionary, the Royal Academy of Music, and the Rhetoric of
Patriotism”, Music and British Culture, 1785-1914: essays in honour of Cyril Ehrlich, Oxford:
OUP, 2000, pp. 65-71.
56 Keith Thomas, Changing Conceptions of National Biography: the Oxford DNB in Historical
Perspective, The Leslie Stephen Special Lecture, Cambridge, delivered in 1 October 2004,
pp. 34-37; James Raven, “The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: Dictionary or
36
which were filled up with biographical materials and were ready to be analyzed
within the collective biography research techniques by the social historians of post-
World War I, as Stone mentioned.57
The post-modern challenge to the discipline of history offered a profound change in
terms of understanding the past societies and interpreting the historical “facts”.
Particularly the reassessment of auto/biographical accounts, giving more space to
individual experiences and to the “linked lives” are the most recent methodological
fashions that is called the “biographical turn”, the impact of which is noticeable in
the Oxford DNB.
2.2.1. The Biographical Turn and Its Influence on Collective Biography Study
The recent biographical interest in history writing is not mainly based on the life
story of an individual but also add vigorously his/her social setting into the
narrative. Even though the individual actions in the life story take priority over any
other mattter, the historical explanation of the social environment entails a closer
look into the groups, of which he/she was a part. Therefore, the individual becomes
more intelligible within the group portrait.58 Cowman underlines the notion of
collectivity in biography to avoid reproducing conventional life stories. Human
beings get involved in a wide range of activities in their lifetime and interact with
people on a daily basis. For this reason, a well-grounded biographical narrative
should fairly mirror the linked lives or the social circles of the person under study
such as family, kinship relations, close friends, classmates, professional partners,
etc.59 Agirreazkuenaga and Urquijo consider this research methodology applicable
in collective biography analysis.
Encyclopedia?”, The Historical Journal, Vol. 50, No. 4, December 2007, pp. 991-1006, see p.
993.
57 Lawrence Stone, “Prosopography”, p. 49.
58 Alastair J. Shephard, “Biography and Mentalité History: Discovering a Relationship”,
Fukuoka University Review of Commercial Sciences, No. 49, 1992, pp. 6-7.
59 Krista Cowman, “Collective Biography”, p. 91-92.
37
The research will embrace quantitative and qualitative analysis in order to produce
a “larger microbiographical study”.60
I will now briefly touch upon the issue of biographical turn to see what it brings to
the fore. As mentioned above, it is the decisive shift in the social sciences to
promote the idea that societies and cultures might be understood through the
individual agency. Rustin argues that François Furet’s study, Interpreting the French
Revolution, in 1978, was a noteworthy analysis of events, which rejected the
Marxist interpretation of the French Revolution and highlighted the role of the
individuals with its distinct discourse. The recognition of individual agency and
stressing the individual survival strategies that create meaning as well as identity in
the life are the key elements for the “biographical turn”.61 Investigating the link
between individual agency and wider social structures, both in the past and in the
present, would help to reveal the social policy and power relations in the society.
The constructed life stories, on the other, are central to postmodern debates, which
concomitantly make it more complex for historians. E. M. Bruner suggests that the
“life lived”, the “life experienced”, and the “life told” are essentially different things:
“A life lived is what actually happens. A life as experienced consists of
the images, feelings, sentiments, desires, thoughts, and meanings known
to the person whose life it is... A life as told, a life history, is a narrative,
influenced by the cultural conventions of telling, by the audience, and by
the social context.”62
60 Joseba Agirreazkuenaga & Mikel Urquijo, “Collective Biography and Europe’s Cultural
Legacy”, p. 381.
61 Michael Rustin, “Reflections on the Biographical Turn in Social Science,” The Turn to
Biographical Methods in Social Science: comparative issues and examples, Tom Wengraf,
Prue Chamberlayne and Joanna Bornat (ed.), Routledge, 2000, pp. 48-49.
62 E. M. Bruner, “The Opening up of Anthropology”, Text, Play, and Story: the construction
and reconstruction of self and society, E. M. Bruner (ed.), Washington, DC: The American
Ethnological Society, 1984, p. 7, quoted from J. Amos Hatch and Richard Wisniewski, “Life
History and Narrative: Questions, Issues, and Exemplary Works”, Life History and Narrative,
The Falmer Press, London, Washington, D. C., 1995, p. 129.
38
Kenyon explains the reasons for storytelling in the interrelated aspects of human
life (structural, social, ethic, and interpersonal), which the historian should
acknowledge in order to interpret the text in different contexts.63 According to
Jerome Bruner, autonomy and commitment are two features of self-making
narrative. The genre balances the autonomy that allows the social actor to choose
freely, and the commitment, which indicate the dependence to family, friends and
institutions. The author considers the life writing as the struggle to balance these
two entities.64
Deliberately or not, development towards a certain goal, the retrospective
teleology, in the most of the auto/biographical life accounts is noticeable, which the
postmodern critic is acutely aware of. If the primary actor or the author of the text
became a famous artist, a prosperous businessman or a successful professional, all
the past events are placed in the narrative towards that goal. Put differently,
uncertainty, discontinuity, crises and sudden interruptions experienced in the
lifetime lose ground in the integration process of the past and thus, the life-story
chooses the most appropriate stages in the past to provide consistency.65
The arrangement of events in order of occurrence is like a straitjacket, which
imposes restrictions to auto/biographical expressions. A. Kırmızı underlines that
chronology or locating historical events in time imposes limits on the genre, but at
the same time is the glue that sticks the story together.
63 Gary M. Kenyon, “The Meaning/Value of Personal Storytelling”, Aging and Biography:
Explorations in Adult Development, Gary M. Kenyon and Jan Erik Ruth (eds.), New York:
Springer, 1996, p. 22.
64 Jerome Bruner, “Self-making Narratives”, Autobiographical Memory and the Construction
of a Narrative Self, Robyn Fivush and Catherine A. Haden (ed.), Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates, Inc., Publishers, New Jersey, London, 2003, p. 218.
65 Jens Brockmeier, “From the End to the Beginning: Retrospective Teleology in
Autobiography”, Narrative and Identity, Jens Brockmeier and Donal Carbaugh (ed.), John
Benjamins Publishing Company, 2001, Amsterdam, pp. 251-52.
39
In fact, it is the chronology, which arranges life into tidy patterns. In doing so, the
arbitrariness of life is deliberately reduced to a coherent whole.66
Terzioğlu traces the biographical interest in the Ottoman historiography. As history
discipline largely falls behind the recent debates in social sciences, so does the
Ottoman historiography. According to Terzioğlu, Ottoman historians have long
considered the diaries, memoirs and letters as a data source and thus produced
many “classical” biographies. Nevertheless, the new approaches attempt to explain
how he/she under study was represented through the narrative as well as the way
the narrative was constructed. Albeit rather slowly, the biographical turn arouses
attention and makes progress among the Ottoman scholars.67
2.3. Literature Review on Some Collective Biography Studies in the History of
Music
Collective biography analysis are more often applied to groups whose beginning
and end might be estimated statistically. The presence of data and access to
biographical record is vital as well. Therefore, it is reasonable that the methodology
is predominantly applied to official functionaries, either military or civil, of a certain
state. Even though few in number, there are studies exploring the musicians by
employing the collective biographical analyses.
Cyril Ehrlich’s book, The Music Profession in Britain since the Eighteenth Century,
which deals with musicians as social actors and focuses on their struggle to gain a
professional status in the society from the late eighteenth century to the post-
World War I, is considered a seminal work in English social history. The narrative is
based on the review of state and private records, newspapers, memoirs and
different sort of historical accounts on music and highlighted the socio-political
66 Abdulhamit Kırmızı, “Oto/Biyografik Vebal: Tutarlılık ve Kronoloji Sorunları”, Otur Baştan
Yaz Beni: Oto/Biyografiye Taze Bakışlar, Abdulhamit Kırmızı (ed.), Küre Yayınları, İstanbul,
2012, pp. 11-27, particularly pp. 23-27.
67 Derin Terzioğlu, “Tarihi İnsanlı Yazmak: Bir Tarih Anlatı Türü Olarak Biyografi ve Osmanlı
Tarihyazıcılığı”, Cogito, No. 29, 2001, pp. 284-295.
40
changes in the British society and the musicians’ confrontations in return. The book
raises questions on how they received music education, how they made a living and
their employment patterns in the business to portray the English musical world in
the period under study. The author considers certain issues critical to explain the
transformation of music and musicians. The headings are: the difficulty in
controlling unqualified people’s entry into the music market that gave rise to mass
unemployment, the expansion of musical instrument manufacturing that produced
cheap instruments, the increased circulation of sheet music, the competition with
American musicians, particularly by the turn of the twentieth century, the arrival of
electrical recording, broadcasting and the diminishing of silent cinema, in which
musicians were performing live music. Much of the narrative is a sad one with a
hardly optimistic conclusion. Ehrlich indicates that the life of a musician was not an
easy one and it is also difficult to precisely define the term “professional musician”
within the British context. The musicians’ desire for a social status equal to that of
lawyers and doctors proved to be irrational. Even though the economic conditions
of musicians have improved over time, the best status they could achieve was
roughly the same with service workers, as indicated in the official annual income
statistics.68
The book of Dave Russell, Popular Music in England, 1840-1914, attempted to
analyze the main patterns of popular music in England between 1840 and 1914, in
which musician stories help us follow the processes in music that he defined as
expansion, diversification and nationalization. The book could not be considered as
a collective biography study; however, it is partly influenced by Ehrlich’s study
mentioned above, which revisits similar themes with new perspectives. The author
claims that there was clearly a huge expansion in all branches of music during the
late nineteenth century. In terms of diversification, many new institutes of musical
education, music journals, and musical societies emerged by 1900. Here the
similarities with the Ottoman case are striking. Russell states that the
68 Cyril Ehrlich, The Music Profession in Britain since the Eighteenth Century: A Social
History, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1985.
41
nationalization (similar and unified musical taste) developed but it should not be
exaggerated. The strong regional variations existed in different parts of the country.
The musical industry invested more in cities and large towns, whereas communitybased
music (choir and bands) was pervasive in the provinces. The English music
hall industry played a great role to popularize the English music. However, the stage
was not entirely devoted to music. Acrobats, comics, strongmen, pantomime, dogs,
birds and baboons shared the (same) stage with music. In the socio-economical
level, the author believes that the industrialization brought major changes to music.
By 1881, almost half of the English population moved to live in cities and bigger
towns. The growth of the lower middle classes, clerks, the commercial traveler and
associated occupational groups contributed to the musical life. They
organized brass bands, choirs and musical societies. Between 1876 and 1896, real
wages increased by 66 percent, which means the working class had an increased
economic capacity for musical enjoyment. Concerts with lower ticket prices and
countrywide tours of musicians reached the lower middle and upper working class
audience. By the 1890s, the music industry annually sold some 14 million tickets in
England. Finally, Russell’s narrative on the comprehensive social history of the
English popular music culture between 1840 and 1914 has been criticized by
historians for its “progressive” approach in analyzing the processes before the
emergence and expansion of the popular music.69
Deborah Rohr’s collective biography study, The Careers and Social Status of British
Musicians, 1750-1850, deals with roughly over 6,000 musicians (1750-1850) that
were mostly traced from the Royal Society of Musicians’ archives. She puts the daily
activities of musicians at the center of her narrative and explains the geographical
and social origins, education methods, and common characteristics in the
musicians’ career paths, their economic situation and the struggle to gain a social
status in society. Rohr raises questions on why they wanted to be a musician. She
claims that there is a combination of factors that range from following the family
69 Dave Russell, Popular Music in England, 1840-1914 (Music and Society), Mcgill-Queens
University Press, 1987.
42
tradition to talent, and from the hope of becoming rich to unanticipated economic
hardships (particularly for the upper class members). The narrative asserts that the
marriage meant a sort of upward social mobility for English musicians, who sought
wealthy or titled family members. Regarding the patronage relationships,
musicians’ career reveals complex web of financial arrangements ranging from
classical types (royal, aristocratic, church, municipal) to more professional ones
(giving concert, playing in the music halls, teaching music). To discuss the economic
situation of musicians, Rohr conducted an income survey of different professions
like artisans and laborers in the period under investigation. She states that even the
ones who performed for the highest salaries could do so temporarily and could not
establish a regular lifetime earning from music. The more pervasive patterns were
low earnings and irregular job opportunities. Apart from the economic obstacles
faced by musicians, the cultural perceptions on music and musicians were also the
underlying causes to prevent musicians to gain a social status and respect in the
English society. Rohr states that music was perceived as not having any serious
purpose. It was about entertainment and pleasure, thus was associated with
immorality. Musicians, on the other hand, mainly belonged to the lower classes,
who were poorly educated, “inferior” individuals. Yet, music was fundamentally a
feminine art and was likely to destroy manly virtues. For Rohr, such beliefs together
with the insufficient income significantly undermined musicians’ chances of
achieving middle class social and professional status. She concludes that musicians
showed uneven advances of different groups. Teachers and some performers
obtained higher positions in the society, whereas the overwhelming majority
earned the minimal income needed for subsistence.70
Cem Behar studied on the Es’ad Efendi’s text, which collected 97 Ottoman musician
biographies from the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. According to
Behar, the Ottoman music only after the mid-seventeenth century became
recognizable technically and aesthetically, and thus separated itself from the
70 Deborah Rohr, The Careers and Social Status of British Musicians, 1750-1850, A
Profession of Artisans, Cambridge University Press, United Kingdom, 2004.
43
antecedent tradition. Thereby, Es’ad Efendi’s collection provides historical evidence
for the assertion. The text’s major disadvantage is its limited representativeness.
Apart from the quantitative inadequacy, the biographies merely belong to
composers and singers, hanende. Since the sub-title of the text is Tezkire-i
Hânendegân-ı Esâd Efendi, instrumentalists’ exclusion is acceptable. However,
absence of non-Muslim musicians constitutes a problem for the text. Es’ad Efendi
does not provide much information about his musicians. The birthplace, the place
of residence, the period in which he became known as a musician (the name of the
Sultan), and finally their profession were entered to each biography. The text
reveals that Istanbul was the center of musical activities. Sixty-three out of 99
musicians lived and made music in Istanbul. The musicians were engaged in various
professions such as artisans, traders, official scribes, and palace servants. Dervishes
and the members of the ulema were also among the musicians. Only two musicians
were official palace musicians, or at least served in the palace for a time period as a
musician, which indicates that the palace only occasionally gave financial support to
music. The backbone of musical activity was not courtly patronage. Music was an
amateur activity and so were the musicians. The principle, based upon which Es’ad
Efendi judged the musicians, was the quality they produced through their artistic
pursuits. Being wealthy or having an elite family background was not surely the
point of reference for his musicians. In other words, they had to be approved by the
musicians rather than the audience.71
71 Cem Behar, Şeyhülislam'ın Müziği: 18. Yüzyılda Osmanlı/Türk Musikisi ve Şeyhülislam
Es'ad Efendi'nin Atrabü'l-Âsâr'ı, Yapı Kredi Yayınları, İstanbul, 2010.
44
CHAPTER 3
THE DEMOGRAPHICS OF MUSICIANS
The chapter will be based on the demographic analysis of musicians, which seeks to
explore their social position in society. To describe them beyond their musical
output, the chapter will approach musicians through a handful of perspectives,
including geographical background, educational characteristics, occupational
continuity, sources of income, age compositions, and causes of mortality. Some will
address the issues related to the social status of musicians, while some other will
enhance our understanding of their intellectual and cultural worlds. The part will
underscore any biographical data that would contribute to the principal aim of the
thesis, albeit its influence on the formation of musical character is open to
argument. To identify the educational profile, for instance, non-musical education
level and language skills will be discussed. Based on the statistical outcome, the
limits of music as the chief source of income will be debated, which will help to
consider music as a profession or not at the turn of the twentieth century. Along
the same lines, the musicians in the sampling were predominantly concentrated in
the civil offices as a profession. The chapter will evaluate the meaning of this finding
from a cultural perspective to emphasize the intersecting spaces of music and the
burecratic culture. Indeed, identifying the causes of mortality will provide highlights
into the living conditions of musicians prior to their death and thus will contribute
differently to the question of musicians’ social status. I believe that this “beyond the
music” investigation will be instrumental to see how adaptable they were to
sweeping changes during and after the late Ottoman period.
3.1. Age Composition Characteristics
The study does not restrict the time period deliberately, because the chief concern
is to assemble musicians, whose larger part experienced the late Ottoman and the
subsequent Early Republican years (until 1930). The majority of the musicians under
research satisfy the criteria. The part will display the dates of birth and death of
musicians through a variety of line graphics and tables.
45
Figure 3.1. Histogram of birthdate distribution
Figure 3.2. Histogram of death date distribution
In parallel with two histogram graphs above, the study, on the one hand, included
some musicians who were born in the second decade of the nineteenth century (as
the earliest birth date) and some that remained alive until very recently, on the
other, albeit they are minor in number compared to the bulk of the sample. The
important part of the musicians is well suited to the purpose of the study. The next
table combines the musicians’ birth dates according to time periods to display
alternatively the overall distribution.
6
111111
2
5
222
11
22
1
33
222
1
3
111
22
11
8
5
3
4
66
4
22
444
1
5
6
1
8
10
222
6
9
2
3
6
3
8
1
2
3
6
3
9
2
6
7
44
3
1
7
2
7
1
5
1
unknown
1830
1835
1841
1847
1850
1855
1858
1861
1864
1867
1870
1873
1876
1879
1882
1885
1888
1891
1894
1898
1901
1904
1907
1910
1913
Frequency
18
1221111111122123212111
4
2
4
12
5
21
4
2233
1
44
221
7
1
8
3
5
3
1
4
23
7
4
2
4
21
8
22
5
3455
32
6
4
2
5
1
8
21222
4
222111
32122121
unknown
1896
1901
1907
1911
1917
1922
1926
1930
1936
1940
1945
1949
1953
1957
1961
1965
1969
1974
1978
1982
1987
1992
1999
Frequency
46
Table 3.1. Birth dates by periods
Born
Between Frequenct Percent
1820-1849 23 9
1850-1899 162 62.2
1900-1918 66 26.5
Unknown 6 2.3
TOTAL 257 100.0
As emphasized above, the majority of the musicians’ birth dates concentrated at
the middle (88.7 %) will have more power to affect the outcomes and support the
arguments throughout the thesis rather than the ones assembled at two edges.72
Table 3.2. Death dates by periods
Died
Between Frequency Percent
1891-1908 17 6.6
1909-1950 97 37.7
After 1951 125 48.7
Unknown 18 7
TOTAL 257 100.0
Grouping musicians’ death dates by periods reveal that nearly half of them lived
throughout the second half of the twentieth century. This period, however, is
beyond the scope of the thesis due to the changing social conditions, in which the
diversities belonging to the imperial past faded away and steadily a standard
musician type was created. Therefore, the thesis will concentrate on the first half of
72 Cem Behar prepared the Life Expectancy map for Istanbul based on the statistical data of
1300 (1882-83) and 1322 (1904-5) population censuses. The Brass method which Behar
applied, is based on the use of paternal and maternal orphanood statistics. Owing to the
shortcomings of the necessary dataset, the life expactancy figures for musicians cannnot be
estimated. See, Cem Behar, “An Estimate of Adult Mortality in Istanbul in the Second Half
of the Nineteenth Century, Dünü ve Bugünüyle Toplum ve Ekonomi, Issue 4, October 1994,
İstanbul, pp. 95-105.
47
those musicians’ life stories rather than their later years that they experienced the
years after 1950s, which the reasoning behind it was already debated in the
introduction part. The issue, however, might also be debated through the age
composition of musicians. Given the musicians’ birth interval that almost makes a
century, one may question whether grouping the musicians in accordance with
their birth dates would shed light on meaningful differences or not. Though the
study does not aim to make a comparison based on two generations of musicians,
the reasons should be explained. Firstly, due to the main scope of the study, which
is to identify and analyze the ways musicians responded to the socio-cultural
changes, the large number of my grouping was born in the same period, in the
second half of the nineteenth century, and thus such a comparison would not yield
meaningful outcomes. Secondly, in order to do that, the issue of periodization
needs to be well defined. The issue is a highly contested one among scholars since
the schemes of periodization depends on the historian’s personal reorganization of
the past. The practice of periodization entails historian to regard some events
relatively more critical or characteristic than others, and indeed their impact should
be traceable during the defined period.73
The study views some of the historical ruptures in music more significant than
others. These emerged at about the turn of the twentieth century all the way to the
Early Republican years. Since I have discussed the issue in the introduction section
in detail, I will briefly touch upon them. These events were the opening and
expansion of music schools in Istanbul, the beginning of sound recording
(phonographs, gramophones), developments in publishing sheet music, and music
journals as a sign of increased researches and debates on music. The list should also
include the foundation of state radio in Istanbul and Ankara, in 1927 and 1928,
respectively. Hence all these factors support the opinion that a generation-based
comparison of musicians would not be helpful to address the issues the study works
on.
73 A critique on the emergence of dividing the past into stages and its attachment with the
ideas, including civilization and progress, see Ernst Breisach, Historiography: Ancient,
Medieval & Modern, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1994, pp. 205-215.
48
Table 3.3. Age composition of musicians, 1906
Age Interval Frequency Female Male Percent
0-5 28 6 22 10.9
6-10 20 3 17 7.8
11-15 13 1 12 5.1
16-20 21 1 20 7.8
21-25 25 - 25 9.7
26-30 15 1 14 5.4
31-35 21 - 21 8.2
36-40 16 - 16 6.2
41-45 6 - 6 2.3
46-50 9 - 9 3.5
51-55 7 - 7 2.7
56-60 6 1 5 2.3
61-65 5 - 5 1.9
66-70 4 - 4 1.6
Died 15 - 15 5.8
Unborn 31 10 21 12.1
Unknown 15 - 15 5.8
TOTAL 257 23 234 100.0
Comparing the age composition of musicians with the general population figures,
which derived from 1897 census, indicate similar trends before the ages reach to
40. 0-20 age group’s proportion amongst the musician group was 31.6 %, while in
the overall population it was 37.5 %. The group between the ages 20-40 constituted
29.5 % of musicians, while it was 32.3 % of the general population. For the ages
between 40-60, the proportions were 10.8 % among the musicians and 20.4 in total.
Ages grouped as “60 and over” constituted 3.5 % of the musicians, and 9.8 % of the
total population. The irregularities between two sets are mainly related to the
random variation of my sampling. Another reason is that my sampling contains a
49
number of unborn and died ones, together with the musicians whose ages could
not be defined. Plus, there is a ten years of interval between two sets of figures.74
3.2. Geographical Origins
I distributed the birthplaces of the 257 musicians under investigation in parallel
with the Ottoman vilâyet system, which was valid between 1895-1908. The empire
was then officially divided into thirty vilâyets, which were later reduced to twenty
nine due to the changes related to the political situation of Crete (Girid) in 1898,
which henceforth would be an autonomous province.75 The total population figures
were derived from 1903 census, which was completed in three years and hence was
known as 1905-1906 census. According to it, the Empire’s population was
20,884,630.76
74 The population statistics were taken from two researches both based on the Ottoman
census in 1897, Tevfik Güran, Osmanlı Devleti’nin İlk İstatistik Yıllığı, 1897, Tarihi İstatistikler
Dizisi, Vol. 5, T. C. Başbakanlık Devlet İstatistik Enstitüsü, Ankara, 1997, pp. 26-29 and Cem
Behar, “Osmanlı Nüfus İstatistikleri ve 1831 Sonrası Modernleşmesi”, Osmanlı Devleti’nde
Bilgi ve İstatistik, Halil İnalcık and Şevket Pamuk (eds.), T. C. Başbakanlık Devlet İstatistik
Enstitüsü, Ankara, 2000, p. 174.
75 Abdulhamit Kırmızı, Abdülhamid’in Valileri: Osmanlı Vilayet İdaresi 1895-1908, Second
Edition, Klasik, İstanbul, 2008, pp. 13-15.
76 Osmanlı İmparatorluğu’nun ve Türkiye’nin Nüfusu, 1500-1927, Cem Behar (ed.),
Historical Statistics Series, Vol. 2, T. C. Başbakanlık Devlet İstatistik Enstitüsü, Ankara, 1996,
p. 55. For the purpose of Regulation of Population Registration (Sicill-i Nüfus Nizamnâmesi),
which was put into effect right after the Ottoman-Russian war and the Treaty of Berlin in
1878, and the brief explanations on the subsequent modifications at the Department of the
Census (Nüfus-u Umumi İdaresi), see Stanford J. Shaw, “The Ottoman Census System and
Population, 1831-1914”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 9, No. 3, Oct.
1978, pp. 330-334.
50
Table 3.4. Musicians’ birthplaces
Vilâyet Frequency Percent Ottoman Population
İstanbul 186 72.4 864,662
Selanik 11 4.3 921,359
Edirne 6 2.3 1,133,796
Hüdavendigâr (Bursa) 6 2.3 1,691,277
Aydın 6 2.3 1,727,581
Konya 4 1.6 1,249,277
Sivas 4 1.6 1,194,372
Beyrut 3 1.2 562,719
Kastamonu 3 1.2 1,121,516
Outside Ottoman territory 7 2.7
Unknown 3 1.2
Other vilâyets 18 6.9
Hâlep 2 867,679
Trabzon 2 1,342,778
Biga (Karesi) 2 186,455
İzmid 2 290,517
Adana 1 504,396
Cezayir-i Bahr-i Sefîd 2 364,234
Erzurum 1 675,855
Hicaz 1
Mamûret-ul-Azîz 1 473,324
Musul 1 161,748
Suriye 1 478,775
Yanya 1 516,766
Yemen 1
TOTAL 257 100
To be noted that the percentages in the Table 3.4 show the proportions among all
musicians, not the proportions among overall population figures. Yet, Table 3.4
does not show the precise birthplaces of musicians. For instance, one who was born
in Amasya sancak will inevitably appear in Sivas vilâyet. But the dataset stores the
names of cities, towns and villages that were recorded as birthplaces if necessary.
The table indicates the significance of Istanbul as the geographical origin of
musicians that lived during the late Ottoman period, though the strikingly high
percentage of Istanbul born musicians (72.4 %) may be criticized for
51
overrepresentation at the expense of others. The distribution of overall population
of Istanbul in 1885 according to the birthplaces, however, shows that the trend
goes in opposite direction as the proportion of Istanbul-born people was 45 %,
whereas the elsewhere born were 55 %.77
Therefore, it might be suggested that musicians were generally from more stable
population. The difference between my sampling and the general population should
partly be related with the relationship between arts and socioeconomic positions in
the society. As anticipated, allocating budget to arts would not take priority over
more pivotal concerns for the newcomers of the city. It could be explained in a
more music-oriented way. According to Es’ad Efendi’s (1685-1753) biographical
dictionary of musicians, the association of music and musicians with Istanbul has
already been established since the beginning of the eighteenth century.78 Even at
that time the city could not be compared to the rest of the empire, it retained its
domination during the late Ottoman period. According to an anecdote told by
İbnülemin, Hacı Arif Bey (1831-1885) heard adolescent Bimen Şen (1873-1942)
during a liturgy in the Armenian Church of Bursa and immediately told him to move
to Istanbul to benefit from his musical talent (…isti’dadından hayır görmek
istiyorsan İstanbul’a git). His statement was not only about preventing him from
wasting his talent, but also leaves no room for doubt about the musical significance
of Istanbul.
The minor presence of musicians from different cities is credible. Salonika,
Hüdavendigâr, Edirne and Aydın provinces, which the last province territorially
included the city of Izmir, were significant urban centers, and well connected to the
capital in terms of commerce and culture. Albeit small in number, these urban
centers did supply the Ottoman music with new musicians. I intentionally use the
word “supply” because the outcome below shows that nearly all non-Istanbul born
77 Stanford J. Shaw, “The Population of Istanbul in the 19th Century”, International Journal
of Middle East Studies, Vol. 10, 1979, p. 270.
78 Cem Behar, Şeyhülislam'ın Müziği: 18. Yüzyılda Osmanlı/Türk Musikisi ve Şeyhülislam
Es'ad Efendi'nin Atrabü'l-Âsâr'ı, Yapı Kredi Yayınları, İstanbul, 2010, pp. 142-153.
52
musicians moved to and resided in the capital. Table 5 better portrays the trend and
indicates the number of non-Istanbul born musicians who immigrated to the
capital.
Table 3.5. Non-Istanbul born musicians – If resided in Istanbul (cross tabulation)
Vilâyet Frequency Resided in Istanbul Unknown
Selanik 11 9 1
Edirne 6 5 1
Hüdavendigâr 6 6
Aydın 6 3
Konya 4 3 1
Sivas 4 3
Beyrut 3 3
Kastamonu 3 3
Outside Ottoman territory 7 7
Unknown 3 2 1
Other vilâyets 18
Hâlep 2 2
Trabzon 2 2
Biga (Karesi) 2 2
İzmid 2 2
Adana 1 1
Cezayir-i Bahr-i Sefîd 1 1
Erzurum 1 - 1
Girit 1 1
Hicaz 1 1
Mamûret-ul-Azîz 1 1
Musul 1 1
Suriye 1 1
Yanya 1 1
Yemen 1 1
TOTAL 71 61 5
Consequently, the significance of Istanbul becomes more and more clear with the
statistical data. The outcome shows that 61 out of 71 musicians left their places and
53
established a life in the capital, whereas only a minor group of non-Istanbul born
musicians (n = 5) remained in their birthplaces. 79 The overall percentage
dramatically reaches up to 96.1% that covers both the Istanbul born and the non-
Istanbul born musicians who resided in the capital. One may argue the credibility of
the research based on the significant proportion of Istanbul-born musicians, which
might influence the analyses and hence may result in risking the research findings.
The argument would be credible if only the non Istanbul-born ones would not have
moved to capital in such great numbers and would have continued to live where
they were born or elsewhere. As demonstrated, the outcome provides evidence for
the centrality of Istanbul in a study that would deal with the social aspects of music
and musicians’ biographies. To explain the reasoning behind this, the subsequent
chapter will be related to the interactions between city and musicians.
Unfortunately, one can hardly encounter the internal immigration stories of those
61 fathers; it is such a rare data in the biographies. However, a closer look into
Konya born musicians’ life accounts may be helpful to understand the motivations.
Marko Çolakoğlu (1896-1957) belonged to the Rum community of Konya (Karaman),
whose family moved to Istanbul for unknown reasons when he was a child. His
primary music education began in the Orthodox Patriarchate at Phanar, Fener. A
female musician, Bedriye Hoşgör, was born in 1896. For some unknown reasons
again, her family moved to the capital when she was still a child. There she had the
chance to be privately educated by Cemil Bey (1872-1916)80 and Nevres Bey (1873-
1931). The same pattern is visible in the life story of Sedat Öztoprak (1890-1942). In
1890, he was born in Konya as his father was then the Chief Execution Judge of that
city. The father was appointed to Istanbul once he completed his middle education.
There he would find many opportunities to advance his musical skills. The fourth
79 Those names are Cemal Efendi, Hasan Güler, Rakım Elkutlu, Ömer Altuğ and İzak Elgazi.
Although these names were in Istanbul periodically, they have lived most of their lives in
the places they were born.
80 There is a debate on the precise birth year of Cemil Bey among the music historians. My
date is derived from his personal register record, which was officially kept by the Ottoman
Ministery of Interior, According to it, his birth date was on 17 September 1872, 1289 senesi
şehr-i Recebinin on dördünde, 5 Eylül sene 1288, see DH.SAID, 43-343/174.
54
one was an Armenian, İstepan Gedik (1886-1970), whose biographical data is less
complete to support the argument.
Similarly, all roads lead to Istanbul for the Beirut born musicians indeed. However,
the biographies reveal that none of them had family roots from Beirut. Kemal
Niyazi Seyhun was born in 1885 in Acre sanjak of Beirut province because his father,
Niyazi Bey, served as the district governor (kaymakam) there. His family moved
back to the capital due to his father’s assignment to a new post. Kemal Niyazi
studied at Galatasaray Sultanî and pursued a musical career. İhsan Raif Hanım
(1877-1926), whose father was Köse Mehmed Raif Pasha (d. 1911), was born in
Beirut because her father then was the governor of the city. She did not only
compose music but was also a prolific poet, who published her poems in journals
and books. The last Beirut born musician was Zeki Duygulu (b. 1907-1974). Like
other Beirut born musicians, his father served in the Excise Tax Department
(Rüsumât Emaneti) at Beirut in 1907. Zeki Duygulu as a professional musician,
wandered from Istanbul, Ankara to Izmir throughout his life.
Table 3.6 is designed to highlight the professions of non-Istanbul born fathers to
explain the issue from a different perspective. The official functionary, religious
functionary, and military categories can be defined as official jobs, and their shift of
location was probably related to official assignments. Indeed, sheikh/dervish group
might be added into this category, whose movements from one lodge to another
depended on the permission (icazetnâme) given by the authorities of the order.
Therefore, one can argue that the appointment into a new post or place was a
determining factor for 27 fathers’ movement to Istanbul. Other professions
(musicians, artisans, merchants) may be classified as independent or lesserindependent
ones, that they were certainly freer to create business opportunities in
a new market. Given the large percentage of unknown group (n = 20, one-third of
the group), one cannot advance further on the issue.
55
Table 3.6. Fathers’ occupation - Fathers settled in Istanbul (cross tabulation)
Occupation of Fathers Number of Families
Who Settled in Istanbul
Official Functionary 11
Religious Functionary 5
Teacher 2
Military 5
Sheikh/Dervish 4
Musician 3
Artisan 6
Merchant 1
Solicitor 1
Other 3
Unknown 20
TOTAL 61
In fact, immigrations were not music related, but the capital had much more to
offer to their children in terms of musical opportunities. The small number of music
teachers, the lack of music schools, in particular, as well as of a non-dynamic
musical atmosphere, in general, characterized the provinces, whereas the capital
was beyond comparison. Given the musical significance of Istanbul, the subsequent
chapter will concentrate on the interactions between the city and the musicians.
3.3. Education Patterns
This part will analyze the educational level of musicians to further explore the
musicians’ socio-cultural profiles. It will highlight the types of schools that musicians
mostly preferred, the role of the private tutorage, and their language skills.
Therefore, the part will discuss merely the non-musical educational behaviors, as
the processes of musical cultivation are the subject matter of the fifth chapter.
56
It is debatable whether any person needs non-musical education to make music.
Yet it is open to question to assume that it essentially improves the musical output.
Nevertheless, exploring the educational patterns will enhance the quality of the
thesis that seeks to analyze the social aspects of music, and hence concentrates
more on the social status of musicians. In other words, to analyze the musicians’
social status, each biographical data is worth to be analyzed even if its direct effect
on his/her musical formation is debatable.
3.3.1. Primary Education
According to 1897 census, the Ottoman state had 34.843 primary schools, of which
28.615 (82.1 %) were for Muslims. 5.982 (17.2 %) belonged to non-Muslim
Ottomans, while 246 (0.7 %) to foreigners (ecnebi), which means that they were not
Ottoman subjects. The number of Muslim primary schools in Istanbul was 263 with
19.792 students in total. 81
Table 3.7 indicates the level of primary school education and includes both the
Muslims and non-Muslims. Though the non-Muslims (n = 28 in total) had their first
education overwhelmingly at their own community (cemaat) schools, the data did
not separate state-run schools and non-Muslim community schools at the primary
level.82
81 Tevfik Güran, Osmanlı Devleti’nin İlk İstatistik Yıllığı, 1897, Tarihi İstatistikler Dizisi, Vol. 5,
T. C. Başbakanlık Devlet İstatistik Enstitüsü, Ankara, 1997, pp. 98 and 110; Cem Behar,
“Osmanlı Nüfus İstatistikleri ve 1831 Sonrası Modernleşmesi”, Osmanlı Devleti’nde Bilgi ve
İstatistik, Halil İnalcık and Şevket Pamuk (eds.), T. C. Başbakanlık Devlet İstatistik Enstitüsü,
Ankara, 2000, p. 169.
82 The years of education in the Muslim primary schools differed according to the
geographical location. It lasted three years in Istanbul, whereas it was four years in the
provinces between 1891 and 1908. The curriculum included learning the alphabet, reading
Qur’an, learning the principles of Islam (ilmihal), Ottoman Turkish language, orthography,
Ottoman history, Ottoman geography, arithmetic, and calligraphy, Bayram Kodaman,
Abdülhamid Devri Eğitim Sistemi, TTK, Ankara, 1999, pp. 85-88.
57
Table 3.7. Primary (ibtidâî) school attendance
Frequency Percent
Yes 211 82.1
No 2 0.8
Other 7 2.7
Unknown 37 14.4
TOTAL 257 100.0
The difference between “no” and “unknown” categories needs to be explained. The
“no” group included two musicians who have not received primary education for
sure. Yet the situation for the 37 musicians in the unknown category is open to
interpretation. They might have received primary education; however, their
educational record could not be identified. In fact, their education history is
recorded as unknown in the middle and higher education columns as well, which
might imply that they have not received primary education. Even so I did not place
them into the “no” variable unless the biographical accounts stated it precisely.
Therefore, the possibility remains open. The only exceptional case in the “unknown
musicians” category is Ahmet Celaleddin Efendi (1853-1946), the Sheikh of Gelibolu
and Üsküdar Mevlevî lodges, whose educational background is unidentified until his
higher education in the Al-Azhar at Cairo. Therefore, it is a clear evidence for his
primary education. Seven people that were placed in the other category did not
receive public education but were educated by private tutors. Furthermore, a
number of people that were educated in the public schools also had private tutors
whose cases I will soon touch upon.
3.3.2. Secondary Education
The study divides the Ottoman mass education at the secondary level into two
comprehensive categories. The lower secondary education corresponds to the rüşdî
schools, while the upper level points to idadî and sultanî schools. To reiterate, both
levels are considered to be within the secondary education.
58
The data derived from 1897 census indicates that 1187 (rüşdî) schools provided
lower secondary level education throughout the empire. The number of Muslim
schools was 426 (35.9 %); 687 (57.9 %) belonged to non-Muslim communities, while
74 (6.2 %) were owned by foreigners. Istanbul had 29 (rüşdî) schools with 4.776
students in total; however, the number did not include non-Muslim community
schools.83
Seven musicians continued to receive education privately as it was at the primary
level. Three more whose education carried out in the palace (mûzîka-i hümâyûn)
are included. The proportion of continuity among musicians from primary level
education to lower secondary is still high, even considering the sharp decrease in
number between primary and rüşdî schools, (see Table 3.8).
Table 3.8. Lower secondary (rüşdî) school attendance84
Frequency Percent
Yes 161 62.6
No 17 6.6
Other 10 3.9
Unknown 69 26.8
TOTAL 257 100.0
83 Tevfik Güran, Osmanlı Devleti’nin İlk İstatistik Yıllığı, 1897, pp. 98 and 109; Cem Behar,
“Osmanlı Nüfus İstatistikleri ve 1831 Sonrası Modernleşmesi”, p. 169.
84 The existence of rüşdiye schools was a matter of debate among the Ottoman authorities.
Mehmed Said Pasha (d. 1914) was the governer of Hüdavendigâr vilâyet in 1878. He
witnessed that despite the allocation of state funding to rüşdiye schools, participation at
the local level was far less than expected. He proposed that the state make the local people
pay for the expenses; so that, the local awareness would increase. The Pasha submitted
another petition to Abdulhamid in 1888. His plan was to extend the primary education to
six years, and then let the students pass directly to higher education without even spending
a day in rüşdiye. His idea was to transform the rüşdiye schools into three year occupational
schools. Abdulhamid did not accept Said Pasha’s plan and continued to fund the rüşdiyes
for several years more. The situation was bizarre: In 1892, these schools were merged with
idadî schools, while in practice the rüşdiyes did not come to an end, see Selçuk Akşin Somel,
The Modernization of Public Education in the Ottoman Empire 1839-1908: Islamization,
Autocracy and Discipline, Brill, Leiden, 2001, p. 161; Bayram Kodaman, Abdülhamid Devri
Eğitim Sistemi, pp. 107-114.
59
Eventually, 164 musicians (three palace-educated in the other category included)
out of the 211 who received primary education continued their education in the
next stage, and the overall proportion makes 77.7 % in total.
The number of upper secondary schools operated in the empire was 189, of which
56 (29.6 %) were state-sponsored schools. The non-Muslim communities had 70
schools (37.1 %), whereas 63 (33.3 %) were under the responsibility of the
foreigners.85
Tracing the educational continuity, 92 musicians further stayed in public education
out of 161 musicians who completed the lower secondary education, a proportion
of 57.1 %. Indeed, biographical accounts recorded 11 new cases in the upper
secondary education whose lower secondary education was unknown. That is how
the number reached 103 in total (40.1 %), (see Table 3.9). By keeping out the 101
musicians in the unknown category from the total population, the reasoning behind
it already pointed out, the final number of musicians that eventually completed
upper secondary education becomes 156, which the amount is equivalent to 60.7 %
in total.
People, who attended a certain school but did not complete it, are always placed in
the “no” category. For example, Tevfik Kolaylı (1879-1953) could not regularly
attend the classes in the (idadî) school in Izmir due to his health problems, and did
not receive the diploma (şehadetnâme). Thus, I coded him to his previous school.
85 Tevfik Güran, Osmanlı Devleti’nin İlk İstatistik Yıllığı, 1897, pp. 98 and 108; Cem Behar,
“Osmanlı Nüfus İstatistikleri ve 1831 Sonrası Modernleşmesi”, p. 169.
60
Table 3.9. Upper secondary (idadî and sultanî) school attendance86
Frequency Percent
Yes 103 40.1
No 46 17.9
Other 7 2.7
Unknown 101 39.13
TOTAL 257 100.0
The dataset reveals that certain schools attracted more attention than others. Vefa
Secondary School at Fatih, for instance, was mostly preferred among the musicians.
Sixteen musicians received education in that school, which was followed by
Galatasaray at Beyoğlu with thirteen students. Seven students were educated in
the Orphanage School (Dârüşşafaka) at Fatih, which was the third mostly preferred
school. Within the musical perspective, these schools were critical for the musical
development of the pupils, who who had chance to learn music from significant
music teachers.
At the secondary level, 13 families’ offspring received education in the foreign
schools. These schools were mainly French (Catholic) and so was the language of
education. Some of those schools were located in the city, namely Saint-Benoît,
Saint-Gabriel, Frères (des écoles Chrétiennes), Notre Dame de Sion, and some were
in remote provinces, such as the French schools in Beirut, Cairo and Yemen. Three
out of four musicians who were educated in these provinces were the children of
official functionaries. The case of Kemal Emin Bara (1876-1956) was typical for
official functionary families. He was born in Istanbul but had to complete his
86 There were two types of idadî education; seven years of boarding (leylî) schools and five
years of day (neharî) schools. The extention of idadi education was related to the
Regulation of Public Education of 1869 (Maârif-i Umûmiyye Nizamnâmesi). The regulation
stipulated the opening of one sultanî in each province. The plan did not succeed; only a
handful of provinces such as Girid and Suriye had sultanî schools. Thereby, the Ottoman
authorities extended the idadî education to seven years to meet a particular need. Both
Ergin and Kodaman provided a detailed version of the idadî school curriculum, see Osman
Ergin, Türk Maarif Tarihi, Vol. 3, Eser Matbaası, İstanbul, 1977, pp. 930-31; Bayram
Kodaman, Abdülhamid Devri Eğitim Sistemi, pp. 143-44.
61
secondary education in Yemen and Beirut due to his father’s official assignments.
His language skills, however, became his main source of income in Istanbul, as he
taught French in state schools and translated pieces from French literature
throughout his life. But Nurettin Cemil Sangan’s (1900-1979) life narrative differs
from the families of government officials. He was the son of Cemil Bey (Şekerci,
1867-1928). After his retirement from Imperial Music Academy (mûzîka-i hümâyûn),
in 1911, Abbas Hilmi Paşa (1874-1944) invited Cemil Bey to Cairo. The place
eventually became a permanent residence for the family where his son graduated
from a French school.
3.3.3. Higher Education
Higher education outcomes that were derived from occupational schools and
universities indicate that 78 musicians were enrolled in total (30.3 %), (see Table
3.10). The number of cases that were fully recorded from primary school to
university is 48, which means that other 30 musicians’ educational records were
fragmented. The situation reveals the gaps in the biographies, particularly in
educational issues. Figure 3 provides the general educational condition of musicians
from primary school to the university level. Musicians who achieved a university
degree were almost a quarter of the total number of musicians. Yet the outcome
needs cautious interpretation given the unmeasured number of people, whose
educational records could have an impact on the proportions.
62
Figure 3.3. Complete distribution of educational outcomes
Though 78 musicians enrolled to these schools, not all have received a diploma. The
amount of incomplete students was 16. Therefore, 62 students eventually
graduated from their schools, 24.1 % of the total. The list below shows the number
of musicians who attended to higher educational institutions, musicians’ most
frequented schools, as well as the number of students with higher education
degree.
62
103
161
211
257
24,1
40,1
62,6
82,1
100
Total Primary Secondary 1Secondary 2 Higher
Education Completed
percent
Frequency
63
Table 3.10. The list of attended schools
School Names
Attendance Completed
Frequency Percent Frequency Percent
Imperial School of Law
[Mekteb-i Hukuk]
16 6.2 14 5.4
Civil Service School
[Mekteb-i Mülkiye]
10 3.9 9 3.5
Imperial Civilian School of
Medicine
[Mekteb-i Mülkiye-i Tıbbiye]
7 2.7 4 1.5
Imperial Ottoman University
[Dârülfünûn-u Osmanî]
5 1.9 5 1.9
Civil Engineering School
[Hendese-i Mülkiye]
4 1.6 4 1.6
Imperial Trade and Agricultural
School [Ticaret ve Ziraat Mektebi]
3 1.2 2 0.8
School of Fine Arts
[Mekteb-i Sanayi-i Nefise]
1 .4 1 .4
War Academy
[Harbiye Mektebi]
1 .4 0
Universities abroad 5 1.6 3 1.2
Other87 26 10.1 20 7.8
No 179 69.7 195 75.9
TOTAL 257 100.0 257 100.0
Exploring the social background of those 78 families whose children applied to
higher education and making comparisons with the families whose children did not
receive university education might provide deeper insights into the matter, (see
Table 3.11).
87 A comprehensive list of schools that musicians attended is not essential for the analysis.
However, providing a few names will give an idea: Occupational Accounting School, Istanbul
Trade School, Female School of Art, Dersaadet Language School, Female Teacher School,
and so on.
64
Table 3.11. Father occupations compared to children’s higher education (cross
tabulation)
F_OCCUP H_EDU Total
Yes No Unknown
Musician Count 2 9 0 11
% within 18.2% 81.8% 0.0% 100.0%
Official
Functionary
Count 27 43 3 73
% within 37.0% 58.9% 4.1% 100.0%
Religious
Functionaries
Count 7 21 0 28
% within 25.0% 75.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Teacher Count 3 3 0 6
% within 50.0% 50.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Military Count 7 14 2 23
% within 30.4% 60.9% 8.7% 100.0%
Note: Table included certain occupations.
The reason why I give combinations of selected occupations is that some numbers
did not come out as expected and need to be treated carefully. The overall situation
of higher education indicates a negative trend for almost each occupation, with the
exception of teacher fathers, almost half of whose children received higher
education. I pay particular attention to the official functionary families, as their
number is strikingly low in proportion. How to explain the situation? Their offspring
is expected to be better educated. But an upside down trend is apparent. The
proportions are even wider for the children of religious functionary and military
groups, who might also be regarded as members of the literate classes in the
Ottoman society. Following the career paths of 27 children would provide an extra
insight. As anticipated, the majority of these people sought bureaucratic careers (n
= 12 with 44.4 %) or they were specialized in the fields that they have received
higher education (three teachers (11.1 %), two doctors (7.4 %), and three engineers
(11.1 %)). The cases of 43 musicians who did not receive higher education,
however, are challenging. Music was the main source of income for nine of them
(20.9 %), whereas two became journalists (4.7 %), but 23 succeeded in finding a
post in the bureaucracy (53.5 %).
65
Before accounting for this high amount, I will also look into the professions of
religious functionaries’ and military fathers’ offspring. All the religious functionaries
(n = 7) who had higher education served in the public offices. But nine out of 21
children (43.2 %) who did not get university education were also able to find a job in
the Ottoman bureaucracy, whereas only three (14.3 %) continued the occupational
tradition. Military fathers’ six children out of seven with university education were
distributed evenly among bureaucracy, medicine and music (two for each, 28.6 % in
each). Typical in cases with no high education, five out of 14 children served in the
public offices (35.7 %), which shared the bigger proportion with five who chose to
be a musician (35.7 %). The rest was distributed among other occupations.
Though the experiences emerging from each narrative might be diverse; a trend
emerges from the outcomes that higher education was not the point of attraction
for the majority of families with a certain degree of intellectual background. Even
the positive effect of higher education could not all be neglected particularly
considering the cases of religious functionaries, it might be suggested that it was
not so vital and decisive for a bureaucratic career. Addressing the channels of
bureaucratic recruit is not the aim of the thesis; nevertheless, broad range of
factors could have played a role in it, including a network of friends and nepotism.
3.3.4. Private Tutorage
Construction of state schools in the distant corners of empire, adoption of Western
methods, centralized curriculums and standard textbooks are evidences of rapid
state expansion into the mass education in the Hamidian period. Nevertheless,
Fortna stresses that such an approach, demarcated by cultural dualism, bears
considerable risks and leads to understanding the issue in terms of “secular” or
“Western”. A more balanced evaluation of the late Ottoman mass education should
also highlight the priority given to Islamic values to revitalize the Islamic and
Ottoman basis of the empire, as well as the various types of education taken by the
great variety of students no matter how efficiently the system was controlled from
66
the center.88 From a musical perspective, the late Ottoman musician biographies
reflected the imperial diversity that would soon be overcome by more
homogeneous models in the course of nation building. The private tutorage
(muallim-i mahsus) was one example of the imperial pluralities. But how did it
function in the Ottoman daily life? Did it work as an alternative model of school
education or was it connected to it? Addressing these issues will provide insights
into the educational aim of private teaching and lead to a closer look into the social
status of families that hired private tutors for their offspring.
In fact, studies dealt with the Hamidian educational policy provides enormous
statistical data regarding the number of schools, teachers, and students. What I
have not encountered is data corresponding to private tutorage. Therefore, the
practice of it -albeit not commonly- among my sampling cannot be viewed with
overall trends.
Yet the gender segregation was not the issue of the private tutorage. Only five out
of 23 women (21.7 %) in the sampling were instructed through it, so attending
state-run institutions was more common in the Hamidian era.89 Though it was more
frequent in the Hamidian period, schooling girls was in practice since Tanzimat’s
educational reforms.
In terms of situating the private tutorage within the mass education, statistical
outcome reveals that the majority attended mass education. The number of
musicians, for instance, who also joined public school, was 20 (66.7 %) against
seven (23.3 %), with three unknown cases. The amount for the lower middle
education was 16 (53.3 %) against nine (30 %), with five unknown cases. In the
highest level of education, nine musicians who were educated privately had
university education (30 %) while 21 did not (70 %).
88 Benjamin J. Fortna, Imperial Classroom: Islam, the State, and Education in the Late
Ottoman Empire, Oxford University Press, New York, 2002, pp. 202-247.
89 François Georgion, Sultan Abdülhamid, Ali Berktay (trans.), İletişim, Third Edition,
İstanbul, 2015, pp. 347-348.
67
However, there was not such a case of direct access to university without getting
public education in the lower levels.
All those 30 musicians were Muslims with a diverse social background, (see Table
3.12). The statistical table, nevertheless, brings to the forefront two types of family
profiles. Families in official service (43.3 %) and religious functionaries (30 %) that
served either in mosques or in Sufi lodges.
Table 3.12. Privately taught musicians’ family profile
Occupation
Frequency Percent
Official Func. 13 43.3
Religious Func. 4 13.3
Teacher 1 3.3
Sheikh 5 16.7
Artisan 1 3.3
Writer 1 3.3
Military 1 3.3
Unknown 4 13.3
TOTAL 30 100.0
Focusing more onto the official functionary families, it becomes apparent that the
private tutorage was a practice widely applied by the people who had means and
higher social status. Six of them hold the title of Pasha, almost all the highest-ranks
in the sampling. One was in the close circle of Abdulhamid, Mabeynci Faik Bey, and
another held a senior position in the Ministry of Finance (Maliye Nezâreti). One
military doctor and three officials served in the less important positions relatively
but not moderate at all.
On the question of being elite, it was characteristic for non-official families as well.
Abdülkadir Bey’s father, Seyyid Yakub Han, was an immigrant with a notable family
background originating from Kashgar. Nuri Şeyda Bey’s father, Hafız Efendi,
belonged to the artisan class but he was a warden (kethüda). Religious functionary
68
families were indeed elites of their social class. Şerif Muhiddin’s father, Şerif Ali
Haydar was the sharif of Mecca (descendant of the Prophet through his daughter).
One was the professor of religion with a title of chief judge (kadıasker) while others
functioned as imam in the distinguished mosques of Istanbul. Sufi sheikhs
overwhelmingly belonged to the Mevlevî order who led the distinguished Mevlevî
lodges at Istanbul, including Yenikapı and Beşiktaş.
According to Table 3.13, it is apparent that the private tutorage overwhelmingly
concentrated on two fields: regular subjects and language learning. Language
learning was the leading subject matter of tutorage. Considering the centralized
curriculum at the primary level state schools, regular subjects were precisely
equivalent to primary education. The topics taught in these schools were
mentioned previously. It yet included basic religious knowledge (mebadi-i ulûm-ı
diniyye).
Table 3.13. Subjects of tutorage
Subject Frequency Percent
Regular subjects 5 16.6
Language 15 50.0
Memorization of Qur’an 2 6.7
Regular subjects with
language
8 26.7
TOTAL 30 100.0
As the general condition of language learning among musicians will be dealt soon, I
will very brief touch on the issue here. The most preferred language was Persian by
15 musicians out of 23; followed by 13 musicians in Arabic and French by 10. It has
to be noted that, the number of musicians exceeds the total number (n = 23) due to
cases of learning more than one language. Only eight musicians (36.6 %) attempted
to learn one language, while the rest were involved in multiple languages. One case
was placed into the unknown category.
69
Seven out of 13 cases (53.8 %) who was privately educated on regular subjects did
not ever attend primary and secondary level of school education, but four were
enrolled to primary state schools (30.8 %). Indeed, out of these 13 cases, only two
received higher education. Even though the numbers of sampling is small to draw a
conclusion, it nevertheless would not be wrong to say that the private education
operated as an alternative model to the Ottoman mass education particularly at the
primary level for the families of higher social status.
Two musicians were instructed privately in order to memorize the Qur’an.
However, the task was achieved in one case. Ahmet Irsoy (1869-1943), the son of
Zekai Dede (1824-1897), specifically was instructed (kıraat-i seb‘a, aşere, and takrîb)
by Süleyman Efendi who was the imam of Humbarahane Mosque on the shores of
the Golden Horn and hence became a hafiz. The incomplete one was Kemal Batanay
(1893-1981), who attended to a religious school at Fatih, Dârü’l-hilâfeti’l-aliyye,90
but, quitted without graduating.
3.3.5. Learning a Language
The thesis considers non-Muslims as native speakers of the dominant language of
their respective community unless stated otherwise. Thus, the number of
Armenian, Greek or Ladino Spanish languages virtually corresponds to the non-
Muslims in the sampling. Given the situation that not a single biographical account
has mentioned difficulties in communication experienced when using the Ottoman
Turkish language, the study tends to treat it as the standard language for all.
The language statistics are not about proficiency. If only the level is stated explicitly
in biographical accounts, which was a rare situation, it has to be taken as familiarity
at best. Fortna defines the funding shortage and problems in teachers’ training, as
the main reason behind the poor preparation of students for higher education.91 His
assessment supports the way I approach the capacity of language skills in general. It
90 Mübahat S. Kütükoğlu, “Dârü’l-Hilâfeti’l-Aliyye Medresesi” DİA, Vol. 8, 1993, pp. 507-508.
91 Benjamin J. Fortna, Imperial Classroom, p. 116.
70
could presumably be stated that privately taught musicians were better trained and
hence were more skilled in language than the pupils of the state-owned schools.
Table 3.14 is designed to indicate each instructed language together with language
combinations among musicians. In the table Arabic, Persian and French appear as
predominant languages, each of which had distinct cultural undertones.
Table 3.14. Most popular languages
Language Type Frequency Percent
Arabic 3 1.2
Persian 3 1.2
French 31 12.1
Armenian 19 7.4
Greek 7 2.7
German 3 1.2
English 1 .4
Ladino Spanish 3 1.2
NSL 44 17.1
Unknown 93 36.2
Language Combinations
Arabic and Persian 18 7.0
Arabic and French 3 1.2
Persian and French 4 1.6
Arabic, Persian, French 15 5.8
Other 10 4.0
TOTAL 257 100.0
Though Arabic played a central part in the religious school education, medreses,
which was taught regularly in the primary and secondary levels together with
Persian. It was partially due to the fact that a great part of the grammatical
structure and the vocabulary of the Ottoman Turkish were derived from these
languages. Yet culturally, these languages were considered to be fundamental for
cultivated Ottomans.92 French language also became part of this essentiality by the
92 Benjamin C. Fortna, “Education and Autobiography at the End of the Ottoman Empire”,
Die Welt des Islams, New Series, Vol. 41, No. 1, Mar., 2001, pp. 26-30.
71
Tanzimat’s educational reforms and continued to be so in the Hamidian period. The
Regulation of Public Education introduced the French language as an elective course
at the lower secondary level (rüşdiye) curriculum in 1869. The course nevertheless
could be offered only in the more central schools due to insufficient state funding.
In 1880, it became a compulsory course in the secondary education with a view to
provide the latest developments and trends in commerce, agriculture and industry
to students.93 Therefore, culturally speaking, the French language was substantially
associated with the “West rooted” modernization process and meant to be more
secular.94 NSL category points to 44 musicians without any language skills for sure
(17.1 %), which the definition clearly separates it from 93 musicians placed into
unknown category (36.2 %), whose language issue could not be identified and left a
possibility behind.
Table 3.14 also shows the number of multilingual musicians, which means they had
familiarity with more than one language apart from Ottoman Turkish. Their
proportion was 19.6 %, which also contained the language combinations recorded
into other category. The main reason of grouping some musicians under “other” is
their undersized proportion. Table 3.15 brings to the forefront the combinations
that were mostly made up by three dominant languages, namely as Arabic, Persian,
and French.
93 Selçuk Akşin Somel, The Modernization of Public Education in the Ottoman Empire 1839-
1908, p. 175.
94 Interestingly, the non-Muslim community leaders considered Galatasaray Sultanî
exaggaretedly Western-oriented and propagated against their community members’
involvement in this school saying that it advocated a secular worldview, İlber Ortaylı,
İmparatorluğun En Uzun Yüzyılı, İletişim, Fifteenth Edition, İstanbul, 2003, pp. 191-192.
72
Table 3.15. Other language combinations
Language Type Frequency Percent
Arabic, Persian, Armenian 1 .4
French and Armenian 1 .4
French and German 1 .4
Persian, French, English 1 .4
Persian and German 1 .4
Arabic, Persian, French, Greek 1 .4
Arabic, Persian, French and German 1 .4
Arabic, Persian, French and English 1 .4
Arabic, French, English and Italian 1 .4
Arabic, Persian, French, Armenian and
Greek
1 .4
TOTAL 10 4.0
To find out the precise numbers of languages studied by musicians, I totaled the
multiple ones in the previous table. Additionally, Figure 3.4 would indicate the total
number of each language. Apart from the place of ruling languages, the chart
presents how “insignificant” were other Western languages in the intellectual world
of Ottomans, the reasons of which is not the subject matter of this study.
Figure 3.4. Language frequency
45
47
61
22
9
6
4
3
1
Arabic
Persian
French
Armenian
Greek
German
English
Ladino Spanish
Italian
73
3.4. Occupational Continuity
Having information about the fathers’ occupations is decisive for building
arguments on the social backgrounds of musicians. In fact, the study asked the
same question about the mothers and relatives but these variables have not
produced satisfactory results. Even the names of mothers are missing in many
biographical accounts. This kind of rare data could be found in cases where the
mother belonged to a family with a high social status. Suphi Ziya Özbekkan’s (1887-
1966) mother, Ayşe Behiye Hanım, for instance, was the daughter of Abdüllatif
Suphi Pasha (d. 1866). Osman Nihat Akın’s (1905-1959) mother’s name is known
because Rasime Hanım was Ahmet Rasim’s (1864-1932) daughter. Furthermore,
most of the mothers seemed to have no profession or it was omitted from the
accounts at best. For that reason, fathers’ occupations prove to be essential and
valuable to understand the social milieu in which musicians were born (see Table
3.16).
74
Table 3.16. Occupations of fathers
Occupation Frequency Percent
Official Functionary 73 28.4
Religious Functionary 28 10.9
Military 23 8.9
Sheikh/dervish 16 6.2
Artisan 15 5.8
Musician 11 4.3
Teacher 6 2.3
Merchant 3 1.2
Doctor/Pharmacist/Chemist 2 0.8
Writer 1 0.4
Solicitor 1 0.4
Other 8 3.1
Captain 2
Laborer 2
Farmer 1
Mültezim 1
Odabaşı 1
Lower Court,
Bidâyet, member 1
Unknown 70 27.2
TOTAL 257 100
At first sight, the outcome uncovers the musicians’ heterogeneous social
backgrounds. It basically means that many different layers of society shared the
musical knowledge in the late Ottoman period and therefore music could not be
associated with a particular group of people or class. Making a brief touch on the
musicians of previous generation further encourages the situation. Seyyid Abdi
Efendi’s (Basmacı, 1788-1856) father, Halil Efendi was a qadi. The well-known Hacı
Arif Bey’s (1831-1884) father served as a scribe at the religious court of Eyüp.
Dellalzâde İsmail Efendi’s (1797-1869) father, as anticipated from the epithet, dellâl,
was a middleman who bought goods from producers and sold to consumers or
retailers. Three of them spend years as palace musicians, performed for royal
people and instructed music to pupils in the Imperial Music Academy (mûzîka-i
hümâyûn). The list of musicians whose family backgrounds reveal the diversity
75
could easily be expanded for the previous generation. Nevertheless, if we had a
historical study to explore collectively the social basis of musicians who belonged to
the first half of the nineteenth century, it would be possible to follow the trends of
continuity and change for the whole century and even beyond.
Returning back to the table, a high proportion of musicians were born into families
whose professional careers evolved in the Ottoman bureaucracy (more than a
quarter, n = 73). Even though the group includes a few upper-class families, a
considerable amount pursued middle or lower-status official careers. The study also
recorded their offices precisely. Based on that outcome, musicians by and large
were born into the ordinary, middle-rank families. Since the bureaucratic trend
would also continue for the offspring, that is what the variable on the income
sources of musicians tells, the embedment of music into the Ottoman bureaucratic
life deserves an elaborate interpretation.
The cross-tabulation table below shows the interrelation between some selected
occupations held by fathers and children to grasp the continuity and change from
one generation to another.
Table 3.17. Fathers’ occupations – income source of children (cross tabulation)
Fathers’
occupations
Income sources of children
Music
Official
Func.
Religious
Func.
Sheikhs
Artisan
Other
TOTAL
Religious
Functionaries
3 15 4 1 5 28
Sheikhs/derv. 4 3 6 3 16
Artisan 5 5 2 3 15
Musician 9 1 1 11
TOTAL 21 24 6 6 4 9 70
Note: The table contains selected professions for both fathers and the offspring.
76
Probably the first thing regarding the table makes clear is the advancement of
musicians whose main source of income was music. In one generation, the number
almost doubled from 11 to 22. The situation indicates the growing of the career
opportunities in music, which I will elaborate upon in the sixth chapter.
The sheikhs/dervishes variable reveals a solid family tradition in terms of
professional continuity. Sons replaced the sheikh fathers in the lodges, however,
many would experience the abolishment of Sufi lodges in 1925. Therefore, those six
sons in the table, who were officially accepted as sheikhs, also had to struggle to
create a new life. The state intervention was devastating but it seems that they
were able to overcome it. Previous sheikhs and dervishes largely survived in the
music industry, and they did not have to start from scratch. For example, Gavsi
Baykara (1902-1967) was born in the Yenikapı Mevlevî lodge. He was a member of a
sheikh family, whose grandfather was sheikh Mehmed Celaleddin Dede (d. 1908).
His father, sheikh Mehmed Abdülbâki Baykara (1883-1935) 95 was a natural
successor of the post and was still the sheikh of the same lodge when he
experienced the abolishment of the Mevlevî order. Thereby, Gavsi never had the
chance to become an official sheikh in the order. Despite his education, he received
a high-school diploma from Galatasaray Sultanî and having skill in Arabic, Persian,
French and Greek, he preferred to be in the music industry after 1925. Selfconfident
about his musical ability, played in the Istanbul music market (piyasa);
organized concerts, recorded music for different companies, composed music for
the early Turkish movies and taught ney in the Istanbul Municipal Conservatory. All
these musical activities were nevertheless not on a regular basis and so were the
fees he received. As time went by, his career trajectory seemed to turn downward.
The job opportunities were narrowed, and could not provide enough income. In a
95 After 1925, Bâki Dede worked in a wide range of non-regular duties, from being a
member of a commission that classify libraries, to working as a record-keeper in the
Republican People’s Party and from teaching Persian in the Literature Faculty at the
Istanbul University, to teaching literature at the Bakırköy Armenian High School (Bezezyan),
see Ahmet Baki Haksever, “XX. Yüzyılda Üç Mevlevi Şeyhi: Veled Çelebi, Abdülbaki Baykara,
Ahmet Remzi Akyürek”, Tasavvuf, special issue dedicated to Mevlâna, No. 14, Ankara, 2005,
pp. 395-96.
77
society without an unemployment compensation system to support impoverished
musicians, or a Sufi lodge to resort to with confidence, his health had deteriorated
too. He eventually suffered a stroke and died in extreme poverty in 1967.96
The adjective “musician” used before fathers, points to music as a primary source of
income. Eleven fathers were actively involved in music as performers and offered
private lessons to supplement their income. The musician category also contains
music teachers in the state schools. The cross-tabulation table above displays the
strong family tradition in music. The statistical outcome indicates that nine children
out of 11 musician fathers chose to make music professionally. It appears that the
children of musician fathers were encouraged to perform music. The family
influence and free music training as well as the fathers’ established business
connections should be noted. All these factors combined with the aptitude for
music seemed to design the career-paths. For example, Yorgo Bacanos (1900-1977)
could hardly complete the secondary school because of his enthusiasm for music.
His father taught him to play the oud when he was five years old and he was not
even twelve years old when he began to play oud in the fasils together with his
father Haralambos (1860-1915) and uncle Anastas (d. 1939).97
Theoretically, employing children weakens their chance to obtain education.
However, other ten musicians’ school report cards may explain if there is a negative
correlation between music and standard (non-musical) education. Table 3.18 will
indicate other professions to make this comparison. The table covers only the
middle education (rüşdî and idadî) levels to grasp the patterns. The reason why I
exclude the primary (sıbyan) and higher education (âlî) is that musicians by and
large completed the former, and ony minor group continued to the latter.
96 M. Nazmi Özalp, Türk Mûsikîsi Tarihi, Vol. 2, MEB, İstanbul, 2000, p. 291; Interview with
Niyazi Sayın at his house in Üsküdar (May 2016).
97 Χρίστος Τσιαμούλης, Παύλος Ερευνίδης, Ρωμηοί συνθέτες της Πόλης (17ος-20ός αι.)
[The Rum Composers of Istanbul (from 17th to 20th centuries)], Εκδόσεις Δόμος, Αθήνα,
1998, pp. 39-40.
78
Table 3.18. Fathers’ occupations – Education level of children (cross tabulation)
Fathers’
occupations Rüşdî İdadî TOTAL
Musician 5 (45 %) 3 (27 %) 11
Official Func. 52 (71 %) 35 (48 %) 73
Rel. Func. 19 (68 %) 8 (29 %) 28
Sheikh/derv. 9 (56 %) 3 (19 %) 16
Military 17 (74 %) 12 (52 %) 23
Teacher 5 (83 %) 3 (60 %) 6
Artisan 7 (47 %) 4 (27 %) 15
The outcome points that the percentages for the musician fathers’ offspring are in
parallel with the artisan category but not so strikingly lower than other groups. I
assume that the idea of considering each occupation in its own inner world will help
to understand the issue better. Musicians that followed the fathers’ footsteps in
bureaucracy had to at least complete middle education to gain a desk in an official
bureau. The situation was more or less the same for religious functionaries’
offspring. Since a separate chapter will elaborate on the types of musical education,
suffice here is to say that musicians by and large were trained as apprentices and
learned their trade from a skilled employer. In their cases that was mostly father,
mother or a close relative. Without restricting the learning model into that, they
were also trained in the house gatherings and learned by watching other musicians
play. They also attended music schools and listened to other musicians’ recordings.
The religious functionaries included predominantly imam, hatib, and muezzin.
Though small in number, qadi, naib and religious school teachers (müderris) are also
inside the group. Yet the variable contained non-Muslim religious functionaries,
such as an Armenian priest, an Armenian Church chorist (muganni) and a Jewish
cantor. The religious functionaries and the Sufi fathers’ proportions (n = 16) are
acceptable but the outcomes still require analysis. Very much in the same vein with
the Sufi fathers, their families lived in a world of profound musical intensity. As
music was a part of their world, their children developed an early interest in music
79
and grew up in an atmosphere to excel at music. Why their children did not
continue the family tradition like the kids of the musician fathers and chose to seek
career opportunities primarily in official service is a question, which is beyond the
scope of this thesis’s interests.
Another interesting point is that more than half of the musician fathers are non-
Muslims (n = 6). Oud player Hapet Efendi’s (1850-1922) father was a clarinet player
and Bacanos’s father was a lute (lavta) player. The high proportion of non-Muslim
fathers who pursued career in music is significant because the study relied on 257
people in total, only 28 of whom were non-Muslims.
Twenty-three fathers who served in the military were largely middle-rank officers
except a few. The father of Sabiha Tekad (b. 1911) was a colonel, the highest in
military rank we have in our sample. Others were commanders and lieutenants.
Military father’s deep engagement with music is noteworthy. Cevdet Çağla (1902-
1988) and Mebruke Çağla’s (1904-1982) father, Eşref Bey, who was the governor of
a provincial district (kaymakam), regularly held fasıls and gathered musicians at
home. Musa Süreyya (1884-1932) and Fatma Nihal Erkutun’s (1906-1989) father,
Asım Bey (1851-1929), was a military fireman who taught music when he was exiled
to Amasya and was forced to live there for almost twenty years. The father of
Salahaddin Demirtaş (1912-1997), known as Salâhî Dede, was a naval officer and a
Sufi dervish who frequented Mevlevî and Uşşakî lodges in the Kasımpaşa district
together with his son.
The proportion of female musicians whose fathers served in military is worth
mentioning (n = 6), since the study contains 23 female musicians, which the number
makes 8.9 % of the total. The occupational continuity between fathers and offspring
seemed apparently weakest in the military group since not even a single child
adopted a military career, however, high number of female children should be
taken into account. The outcome indicates that eight musicians’ primary source of
income was music, followed by five who were employed in government jobs and
two were doctors.
80
On the part of the 15 artisan fathers, many of whom were shopkeepers, the
situation reflected the social and economic status of musicians. Barbers, carpenters,
sellers in market, caffé-house owners, and gardeners constituted a social group,
which can be considered as lower-middle class. In terms of continuity, the children
of artisan fathers were not so determined to continue the family tradition than the
offspring of the Sufi and musician fathers’ groups. Therefore, the children of
artisans either became a member of the Ottoman bureaucracy or sought musical
employment rather than follow in their fathers’ footsteps. I suppose the issue is
partly related with the social meaning of professions, rather than mere financial
factors.
Presumably, the engagement with music professionally or to pursue a bureaucratic
career were more promising in terms of upward social mobility. However, such a
thesis may oversimplify the problem, because some individual accounts reveal
contrasting stories. Artaki Terziyan’s (1885-1948) father did run a barbershop in
Salonika, and wanted his son to complete his education. Being aware of Artaki’s
aptitude for music, he was afraid that he would be a musician (…oğlumun çalgıcı
olmasından korkuyorum). Soon his father sent him to Istanbul to study medicine. In
spite of strong parental objection, Artaki deliberately left the Imperial Civil School of
Medicine (Mekteb-i Tıbbiye-i Mülkiye-i Şâhâne) for music. Elsewhere, there is a
different story. Behlül Efendi’s father was a stallholder (pazarcı) in Üsküdar. Once
he completed his middle education (rüşdiye), his moderate bureaucratic career
began in the Ministry of Navy (Bahriye Nezâreti). Meanwhile, he made a name for
himself owing to God-given voice. He was often invited to distinguished house
gatherings, meşk. Behlül Efendi (d. 1895) continued to hold more than one hat until
his retirement from office. He gained respect and recognition through music more
than he probably could in bureaucracy but surely much more than being a
stallholder.
Consequently, the individual life stories show that the perception of music varied
according to the social status of people. Thus defining what really motivated them
for music is still demanding. Keeping financial profit at bay, financial insecurities
81
appearing to be more widespread, music provided social advancement; admiration,
recognition and popularity particularly for people socially lower in status. For
people of upper classes the motivation for learning music was rather different. It
was acknowledged as a part of the culture, necessary for cultivation and taste.
However, some cases pointed to the fact that their musical knowledge would turn
out to be the means of support in the difficult times they were to experience. I will
soon deal with the issue in more detail.
3.5. Musicians’ Profession
The title might seem confusing, however, the term “profession” is used to
emphasize the real income source of musicians. As mentioned above, the thesis
underscores the line between making music and earning money out of it. The
statement nevertheless does not mean musicians could not gain a living through
music. In fact, the research findings indicate that a considerable number depended
on music to get by. To call someone a musician, the sole criteria the thesis relied
upon was if she/he composed music. Questioning the ways in which they
economically survived points to another diverse and complicated situation indeed.
Why musicians could not make a living out of the art they performed at the end of
the nineteenth century? There could be many economical and political factors
behind it. It is likely that music was not yet enough to provide them with regular
income because of its limited market conditions in general. But the cultural
viewpoint tells a different story. In the light of biographical accounts, it appears that
some musicians did not approach music as a source of income anyway. Therefore,
such a question might hinder us to understand how actually the music was
perceived and performed. Or perhaps both factors need to be considered critically.
Providing examples from a remote past might be helpful to understand the
relationship between music and its economy. How was then the situation for the
earlier generations? The predominant model was occupational diversity or were the
musicians more “professional” than their counterparts that lived in the late
Ottoman period? The earliest example, which might also be considered as the
unique one, to analyze musicians’ real source of income, could be found in
82
Şeyhülislam Es’ad Efendi’s dictionary of musicians. The source was written between
1728-1730 and thus included musicians from the early eighteen centuries. Despite
the fact that Behar questioned its representativeness partly due to the lack of non-
Muslim and female musicians and prioritization of composers at the expense of
singers, his prosopographical analysis reveals the diverse occupational distribution
among the musicians. The biographical dictionary identified 75 musicians’
occupation out of 97. According to it, not more than 10 % of musicians’ chief source
of income was music. The musician group was involved in various professions,
including state officers, religious functionaries, artisans and members of Sufi orders.
The outcome clearly points to the fact that musicians were predominantly nonprofessional
and hence did not receive a regular income out of music. Yet it brings
to the forefront the diverse sociological basis of music at the turn of the eighteenth
century.98
Table 3.19 shows that things seem to have changed almost two centuries after
Es’ad Efendi reported about musicians. Musicians that constituted the sampling
continued to come from a number of different occupations. It appears that the art
was accessible to people from any segment of society as it was before. Besides, it
shows that more and more musicians gained a living by music than their
counterparts lived in the beginning of the eighteenth century. When the four
musicians placed in the “more than one income” group is added, the proportion
reaches up to 33.6 %, which is incomparable with 10 % in the text of Es’ad Efendi.
98 Cem Behar, Şeyhülislam'ın Müziği, pp. 158-163.
83
Table 3.19. Musicians’ principal source of income
Income Source Frequency Percent
Official functionary 83 32.3
Music 81 31.5
Religious functionary 13 5.1
Teacher (non-music) 11 4.3
Sheikh/Dervish 11 4.3
Artisan 6 2.3
Self-employed 7 2.7
Doctor, Pharmacist 5 1.9
Engineer 5 1.9
Writer, Journalist 4 1.6
Other99 13 5.1
Unknown 8 3.1
MOI 10 4.0
TOTAL 257 100.0
Another distinction was the type of musical employment between the musicians of
Es’ad Efendi and the musicians under study. The professional musicians that Behar
mentions predominantly belonged to palace and served as palace musicians. It was
then the predominant model or probably the only one to make a living out of music.
However, the majority of the professional musicians indicated in the table above
represent just the opposite case. The palace supported musicians shrunk in
number, whereas the significant amount of them earned income through a range of
activities that were carried out “outside the palace”, including providing private
tutorage, engaging to music schools, organizing concerts, recording music, and so
on. The outcome points their proportion almost over 90 %. That clearly points the
changing conditions in the music world as the musical activities expanded and
became more diverse in the late Ottoman period. In other words, the growing
music market made new opportunities available. But at the same time the result
expresses even further reduced role of traditional patronage relationships and the
99 Other category includes one military, three merchants and three solicitors. The group
also contains six people of wealth, whose biographies provide no work record at all.
84
far-limited impact of palace. As mentioned previously, this dramatic shift, which I
call as the emergence of public patronage would open unprecedented channels but
also would introduce new problems to musicians. The chapter will continue to
discuss the impact of change on musicians’ lives.
The MOI (more than one income source) group includes people with multiple
professions, (see Table 3.20). The reason why I gather two occupations holders
under one category is to prevent complicating the table with minor results and not
to distract attention from the main patterns. These occupations in most cases did
not overlap with each other. The rule was once the person either resigned or
quitted the job, involved with the second one. Therefore, I decided to present it in
that way to not to miss any information given in the biographies.
Table 3.20. Musicians with multiple income sources
Source of Income Frequency Percent
Music-Teacher 1 0.4
Music-Artisan 1 0.4
Music-Doctor 1 0.4
Music-Other 1 0.4
Official Func.-Solicitor 2 0.8
Official Func.-Freelance 1 0.4
Religious Func.-Teacher 1 0.4
Religious Func.-Artisan 2 0.8
TOTAL 10 4.0
Rather than dealing with the mainstream groups here (because I will deal with
official functionaries in the subsequent part), I will touch on the life stories of minor
occupational groups. For example, there are five engineers whose occupational
choices should be regarded as more distant from music.100 What made these
100 Yekta Akınci (1905-1980), Ali Galip Alnar (1890-1951), Mehmet Fehmi Tokay (1889-
1959), Sabri Süha Ansen (1908-1990), and İsmail Baha Sürelsan (1912-1998).
85
mechanical, agricultural and civil engineers end up in music? A number of parallel
features could be emphasized in their narratives, like fathers of three were state
officers, two were born elsewhere but all grew up in Istanbul. Three of them
actually graduated from the same school: The Ottoman School of Civil Engineering
(Hendese-i Mülkiye Mektebi) and all continued steadily with the jobs on which they
professionally educated. Three engineers performed in the Istanbul radio and so on.
But the most common and relative part is how they were educated musically.
Except Sabri Süha Ansen who learned to play violin in a music school, Dârü’t-Talîm-i
Musikî, they all grew up at a home in which music was heard regularly. Either their
father or mother were fond of music, played an instrument and regularly invited
musicians to their home for musical gathering, musikî meclisi.
Though I did not add all the occupational groups but only the most frequent ones,
Table 3.21 provides a general insight into the occupational continuity and changes
in two generations. Musician fathers’ children retained the family tradition to a
great extent, whose underlying factors, such as hereditary musical skill, free music
instruction, easy procurement of musical instrument, and established business
networks, would be dealt in a separate chapter. It appears that the highest
occupational discontinuity was experienced in the military and artisan classes,
whose children sought career opportunities mainly in music and state service.
Interestingly, even though both are considered to be religion-based occupations,
there was not any relocation from Sufis to religious functionary class. The
subsequent part will elaborate on the second largest professional group, namely
the government officials.
86
Table 3.21. Fathers’ income source compared to offspring’s (cross tabulation)
Fathers
Offspring
Music Official
Func.
Religious
Func.
Artisan Sheikh/
Dervish
Military
Music
(n = 11)
9 1
Official Func.
(n = 73)
14 37 1 2
Religious
Func.
(n = 28)
4 10 6 1
Sheikh/Derv.
(n = 16)
4 3 6
Artisan
(n = 15)
5 5 2 3
Military
(n = 23)
8 5 1 3
Note: Table included certain occupations.
3.6. Musicians’ Career Paths in the Ottoman Bureaucracy
As stated before, there has been a solid pattern in the Es’ad Dede’s musician
dictionary that music was not the primary source of income and musicians
predominantly had professions other than music (see “Musician’s Profession” part).
This pattern emerges in my sample as well. Why my sample of musicians did not
concentrated on the financial side of music is partially related with it. If I would
have to attach priority to the musicians whose income was derived from music, the
study would automatically eliminate the two third of the musicians in the sampling
and hence it would lead to a misleading conclusion. The research findings also show
that musicians that earned money out of music steadily increased in number from
the beginning of the eighteenth century to the late Ottoman period. Only less than
10 % of the Es’ad Dede’s musicians made a living out of music, whereas it is slightly
the largest group in my sampling with 33.6 % (see Table 3.17). The causes of this
change will be discussed in detail in the sixth chapter.
To interpret the connections between bureaucracy and music in the late Ottoman
Istanbul, a detailed examination of the official functionaries is necessary since they
87
constituted the largest part of the “unpaid” musicians.101 According to the statistical
outcome, musicians who served as civil officials constitute the largest group in the
sampling. Table 19 indicates that 83 musicians were officials, making 32.3 % of the
total. Three more should be added from “more than one occupation” group, which
eventually makes 86 officials (33.4 %). In fact, the situation was not different at all
one generation ago. Seventy-three fathers were civil servants that make 28.4 % of
the total (see Table 3.16). As stated before, two occupations revealed strong
continuity from fathers to sons. One was musicians with nine out of 11 fathers (81.8
%) and official functionaries with 37 out of 73 fathers (50.7 %).
Table 3.22 clearly points out that civil officials were mainly born in Istanbul. To
compare it to the birthplace figures of Istanbul in the overall musician population
(72.4 %, see Table 4), the ratio even exceeds it. The birthplace proportions for other
occupations lead to Istanbul as well. 67.1 % of musicians, 69.2 % of religious
functionaries, and 77.8 % of Sufis were born in the city. Indeed, the outcome has
already showed that a significant number of non-Istanbul born musicians moved to
Istanbul in the early ages of their life. Thus, the proportion of musicians that grew
up in Istanbul reach up to 96.1 % in total. The trend runs in parallel to a great extent
for the official functionaries. All the rest of the civil officials that were born outside
of the city (n = 10) later on were moved to and resided in Istanbul.
101 It is noteworthy that the part will excessively benefit from the offical personnel registers
of the Ministry of Interior (under the title BOA, DH.SAİD). Nevertheless, these official
records do not provide any information about their engagement with music. Two
biographical accounts about the same person’s life, one an official record and the other
written by a third-person, do not overlap except the principal parts, including birth place,
birth date, the name of father, so on. The only exceptional case is the official biography of
Kazım Bey (Uz, 1873-1943), in which there is information about music since he wrote books
on music and on the Persian language and needed to obtain official licence to publish,
“…Lügatçe-i Istılahat-ı Musikiyye ve Musikî Istılahatı ve Edvar ve Musikî ve Sualli Cevaplı
Kavaid-i Farisî nam Türkçe eserlerini Maarif Nezaret-i Celilesi'nin dört kıta ruhsat-ı
resmiyesiyle tevarih-i muhtelifede tabʻ ve neşr ettirmiştir…”, BOA, DH.SAİD, 110-23 (13).
88
Table 3.22. Official functionaries’ birthplaces
Vilâyet Frequency Percent
İstanbul 75 87
Edirne 2 2.32
Hâlep 2 2.32
Hüdavendigâr (Bursa) 1 1.16
Aydın 1 1.16
Girit 1 1.16
Outside Ottoman territory 3 3.48
Unknown 1 1.16
TOTAL 86 100
As mentioned above, 50.7 % of the official functionaries’ fathers were civil servants.
What was the occupation of other half part then? According to the research
findings, only one father was musician. 14 % of fathers were religious functionaries;
equal number of fathers was either worker in a skilled trade or belonged to military
class (5.8 % for each). 3.5 % were Sufi sheikhs, and 7 % percent were distributed to
other professions. The occupations of 18 civil servants’ fathers were unknown (20.9
%).
3.6.1. Education Records of Musicians in the Ottoman State Service
Regarding the education levels of official functionaries, I paid particular attention to
the children of literate classes, including official functionaries, religious
functionaries, and the members of the military. The expected outcome was that
their children would be well educated. The biographical accounts reveal that the
trend was other way around. It was not they but the children of less-educated
families that showed more interest in getting higher level of education. What was
equally suprising was the career paths of civil officials’ children. Statistically, 58.9 %
did not receive higher education (n = 43), however, more than half of them could
still be employed in the Ottoman bureaucracy. I argue that the higher level of
education was not needed in their cases. They received education as much as the
89
job (official post) required and a considerable number of them served in the public
offices.
Table 3.23 shows that there are differences between the two sets of numbers;
however, the trends are not contrary to each other. The higher concentration of the
official functionaries both on the secondary and higher levels of education is
reasonable. Although I stated previously that children of the literate classes poorly
received higher level of education, there is not any discrepancy between my words
and the outcome above. The occupational continuity for the children who were
coming from official functionary families was only 50.7 %, which helps to explain
the situation.
Table 3.23. Official’s education levels compared to overall statistics
School
Officials Total
Frequency Percent Frequency Percent
Primary 81 94.2 211 82.2
Secondary 1
(rüşdî)
73 84.9 161 62.6
Secondary 2
(idadî)
39 45.3 103 40.1
Higher 31 36 62 24.1
Regarding the higher education institutions, some schools were clearly more
popular among those 31 state functionaries. Eight officials were educated in the
School of Law (Mekteb-i Hukuk), whereas seven in the School of Administration
(Mekteb-i Mülkiye). Only two were from the School of Trade and Agricultural
(Ticaret ve Ziraat Mektebi). Three officials received education in the School of
Medicine (Mekteb-i Tıbbiye-i Mülkiye), Civil Engineering School (Hendese-i Mülkiye),
and War Academy (Harbiye Mektebi). “Other” category included 11 government
officials that received higher education from a number of different schools.102
102 Some of these schools were Dersaadet Language School, Ottoman University
(Dârülfünûn-ı Osmânî), Istanbul Trade School, and School of Teacher Education.
90
Regarding the higher education degree holders in the musician sampling, 78
musicians attended but 62 succeded in graduating (79.5 %). The proportion for the
officials was analogous to that. Twenty-three out of 31 officials completed the
education and hence received a diploma (74.2 %).
The statistical outcome regarding the private tutorage indicates only 15 official
functionaries (17.5 %). The proportion is slightly higher than the overall ratio, which
was 12 % (see Table 3.13). Language learning was the most popular subject of
private learning, which was chosen by seven officials. Three officials taught regular
subjects, which were analogous to primary level of education, whereas other three
were taught privately on the same two subjects.
Table 3.24. Civil officials’ language familiarity
Language Type Frequency Percent
Arabic 2 2.3
Persian 1 1.2
French 17 19.8
English 1 1.2
NSL 20 23.3
Unknown 25 29.1
Language Combinations
Arabic and Persian 7 8.1
Arabic and French 1 1.2
Persian and French 2 2.3
Arabic, Persian, French 7 8.1
Persian, French, English, German 1 1.2
Arabic, Persian, French, Indian 1 1.2
Arabic, Persian, French, Greek,
Armenian
1 1.2
TOTAL 86 100.0
I will not mention the cultural codes of each language, since it was discussed in the
“Learning a Language” part. Once the language combinations are totaled, the
precise amount of each language emerges. Therefore, three languages were the
91
most popular among the official functionaries and ran parallel to the general
patterns, (see Table 3.24). Twenty-eight officials were familiar with the French
language. Twenty officials knew Persian, while 19 were familiar with the Arabic
language. Abdülkadir Töre (1872-1945) should be noted not only for his knowledge
on several languages, but being the only one among the musicians with his
familiarity with the Indian language (probably Urdu). He was descended from an
Amir family and his family immigrated to Istanbul from Kasghar when he was a
child.103
The reason why Armenian, Greek and Ladino, which were spoken languages in the
Ottoman state, did not appear in the statistics is directly related to the fact that
there was not any non-Muslim in the official functionary group.104 The only official,
who was familiar with Greek and Armenian, was Mehmed Nuri Şeyda Bey (1866-
1901).105 Interestingly, neither Rona nor İbnülemin mentioned Greek and Armenian
among the languages Nuri Şeyda was familiar with. He was a graduate of Military
School at the secondary level (Askerî Rüşdiye) and did not continue to higher
education. According to his biographical material in the Rona’s book, he was a self-
103 “Evvela mekatib-i müteaddidde ve muahharen muallim-i mahsusdan Arabî ve Farsî ve
Türkçe ve hesab ve tarih ve coğrafya fünun-u müdevven ile bir mikdar İngilizce ve Fransızca
talim etmişdir Farisî ve Türkçe tekellüm ve kitâbet eder Hind lisanına âşinadır”, BOA,
DH.SAİD, 32-73 (38).
104 The overwhelming existence of Muslims in the group of officials was largely owing to
the inadequate biographical material of the non-Muslim musicians in general. Vitali Efendi
(d. 1935), for instance, was a kanun player who served in the Ministry of Post and
Telegraphs for many years. I spent hours in the Prime Minister’s Ottoman Archieves to find
out his personal register, which turned out to be an inconclusive effort. Available parts of
his life story was so fragmented that I could not include him into the musician sampling.
Despite that, the proportion of non-Muslims employed in the late Ottoman officialdom in
general was substantially positive compared to minority members in other bureaucraciest,
see the collective biography studies of Abdulhamit Kırmızı, which I stated in the
bibliography.
105 “Muallim-i mahsustan okumuştur Arabî ve Farisîye âşinadır Türkçe okur yazar ve
Ermenice ve Rumca ve Fransızca tekellüm ve kitâbet eder”, DH.SAİD, 45-117 (60). For a
discussion on the various definitions of language proficiency in the Ottoman official
records, see Olivier Bouquet, Sultanın Paşaları (1839-1909), pp. 297-337.
92
taught multilingual, kendi kendine çalışarak tahsilini ilerletmiştir.106 In fact, apart
from being an official, he was a writer, who published a history book (Mücmel
Tarih-i Enbiya, Cihan Matbaası, İstanbul, 1310) and wrote polemical articles on
music to daily news, İkdâm (1894-1928). He was working on a biographical
dictionary on the nineteenth century musicians, Tezkire-i Musikîşinasân, but could
not live long enough to complete it.
3.6.2. Career Patterns of Musicians in the Ottoman State Service
Based on the years of entering the state service, 40 officials were identified out of
86. The earliest date of first appointment is 1847, while the latest is 1920. Indeed,
three officials’ first appointments were in the Early Republican years: 1925, 1932
and 1936. Ten officials entered the service between 1847 and 1871, whereas the
majority’s first appointment date was between 1880 and 1903 (75 %).
Statistics on the first appointed city of the officers reveal that they predominantly
entered the government jobs in Istanbul. Seventy-five out of 86 officials began to
work in Istanbul, which makes 87 % in the total. Six officials were distributed among
Hüdavendigar, Ankara, Aydın and Tuna provinces in their first appointments.
Biographical accounts did not mention the first appointed city of five officials.
It appears that more than half of the official functionaries did not leave Istanbul
during their professional careers. Regarding the last place of appointment, the
outcome points out Istanbul again. Fourty-eight out of 54 officials ended their
official career in Istanbul (56 %). More common way of departure was retirement.
İsmail Fethi [Fennî] Bey (1856-1926) was an accountant in the Ministry of the
Interior (Dâhiliye Nezâreti) when he retired on 13 July 1909.107 The departure from
the job might be so suden as in the case of Mustafa Nuri Bey (Menapirzâde, 1841-
106 Mustafa Rona, 50 Yıllık Türk Musıkisi, pp. 236-237; İbnülemin Mahmut Kemal İnal, Hoş
Sadâ, p. 73.
107 “Müşarünileyhin 1327 senesi Cemaziyelahiresinin on dokuzunda 24 Haziran sene 1325
2196 kuruş maaşla tekaüdü icra edilmiştir” BOA, DH.SAİD, 26-381 (193).
93
1906).108 Mehmed İzzet Efendi (1861-1894) was another similar case. He was only
33 years old when he died on 13 September 1894. Since his date of first entry to
official service was on 20 March 1890, he could work in the Dersaadet Post Office
for only three years and nine months.109
Lemi Atlı was dismissed in December 1908 due to an official order, which was called
tensikat.110 It was a huge operation in the Ottoman bureaucracy to decrease the
number of official functionaries right after the Second Constitutional era in 1908. In
fact, it was more about undermining the dominance of officials who were thought
to be pro-Hamidian.111
Kazım Uz’s case (1873-1943) is a good example of dismissal, as another way of
departure from the service encountered in the personnel registers. He entered into
the civil service when he was 19 years old. His career trajectory included working as
an accountant in the Ministry of Post and Telegraphs (Posta ve Telgraf Nezâreti) for
a year. He resumed his official career in the Imperial Music School due to an official
order in July 1893, bâ-irade-i seniyye-i hazret-i padişahi musika-i hümâyûn'a nakl ve
neferlik ile kaydolunarak. However, he did not last long and resigned from his duty
in March 1895, the reason of which was unknown, hizmet-i mezkûreden istifâen
108 “Müşarünileyh 1324 senesi Cemaziyelevvelinin yirmi beşinde irtihal-i dârü'l-beka eylediği
Hazine-i Hassa-i Şahane Sicil Şubesi'nin 3 Eylül sene 1322 tarihli vukuat pusulasında beyan
kılınmıştır”, BOA, DH.SAİD, 25-101 (53).
109 “Mumaileyhin maaşı 1312 senesi Rebiülevvel onikisinde 140 guruşa iblağ edilmiş ve şehri
mezkûrun yirmi dördündünde vefat etmişdir”, BOA, DH.SAİD, 65-249 (126).
110 “326 senesi Zilkadenin on dokuzunda memuriyetinin lağvından dolayı kadro haricinde
kalıp devletçe müttehiz karara tevfîkan ol-vakt tahsis kılınan 1500 guruş maaşı 327 senesi
Recebinin yirmi yedisinden itibaren tensikât kanununa tevfîkan 685 guruşa tenzil etmişdir”,
BOA, DH.SAİD, 169-427 (215).
111 About the motivations behind the law and its drastic impact on the Ottoman
bureaucracy, see Erkan Tural, “II. Meşrutiyet Dönemi’nde Devletin Restorasyonu
Bağlamında 1909 Teşkilat ve Tensikat Kanunu”, Prof. Ergün Aybars (Superviser),
Unpublished PhD Thesis, Dokuz Eylül Üniversitesi, AİİTE, İzmir, 2006; Abdulhamit Kırmızı,
“Meşrutiyette İstibdat Kadroları: 1908 İhtilalinin Bürokraside Tasfiye ve İkame Kabiliyeti”,
100. Yılında Jön Türk Devrimi, Sina Akşin, Sarp Balcı, Barış Ünlü (eds,) Türkiye İş Bankası
Kültür Yayınları, İstanbul, 2010, pp. 333-355.
94
infikâk eylemiş. Weirdly, the next phase in his career began in the Ministry of
Finance (Mâliye Nezâreti) in January 1896, but as a teacher in the public schools. His
teaching career seemed to expand to many fields. Taught accounting, geography,
the Ottoman language and Persian in the Topkapı Rüşdî School until Septepber
1898. A month later he was assigned to the Correspondence Office of the Ministry
of Finance (Mâliye Nezâret-i Celilesi Mektubî Kalemi). From November 1900 on, he
was additionaly and voluntarily employed as a teacher of mechanics and algebra at
the school of which he was a graduate, ilâveten fahrî olarak Dârüşşafaka
Mektebi'nin sekizinci sınıf fenn-i mihanik ve altıncı sınıf ilm-i cebir dersleri muallîm
muavinliklerinde bulunduğu ve mâh-ı mezkûrun on birinde 1 Eylül sene 1318 [14
September 1902] yine fahrî olarak mekteb-i mezbûrun altıncı sınıf ilm-i cebir
muallîmliğine tayin… In March 1906, he was appointed as mümeyyiz in the Office of
Personal Registeries of the Ministry of Finance, Mâliye Nezâret-i celilesi Sicill-i Ahvâl
Şubesi mümeyyizliğine bi't-terfi resm-i tahlifi icrâ… In September 1909, he was
transferred to a highly prestigious position with a stipend more than the double of
what he was earning before: The inspector of Rüşdî Schools. Nevertheless, he
remained only two months in the position due to an assignment, which ordered him
to investigate the provincial secondary schools. The record did not list the places he
was expected to visit but it was clear that he did not want to leave Istanbul.
Eventually, he was dismissed from his official career due to his disobedience in
November 1909.112
As evident seen in the case of Kazım Uz, the shift between ministries during the
professional career was not a rare practice in the Ottoman officialdom during the
Hamidian period. Since the civil officials’ flow between government departments is
not the subject matter of the thesis, I will not further elaborate on similar
situations. Table 3.25 will indicate in which ministries they were first appointed to.
112 “şehr-i mezkûrun on yedisinde [1327 Şevval] 19 Teşrinievvel sene 1325 müfettişlik
vazife-i asliyesinden dolayı taşraya iʻzamı mukarrer iken istinkâf eylemesine mebni
memuriyetinden infisâl ettirildiği”, BOA, DH.SAİD, 110-23 (13).
95
Table 3.25. Ministries of first appointments
Ministry Frequency Percent
Ministry of Post and Telegraphs (Posta ve Telgraf
Nezâreti)
7 8.1
Municipalities (Belediye) 1 1.2
Ministry of Finance (Mâliye Nezâreti) 8 9.3
Foreign Ministry (Hâriciye Nezâreti) 5 5.8
Ministry of the Interior (Dâhiliye Nezâreti) 7 8.1
Ministry of Justice (Adliye ve Mezâhib Nezâreti) 9 10.5
Customs Administration (Rusûmât Emaneti) 6 7.0
Ministry of Education (Maarif Nezâreti) 3 3.5
Public Debt Administration (Duyûn-i Umumiye
İdâresi)
1 1.2
Imperial Office of Land Registry (Defter-i Hakanî) 2 2.3
Ministry of Public Works and Trade
(Nâfia ve Ticâret Nezâreti)
4 4.7
Ministry of Forest, Mines & Agriculture
(Orman ve Meâdin ve Ziraat Nezâreti)
1 1.2
Ministry of Police (Zabtiye Nezâreti) 1 1.2
Ministry of the Imperial Treasury
(Hazine-i Hâssa-i Şâhâne Nezâreti)
2 2.3
Ministry of Military Affairs (Bâb-ı Seraskeri) 6 7.0
Ministry of Naval Affairs (Bahriye Nezâreti) 5 5.8
Imperial Music Academy (Mûzîka-i Hümâyûn) 2 2.3
Regie Company (Reji Şirketi) 1 1.2
Republican Period113 12 13.9
Other 2 2.3
Unknown 1 1.2
TOTAL 86 100
Two musicians in the “other” group were Fahri Bey (Kopuz, 1885-1968) and Rauf
Yekta Bey (1871-1935). Fahri Bey entered the office in the Council of State (Şûrâ-yı
Devlet) in 1903. After serving only six months, he was transferred to the office in
the Ministry of Military Affairs (Bâb-ı Seraskeri, which was transformed into the
Harbiye Nezâreti on 22 July 1908). There he served until the end of the World War I.
113 The “republican period” category consisted of 12 musicians whose professional careers
evolved in the republican institutions due to their birthdates that were largely after 1900s.
96
He resigned from the office on his own will in 1918. Afterwards he devoted all his
life to music. Rauf Yekta Bey (1871-1935) was the second musician in the group
whose official career began in 1883 in the Imperial Council (Dîvân-ı Hümâyûn). It
seems that when his personal register was written he was still in office. The last
entry to his register was on 5 September 1909, which informs that his professional
status was elavated to a higher position with an increase in the salary.114 Yet his
official career continued until 1922 in the same office.
Eventually, more than two third of musicians in my sampling had other occupations
than music calls for an alternative perspective to reconsider music as a profession. I
argue that music was part of the Ottoman urban culture and it was not perceived as
a profession particularly among the official functionaries. Otherwise it would not be
possible to understand the internal working of music in the late Ottoman Istanbul,
whose significant part of members engaged with it on an unpaid basis. I believe that
even the term “amateur” might be used, but only to emphasize the musicians’
limited financial gain from music rather than implying that they did not have the
necessary skills or expertise of the art. Above all, I suggest that the difference
between “professional” and “amateur” musicians under study manifested itself in
the perception of music and hence in the musical output. I will further develop the
argument in the following chapters.
3.7. Causes of Mortality
A variety of factors, including socioeconomic conditions, ethnic origins, sex and age
compositions, high-risk periods like wartimes, epidemics, environmental
catastrophes such as dry periods, floods and many other circumstances may be the
origin of death. Yet sometimes not a single factor but a combination of factors may
lead to it. Therefore, as anticipated, the death rates for a given society might
change over time either in an upward or downward trend according to the
114 “327 senesi Şabanının on dokuzunda 23 Ağustos sene 1325 icra kılınan tensikâtta iki bin
kuruş maaşla kalem-i mezkûr mümeyyizliğine terfi edildiği salifü'z-zikr müzekkerede beyân
kılınmıştır”, BOA, DH.SAİD, 46-285 (144).
97
improvements or deteriorations in socioeconomic conditions. Yet technological
advancement in medicine and more investments in public health policies are other
influential factors that lead to change in mortality rates. Given the plenty of forces,
there was not a standard list of the causes of mortality and hence demographers
have constructed many different models to grasp the patterns of mortality.115
Determining the cause of death is a challenging task even for experts.116
My previous variable model categorized the deaths into the two general ones:
Natural and age associated (premature) deaths. My aim was to divide and examine
the cases of death according to that. The point of demarcation was the ages
between 60 or 65 and after. Nevertheless, the validity of this approach is in
question by recent epidemiological studies. Though to the association of aging with
the serious chronic diseases is credited, it stresses the difference between
association and causation. Therefore, the assumed age-associated diseases should
be reconsidered because they can be prevented and even reversed.117 In parallel
with the argument, I reorganized the dataset and concentrated on the causes of
death rather than the age as a parameter. Additionally, Figure 3.5 will provide raw
data on the composition of death dates.
Regarding the causes of death among my group of musicians, the proportion of
those whose cause of death is definable makes 30 % in total. Giving the large
proportion of unknown category, it would not be reasonable to draw conclusions
115 Ian Bowen, Economics and Demography, Routledge, 2012, pp. 22-37.
116 An elderly, for instance, may have died due to a combination of health problems leaving
an uncertainty behind in terms of identifying the factor that actually led directly to death. It
might also be the case that many factors together contributed to the fatal outcome.
Therefore, it is an issue of great complexity, see Monica Pace, Eric Jougla, Barbara Leitner,
Jan Kardaun, Torsten Schelhase, Anne Gro Pedersen, Peter Ocko, and Gleb Denisson,
“Causes of Death Statistics – People over 65”, Online Publication, September 2017,
http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statisticsexplained/
index.php?title=Causes_of_death_statistics_-_people_over_65 (accessed on 29
June 2018).
117 Luigi Fontana, “Modulating Human Aging and Age-Associated Diseases”, Biochim
Biophys Acta, 1790 (10), 2009 Oct., pp. 1133-1138.
98
on the issue. Despite the raw data’s shortcomings, Table 3.26 still provides insights
into the trends of death among musicians.
Table 3.26. Causes of mortality
Category Frequency Percent
Ischaemic Heart
Disease
41 16.0
Respiratory Diseases 8 3.1
Cancer 6 2.3
Diabetes 4 1.6
Accident 3 1.2
Alcoholism 5 1.9
Suicide 1 0.4
Other118 9
3.5
Unknown 180 70.0
TOTAL 257 100.0
The category of Ischaemic Heart Disease, also known as coronary heart disease, was
linked directly to the circulatory system. The group accounted for forty-one deaths
(16 %), which makes it the most common cause of mortality among musicians.
Heart attack, stroke and brain (cerebral) hemorrhage comprised the group. The
category of respiratory diseases is the second most common cause of death among
musicians (3.1 %). They are defined as chronic lower respiratory diseases that cause
difficulty in breathing and are usually connected to allergic reaction, including as
asthma, influenza, bronchitis, typhoid, pneumonia, and tuberculosis.
Deaths resulting from alcoholism, various types of accidents and suicide have been
regarded as external causes of death. Alcoholism, for example, is not a medically
118 The other category includes nine deaths resulted from dysentery (two cases), cholera,
and yellow bile. Two musicians could not recover from surgery and died soon after. One
was related with the appendicitis, another was not defined. Though the accounts did not
mention the origins of, two musicians were disabled by illness and were house bounds.
99
recognized cause of death but rather the health problems caused by it is taken into
consideration. It is regarded as one of the ways of intentional self-harm together
with suicide and hence the cases are subject to psychological research.
Figure 3.5. Age of death composition
The median age of death for the musician population under study was 71. The
youngest date of death was 30, while the oldest musician age was 96. The most
frequent ages of death were 75 and 76. Twelve and 11 musicians have died at these
ages respectively. The rarest ages for death were 30 and 96 , which were also in
parallel with the yougest and oldest ages of death.
3.8. Lives Struck by Poverty
It is true that the biographical accounts did not contain rich data on the medical
(technical) origins of death and hence did not leave much space to deal analytically
with the patterns. But a cautious reading of biographies brings other issues to the
forefront. These might provide important insights into the social and economic
positions of musicians in the late Ottoman society. 119 Though unintended,
119 My argument on the death as a social phenomenon differs distinctly from the
anthropological approach, which questions the socially constructed meanings of death and
analyses the diverse forms of death rituals that provides insights into the complexities of
death, rebirth and the religious beliefs, Death on the Move: Managing Narratives, Silences
and Constraints in a Trans-National Perspective, Philip J. Havik, José Mapril and Clara
Saraiva (eds.), Cambridge Scholars Publishing, UK, 2018; Taming Time, Timing Death: Social
1121111121
33323
55
3
9
2
67
4
2
554
6
98
10
7
4
9
3
1211
8
6
9
66
434
1
5
3
6
1
3
1
3
111
23
30
33
36
43
46
49
51
53
55
58
60
62
64
66
68
70
72
74
76
78
80
82
84
86
88
90
93
95
Unknown
Frequency
100
biographical accounts highlighted the musicians’ latter years while describing the
conditions prior to death. Expressions such as “she/he died in isolation”, “passed
away due to lack of care”, or “so destitute the musician was that could not even
afford medical care”, are not infrequent. Yet a number of musicians have died as
nursing home residents, the situation appears to be another indicator of social
isolation and the state of severe poverty. Alcohol dependence was another
frequent factor that had a role in a number of musicians’ death.
Leon Hanciyan (1860-1947) is a typical case. He became impoverished during the
older ages after having a long period of musical success and popularity. He officially
instructed musicians in the palace and the members of the notable families. His
fragmented biographical account did not reveal the factors that contributed to his
downward trend in music, and why he could not cope with it. All we know is that he
spent years previous to his death in the Mental Hospital in Bakırköy, where his life
eventually ended in poverty and misery.
The devastated life stories were more than a few and were not peculiar to people
who solely depended on music. Hafız Aziz Efendi (1856-1923) was the imam of the
Ortaköy Mosque. He was taught music by Zekai Dede and Aziz Efendi and was
acknowledged by his immense repertoire among musicians. He taught music to
many at his mosque, also at numerous Sufi lodges. Though little was known about
his life after the retirement, he became fully destitute to the extent that İbnülemin
could not believe the circulating stories about him begging in the streets until he
eyewitnessesed it one night in the Çemberlitaş neighborhood, “kameti iki kat olarak
sokaklarda dolaşırdı…Çenberli taşın dibinde çömelüb istiane ettiğini görerek
fevkalâde müteessir oldum”. Yet the case implies that the monthly payment made
by the state for the pensioners was either not regular or too meager for economic
survival.
Technologies and Ritual, Dorthe Refslund Christensen and Rane Willerslev (eds.),
Routledge: Lodon, New York, 2016.
101
Mahmud Aziz Bey (1870-1929) was another state officer whose father was a
renowned musician, Tanburi Ali Efendi (1836-1890), the second imam of Sultan
Abdülaziz. A musician by blood, he played tanbur like his father. According to his
personal register, he was employed by the Ministry of Trade and Public Works
(Nafia ve Ticaret Nezâreti) on May 24, 1892. His last record belongs to September
22, 1909, which reports that his stipend was raised to 800 piastre.120 The reason
why the record ends after that is practically related with the date of issue. When his
personal record was written in 1909, he was still working. İbnülemin’s statements
for the period between 1909 and 1929 are both inadequate and inconsistent. He
mentions that the Agricultural Bank moved to Ankara but he did not, so he was
dismissed in 1909. In fact, the move was during the War of Independence. Due to
the political conditions in Istanbul, the gold deposits of the bank were secretly
brought to Ankara and the bank ceased to operate in Istanbul. It is probable that he
was dismissed in 1909, because of the general reduction (tensikât) in the Ottoman
bureaucracy right after the Second Constitutional era in 1908. Meanwhile, the
house of his father’s friend where he was residing was destroyed by fire. The date
of the fire is again unknown. Following this, Mahmud Aziz Bey disappeared from the
social network and he eventually was found dead suffering from hunger in 1929.
Kanunî Mehmet Bey (1859-1927) is another story of suffering and a rare example of
musicians whose different life stages, transition points and struggle to adapt to new
situations are detectable in his biographical narrative. He was dismissed from the
Imperial Music Academy (mûzîka-i hümâyûn) in 1909. The next step was the critical
decision to seek a career beyond music, because he believed that it would not
provide more than basic necessities. He first sold his instrument, and later his house
in order to procure financial resource. He moved to Adana as the base of his
(unknown) business activities, but the adventure did not last long for Mehmet Bey.
He had to return back to Istanbul due to his unsuccessful economic activities, which
eventually forced him to continue with a state pension. Soon after, he was
employed as a cleaner (hademe) in a state school through the network of an old
120 BOA, DH.SAİD, 59-399 (201).
102
friend. The work was not sustainable for various reasons, including the difficulty of
the work and the workfellows’ insulting behaviors. Thus he soon left the job. It
seems that the conditions in the last stage of his life was beyond his control. In the
state of severe poverty he resorted to one of his music student’s house, where he
eventually died in 1927.
A handful of cases indicate that the destitution was not a rare phenomenon among
musicians. Even more musicians might be added to the list of those who lived below
the acceptable living standards. The musicians who went through hard times were
from every corner of life, including previous state officers, official palace musicians,
musicians by profession, and so on. The causes of musicians’ deteriorating socioeconomic
conditions were many and complex. Some of these cases seem to be
related to the disruption of the established networks of musicians based on the
imperial order. It has to be emphasized that innumerable well-to-do families or
political notables regulated the financial support of musicians during the Hamidian
era, whereas the role of the palace in this mechanism was negligible. These
connections collapsed due to political changes, which drastically affected the social
milieu of certain musicians. The alterations are well depicted in the life accounts of
Cemil Bey (1872-1916) and Refik Fersan (1893-1965). I call the process an external
force, which was beyond their control.
But cases such as Kel Ali Bey (1831-1899) require an alternative analysis because
poverty hit him well before the aforementioned socio-political changes had taken
place. As a palace musician, he experienced an impoverished life after retirement.
He could barely sustain himself through irregular music classes at a coffee house in
Kadıköy.
Given the complexity of the issue, I suggest that the larger portion of the problem
was related to the lack of future planning. It was an internal factor, which might be
confronted with personal capacity and initiative. It seems that they thought that the
advantages they acquired from music would regularly continue and failed to plan
for old age. Put differently, once the financial challenges emerged, many musicians
103
were unequipped to deal with the situation. Nevertheless, the case of Faize Hanım
(1894-1954) shows that severe poverty did not only hit men but was also shared by
female musicians. It seems that the situation was not peculiar to the Ottoman
musicians; many English musicians were also beset with financial challenges. The
problem seemed to be overcome, at least partially, through musical charity
organizations whose history goes back to the eighteenth century. The Royal Society
of Musicians (RSM), the first musician charity society in England that was founded
by more than 200 people in 1738, the majority of whom were musicians, with
money received from benefit concerts, donations from nobles and from the public.
Similar benefit societies followed the footsteps of RSM in England throughout the
nineteenth century to assist both male and female musicians and their families.121 It
is true that such corresponding organizations were heavily needed in Istanbul as
well. Altough the individual cases show that the chances of survival for the Ottoman
musicians who ran into difficulties were very low, they did not fully surrender to the
problems they faced. There were sings of collective acting. I will discuss the issue in
more detail in order to explore the social basis of the music schools in the sixth
chapter.
3.9. Conclusion
The debate on the demographic characteristics of musicians throughout the chapter
sought to underscore certain characteristics. The empire’s vast territories clarified
the position of Istanbul as being the center of music production, as it was in the
previous century. The concentration of non-Istanbul born musicians in the city
further supported the argument. The study treated musicians’ educational record
as a way to assess their intellectual depth. The statistical data revealed that the
musicians were not illiterate and received as much education as others. The
imperial diversity in educational matters was apparent in the musicians’ life
narratives, even though the era witnessed the rapid standardization of mass
education. The principal aim of tracing the occupational continuity was to
121 Deborah Rohr, The Careers and Social Status of British Musicians, 1750-1850, A
Profession of Artisans, Cambridge University Press, United Kingdom, 2004, pp. 157-158;
http://www.royalsocietyofmusicians.org/ (accessed on 6 July 2018).
104
understand how music was regarded as a professional occupation. Music was highly
preferred by the offspring of musician, Sufi and artisan fathers, whereas it was
limited among children of the families in the state service and religious
functionaries. My interpretation was that music had more to offer to people with
lower social status and income and it might be understood in terms of social
advancement, recognition and popularity. However, it is more likely that it meant
unpredictable future with financial insecurities and irregular job vacancies for
others. My second explanation was related with the perception of music. It seems
that music for many of the musicians in the sampling was internalized as part of the
urban identity and not considered to be profitable. The bulk of the musicians in the
sampling, including official or religious functionaries, military officers, teachers
(non-music), traders and workers in a skilled trade that were engaged in music
unprofessionally confirm my argument. The musician life stories that ended up in
crisis and severe poverty indicated two aspects of musicians. One was that, as a
chief source of income, music was still a difficult choice for one to survive in the late
Ottoman period, even though more and more musical opportunities emerged in the
music market. Secondly, the rapid social changes during and after the late Ottoman
era caused a breakdown in the conventional networks of musicians, some of whom
were unable to adapt to new conditions.
105
CHAPTER 4
MUSIC AND GEOGRAPHY: MUSICIANS ON THE MOVE
While the previous chapter explored the demographic trends of musicians, the
principal aim of this chapter is to portray the musical setting in Istanbul by focusing
more on each district.122 The chapter will analyze the geographical distribution of
the musicians in the city to reveal the center(s) of musical activities. The directions
of musician mobility and the level of local participation to the musical events will be
interpreted to uncover these centers. Yet the districts will highlight the musical
advantages and the obstacles they had, with a view to relate the musical
institutions, house gatherings, meşks, private music classes, and the types of
musical employments to the locations of musicians in the city. The part will
additionally use the network analysis program called Gephi and historical maps to
better visualize the frequency of musical activities throughout the city. In other
words, by seeking links between the locations of musicians and the distribution of
musical activities, the chapter will attempt to explore the musical interactions
among districts as well as the musical characters of each neighborhood.
4.1. The Musical Setting of Istanbul
The statistical outcome on the residence-based distribution of musicians defined
173 musicians’ living places, which is 72.2 % in total. The unknown group comprised
122 The complicated history of administrative system in Istanbul calls for a brief explanation.
Şehremâneti was founded in 1855 to deal with the city’s infrastructure and facilities such as
roads and buildings. Istanbul was divided administratively into fourteen
districts/municipalities (devâir) in 1868. Ergin underlined that the divisions of the city
changed many times in the late Ottoman period. In 1877, the city was divided into twenty
districts. Only three years later, in 1880, the districts in Istanbul were reduced to ten,
whereas in 1912 Istanbul consisted of nine municipalities. My categorization is based on
the fourteen districts of 1868, since the later divisions reduced the number of districts and
unified many smaller residential areas under more central ones: Eyüp joins Fatih,
Kasımpaşa went to Beyoğlu, and Beykoz to Üsküdar. See Osman Nuri Ergin, Mecelle-i Umûrı
Belediyye, Vol. 3, İBB Kültür İşleri Daire Başkanlığı Yayınları, İstanbul, 1995, pp. 1269, 1346,
1422-27 and 1443; Tarkan Oktay, Osmanlı’da Büyükşehir Belediye Yönetimi: İstanbul
Şehremaneti, Yeditepe, İstanbul, 2011, pp. 35 and 125; İlber Ortaylı, “Belediye”, Vol. 5, DİA,
1992, p. 400.
106
69 musicians (27.4 %), however, from which 40 were born and lived in Istanbul. In
fact, the only missing element is where they were precisely located in the city;
therefore, the lack of data consequently leads them into the unknown group. Albeit
they resided in the city, the analysis will exclude those 69 and will be based on the
musicians whose districts were clearly stated in the biographical accounts.
Table 4.1. The districts in which musicians have resided most123
Districts Areas Covered Frequency Percent Total Population
1th Daire (Yenikapı, Unkapanı, Süleymaniye) 4 1.6 151,933
2nd Daire (Fatih) 84 33.3 114,545
3rd Daire (Yedikule) 3 1.2 123,037
4th Daire (Eyüp) 10 4
5th Daire (Kasımpaşa) 5 2
6th Daire (Kurtulus, Beyoglu, Macka) 8 3.2 231,293
7th Daire (Beşiktaş, Şişli, Mecidiyeköy) 18 7.1 70,767
8th Daire (Tarabya, İstinye) 1 0.4 13,850
9th Daire (Büyükdere, Sarıyer, Rumelifeneri) 2 0.8 14,645
Anatolian Part
10th Daire (Beykoz) 6 2.4 29,158
11th Daire (Çengelköy, Beylerbeyi) 7 2.8
12th Daire (Üsküdar) 27 10.7 95,667
13th Daire (Kadıköy, Erenköy, Bostancı) 8 3.2 22,796
14th Daire (Adalar)124 - -
Unknown 69 27.4
TOTAL 252 100 867,537
123 Due to the continuous changes of administirative structure of Istanbul discussed above,
the population figures partially cover the districts of 1868. Eyüp and Kasımpaşa as the forth
and fifth administrative units, for instance, disappeared completely in the 1885 order of
districts and unified with more central ones. Given the complexity of the issue, I will still
give the population figures of each districts based on 1885 census, Osmanlı
İmparatorluğu’nun ve Türkiye’nin Nüfusu, 1500-1927, Cem Behar (ed.), Historical Statistics
Series, Vol. 2, T. C. Başbakanlık Devlet İstatistik Enstitüsü, Ankara, 1996, p. 75.
124 The population figures for the Islands quoted from Vital Cuinet. The data, as Behar
mentions, that his numbers were derived from 1885 census. According to that, islands had
10,553 people (Büyükada with 5,960, Heybeli 2,895, Kınalı 398, and Burgaz 1,250) in total,
Osmanlı İmparatorluğu’nun ve Türkiye’nin Nüfusu, 1500-1927, Cem Behar (ed.), p. 72.
107
Forty-eight musicians lived in the Anatolian part (19.1 %), whereas 125 resided on
the other side of the Bosporus (53.5 %). The historical accounts underline the
capital’s inadequate transportation conditions not in between the opposite
directions but also nearby districts throughout the nineteenth century. Ortaylı
states that the movement was not easy from one point to another in the city; a visit
from Aksaray to Çengelköy entailed an overnight stay.125 According to Behar, the
move between places within the city was a matter of adventure and that meant a
day travel even towards the end of the nineteenth century. The author argues that
people living in different districts of the city were relatively disconnected from each
other, which ultimately instigated the local solidarity at the expense of a common
city identity.126 Though the authors focused on different issues, the way they
portrayed the city make sense from the standpoint of music. When İbnülemin
mentioned his house gatherings, he emphasized the musicians whose houses were
not in the near distance, usually stayed overnight at his home, …semti uzak
olanlarla beraber beytûtet edilirdi.127 It is not to mean that they stayed just because
they could not move in the middle of the night. The musical gatherings were a kind
of social activity that necessarily involved eating, drinking and chatting alongside
the music for long hours. They all contributed to the result.
The other factor, which helped to underpin the argument, was the security risks in
the city especially after sunset. The problem seemed to limit the city dwellers’
movement and was one of the reasons why musicians frequently stayed overnight
in the houses, at where the mesk sessions were organized. For example, Hafız Sami
(1874-1943) after a mesk gathering in Eyüp, refused to stay overnight despite the
strong objection of the host. Even though he was accompanied by an armed guard,
125 İlber Ortaylı, İstanbul’dan Sayfalar, Turkuaz Kitap, İstanbul, 2008, p. 18.
126 Cem Behar, “Kasap İlyas Mahallesi: İstanbul’un Bir Mahallesinin Sosyal ve Demografik
Portresi: 1546-1885”, İstanbul Araştırmaları, No. 4, İstanbul Araştırmaları Merkezi, İBB,
2000, p. 16.
127 İbnülemin Mahmut Kemal İnal, Hoş Sadâ: Son Asır Türk Musıkişinasları, Türkiye İş
Bankası Kültür Yayınları, Maarif Basımevi, İstanbul, 1958. p. 114.
108
the nighttime journey towards Fatih, where his home was, interrupted by two
armed men at the Edirnekapı Cemetery.128
Some musicians’ daily routines seem to be well-organized when one considers the
insufficient transportation infrastructure of the city. Emin Yazıcı (1881-1945), for
instance, was used to welcome his musician friends and students at his home in the
Tophane neighborhood throughout his life. In addition to that, he visited the Galata
Mevlevî lodge on a regular basis, which was at a walking distance from his home.
There he was musically educated by kudümzenbaşı Raif Dede (d.?) and later became
the leading ney player (serneyzen) in the Galata Mevlevî lodge before the Sufî
lodges were officially closed in 1925. The only exception was teaching ney in the
Dâr’ül-Elhân Conservatory in Fatih for a short time.129 There are other musicians
whose musical practices were mainly concentrated within close distances to their
homes. Ali Rıza Şengel (Eyyübî, 1878-1953) was born in the Eyüp district, where
most of his musical activities took place. He held music classes at home, frequented
the Kadirî and Rıfaî lodges of Eyüp and founded the Eyüp branch of Musikî-i Osmanî
with a group of musicians where he also taught music between 1922-1927.130
The other side of the coin is that a significant number of musicians under study
require us to approach the arguments above with some reservation. The musicians
rushed around the city’s musical activities. In fact, musicians’ capability of reaching
different spots of the city for music probably became possible by the swift advance
in city transportation during the latter part of the century. Tekeli’s study underlines
three decisive dates on this issue: The beginning of sea-transportation in the city
with the Şirket-i Hayriye company, which was founded in 1851 and signaled the
growing of the sea traffic in Bosporus. Five years later, two ships crossed the city
128 Sadi Yaver Ataman, Mehmed Sadi Bey, Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı Yayınları, Ankara, 1987,
pp. 40-41.
129 Halil Can, “Edebileşen Dehalarımız: Emin Dede”, Türk Musikisi Dergisi, No. 4, 1947,
İstanbul, pp. 2,3 and 23; No. 5, pp. 4,5 and 20.
130 Salih Dizer, “Alaturka musiki üstadlarımız: Eyyübî Ali Rıza ile bir konuşma”, Taha Toros
Archive, No. 001511093006, İstanbul Şehir Üniversitesi.
109
eight times a day on the Eminönü-Üsküdar line. In the 1880s, the company’s daily
transportation capacity reached 25.000 people, and roughly to 49.000 in 1912.
These numbers included all the routes the company ran; a broad network between
the opposite directions as well as the circuits to the residential districts alongside
the two shores of Bosporus. Tekeli’s second phase focused on the land-traffic. The
beginning of horse-drawn trams in the first half of the 1870s, which initially ran only
in two directions (Azapkapı to Beşiktaş and Eminönü to Aksaray) and transported
more than 17.000 people daily. A new tramline was opened in 1881, which
connecting Karaköy to Şişli via Cadde-i Kebir, Taksim and Pangaltı. A shift occurred
in 1911; the trams pulled by horses were hereafter powered by electricity. Together
with the line in the Asian part (Üsküdar, Kısıklı to Alemdağ), the trams were carrying
more than 30.000 people each day in the same year. The last stage began with the
functioning of railroad in the city. In 1875, the railroad with seven stops connected
Küçükçekmece district to Sirkeci via Makriköy.131
The pattern of mobile musicians is apparent in the life story of Nasibin Mehmed
Yürü (1882-1953). He was born and lived in Kanlıca in the Beykoz district. As an
active piyasa musician, he constantly played oud and sang in Memduh Efendi’s
(1868-1938) fasıl groups. His existence in the music market was recorded in the
historical accounts, particularly in daily papers. He performed at the Fevziye Coffee
House in the Şehzadebaşı neighborhood (within the Fatih district), at the Kılburnu
Casino in the Fener neighborhood and at the Arif’s Coffee House in the Sultanahmet
neighborhood. Another mobile musician was Hasan Sabri Bey (1868-1922), oud
player who was born and lived in the Üsküdar district. At a very young age he
entered the service in the Ministry of Education (Maârif Nezâreti). After long years
in the same office, he was forced to retire due to the general reduction of state
131 İlhan Tekeli, İstanbul ve Ankara İçin Kent İçi Ulaşım Tarihi Yazıları, Tarih Vakfı Yurt
Yayınları, İstanbul, 2010, pp. 22-37. Zeynep Çelik’s narrative provides a detailed
examination of public transportation networks in the city during the period under study.
According to Çelik, the overall effort of the Ottoman authorities to advance the
transportation facilities in the city underpinned the idea of “civilized” and “Westernized”
society, Zeynep Çelik, The Remaking of Istanbul: Portrait of an Ottoman City in the
Nineteenth Century”, University of Washington Press, Seattle and London, 1986, pp. 82-
103.
110
functionaries (tensikât) in 1909. Shortly after leaving public office, he sought to put
his sidelined career back on track. He offered private music lessons at home and
began to regularly visit Şehzadebaşı neighborhood at the Fatih district, where the
Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî of Fahri Kopuz (1885-1968) was located. The school operated
three days a week and provided a platform for live concerts from 1912 onward.132
Hasan Sabri Bey worked there as a music teacher and performed in the live
concerts. Another oud player was Sami Bey (1867-1939) who was born and lived in
the Aksaray district. His music-teaching career was, however, on the other side of
Bosporus. He taught music in the Musikî-i Osmanî in Kadıköy and People’s House
(Halkevi) in Kızıltoprak during the Early Republican period.
Tables 4.2 and 4.3 will demonstrate the musicians’ pattern of behavior particularly
in terms of mobility and daily routines. The outcomes will provide a comprehensive
perspective upon the directions of musical movements in the city, the interactions
between the neighborhoods and ultimately will shed light on the musical character
of certain districts. I believe that the meticulously designed tables will display the
patterns and promote novel questions on the musical setting of the city.
Table 4.2. Locations of musicians’ activities
District
Areas Covered
Frequency
Percent
1th Daire Yenikapı, Unkapanı, Süleymaniye 1 .4
2nd Daire Fatih 45 17.5
4th Daire Eyüp 7 2.7
5th Daire Kasımpaşa - -
6th Daire Kurtulus, Beyoglu, Macka 46 17.9
7th Daire Beşiktaş, Şişli, Mecidiyeköy 1 .4
8th Daire Tarabya, İstinye 1 .4
9th Daire Sarıyer, Rumelifeneri 2 .8
132 Güntekin Oransay, “Cumhuriyetin İlk Elli Yılında Geleneksel Sanat Musikimiz”, Ankara
Üniversitesi İlâhiyat Fakültesi Yayınları, No. 117, Ankara, 1973, pp. 244-245; Nuri Özcan,
“Dârütta’lîm-i Mûsiki”, DİA, Vol. 9, 1994, pp. 9-10.
111
Table 4.2. Continued
10th Daire Beykoz 1 .4
11th Daire Çengelköy, Beylerbeyi 2 .8
12th Daire Üsküdar 8 3.1
13th Daire Kadıköy, Erenköy, Bostancı 4 1.6
Musicians that were active in more than one district
2th and 6th 31 12.1
6th and 9th 10 3.9
2, 4, and 6 8 3.1
2th and 4th 7 2.7
2th and 13th 6 2.3
6th and 13th 4 1.6
2th and 12th 3 1.2
1th and 2nd Daires 2 .8
7th and 10th 2 .8
2, 6, and 9 2 .8
2, 6, and 12 2 .8
2, 6, and 13 2 .8
6th and 7th 1 .4
2th and 10th 1 .4
6th and 12th 1 .4
9th and 12th 1 .4
12th and 13th 1 .4
2, 4, and 5 1 .4
2, 4, and 12 1 .4
1th and 4th 1 .4
2, 12, and 13 1 .4
2, 6, 9, and 12 1 .4
Outside Istanbul 15 5.8
Unknown 32 12.5
TOTAL 257 100.0
A few comments seem necessary to read and interpret the figures better. The first
eleven rows, where the names of the areas covered by districts stated, represent
112
the musicians whose activities were limited to only one district. The second part of
the table that begins right after the row “musicians that were active in more than
one district” indicates the frequency of musicians whose musical activities extended
over at least into two districts. Therefore, the outcome clearly indicates the
musicians’ mobility in the city. In accordance with the finding 45.9 % of musicians
concentrated their musical activities within the borders of one district, in fact,
almost always the one where they lived. 35.8 %, on the other, constantly changed
locations and frequented different districts for musical opportunities.
Table 4.3, which has to be considered together with Table 4.2, will be based on the
same outcome. I will only make minor changes by adding the figures in the multiple
rows to districts to which they belonged in order to refine the data. The aim here is
to highlight the principal districts regarding the musical concentration.
Table 4.3. Locations of musicians’ activities recorded in the city (multiples added)
District Areas Covered Frequency Percent
1. Daire Yenikapı, Unkapanı, Süleymaniye 4 1.2
2. Daire Fatih 106 31.7
4. Daire Eyüp 25 7.4
5. Daire Kasımpaşa 3 0.9
6. Daire Kurtulus, Beyoglu, Macka 102 30.5
7. Daire Beşiktaş, Şişli, Mecidiyeköy 4 1.2
8. Daire Tarabya, İstinye 1 0.3
9. Daire Sarıyer, Rumelifeneri 17 5.9
10. Daire Beykoz 2 0.6
11. Daire Çengelköy, Beylerbeyi 2 0.6
12. Daire Üsküdar 18 5.4
13. Daire Kadıköy, Erenköy, Bostancı 18 5.4
Unknown 32 9.6
TOTAL 334 100.0
The outcomes, in the first place, reveal the way the musical opportunities were
dispersed among the most parts of the city. However, one can observe the unequal
113
relationship between music and each district. Certain districts dominated the
musical activities more than others. They were Fatih, Eyüp and Galata/Beyoğlu in
the Istanbul side of the city; and Üsküdar together with Kadıköy on the Anatolian
side. My plan is to treat some of these districts separately to explore the musical
traffic of the city. To bring the analysis to a required state, I organized a
comprehensive table, in which I will compare musicians’ living places to the
locations of their activities.
Table 4.4. Musicians’ living quarters and the location of musical activities in number
(cross tabulation)
Musicians’
Districts
The Location of Musical Activities (frequency)
1.Yenikapı
2.Fatih
3.Yedikule
4.Eyüp
5.Kasımpaşa
6.Beyoğlu
7.Beşiktaş
8.Tarabya
9.Sarıyer
10.Beykoz
11.Çengelköy
12.Üsküdar
13.Kadıköy
Outside
Unknown
TOTAL
Yenikapı 2 2 1 5
Fatih 2 59 7 26 2 2 1 6 2 9 116
Yedikule 2 1 1 4
Eyüp 1 3 8 2 1 15
Kasımpaşa 3 1 2 2 8
Beyoğlu 3 1 7 1 12
Beşiktaş 6 2 12 2 3 1 1 2 29
Tarabya 1 1 1 3
Sarıyer 1 1 1 3
Beykoz 3 4 1 1 1 10
Çengel
köy
2 2 2 2 8
Üsküdar 11 2 11 3 1 13 2 1 1 45
Kadıköy 4 3 3 1 11
Unknown 1 7 4 28 1 6 3 4 6 16 76
TOTAL 4 106 25 3 102 4 1 17 2 2 18 18 11 32 345
Table 4.4 contributes extra features to the issue in such a way to complete the
required information. Tables 4.2 and 4.3 defined the frequency of activities
happening in the districts. Table 1 has already showed the distribution of musician
population among the districts. It was yet difficult to establish a relationship
between these statistical outcomes. In order to fill that gap I organized the last
table. It will simply associate the musicians’ living places to the locations of their
musical activities. Put differently, the study will reveal, for instance, where the two
Sarıyer (9th Daire) born musicians’ activities took place. Or it will be possible to
114
check the percentages of locations from where the musicians have poured into the
Fatih district (2nd Daire).
A few explanations seem necessary in order to easily read and interpret the Table
4.4. The rows, which start with the name of each district written in bold, indicate
the musicians’ living places in the city, while the columns are designed to show the
frequency of musical activities carried out in each district. The point at which the
lines intersect, display both the number of activities happening at each district
(columns) and the density of participation by the musicians of each district (rows).
By considering the figures in Tables 4.1, 4.3 and 4.4 together, it is possible to define
the musical setting of the city in terms of residential and performance centers of
musicians. Fatih (n = 84, 33.3 %) and Beşiktaş (n = 18, 7.1 %) in the old part of the
city and Üsküdar (n = 27, 10.7) in the Anatolian part were the residential centers of
musicians (see Figure 4.1). On the other hand, Fatih (n = 106, 31.7 %) and Beyoğlu
(n = 102, 30.5 %) were the areas where the majority of the musical activities
concentrated (see Figure 4.2). A third category could be created based on the two
for the Fatih district as both the residential and the performance centers of
Istanbul.
Figure 4.1. Residential centers of musicians in Istanbul
Fatih
33%
Beşiktaş
7%
Üsküdar
10%
Other
21%
Unknown
27%
Outside
2%
Districts
115
Figure 4.2. Performance centers in Istanbul
In a different perspective, I will concentrate on the concept of locality based on the
statistical outcomes of Tables 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3.133 I organized the next table to give
an idea about different sort of perspectives these tables may provide to the study.
Table 4.5. Musical events of musicians in the district they resided (cross tabulation)
District Musicians’ Local Participation Musician
Population
Fatih 59 (70 %) 84
Eyüp 8 (80 %) 10
Beyoğlu 7 (87.5 %) 8
Üsküdar 13 (48 %) 27
Kadıköy 3 (37.5%) 8
Note: The district of Beşiktaş may also be added to the list since 12 out of 18 (67%)
were musically active in the 6th Daire that included the Beyoğlu, Kurtuluş and Maçka
areas, which were at a close distance.
133 The study perceives the concept of “locality” to be totally music-oriented. Thereby, the
term locality will refer to the musical activities in the neighborhoods, rather than dealing
with the local color of music practices (stylistic differences). Issues such as mobility and the
interaction of musicians will be discussed within the context of locality.
Fatih
29%
Beyoğlu
28%
Unknown
9%
Other
34%
Districts
116
Moreover, the way of seeing the statistical outcomes would set the stage for
observing the musicians’ pattern of behavior at the local level and will help to
understand how promising was the musical potential at each district. The musical
potential means to explore the variety of musical activities as they were recorded in
the sources, with which the outcome would provide a basis to argue whether one
may attribute a musical character to a district. In other words, it would test the
reliability of arguments, such as Üsküdar (12th Daire) seemed to produce
overwhelmingly religious or tekke-based music, whereas music for entertainment
dominated the Beyoğlu or Sarıyer district. Starting with Eyüp, my plan is to
separately deal with certain neighborhoods to identify the typical and uncommon
traits, as well as to reveal the musical interactions between neighborhoods.
117
Map 4.1. Frequency map for Istanbul’s musical setting
Source: The map is preperad by Necib Bey in 1918. ArcGIS version 10.2 and Adobe
Illustrator CS6 were used to visualize the musical activity frequencies throughout
the city.
118
4.2. Eyüp: The Sense of Locality
Musicians who resided in Eyüp (n = 10) indicate a distinct character to a certain
extent that may be described as homogenous. First, they were all male and
Muslims. To be noted that, the study does not claim neither non-Muslim nor female
musicians have not lived in the Eyüp district. Simply put, all the non-Muslim and
female musicians the study focused on were born elsewhere. Another distinction
was the Sufi involvement,134 which appeared far more frequent compared to other
districts. Seven out of ten musicians in the Eyüp district were connected to a Sufi
order (70 %), (see Table 4.6). The particular one was the Mevlevî order: four
musicians were among its members. The comparison with other districts will reveal
how high the percentage was regarding the Sufi connection.
Table 4.6. The Sufi affiliation in certain districts (cross tabulation)
Districts Sufi musicians Non-Muslims Unknown135 Total
Fatih 25 (30.0 %) 4 55 84
Beşiktaş 5 (28.0 %) 5 5 18
Üsküdar 10 (37 %) 1 16 27
The way the district was constructed may provide an explanation to the high
percentage of Sufi attachment. In fact, Eyüp district was similar to Fatih and
Üsküdar districts in terms of its religious atmosphere, the dominant religious
architecture and particularly the numerous Sufi lodges,136 all of which have seemed
134 The term “Sufi involvement” embraces a number of narratives from being a member of
a Sufi order (Sheikh, dervish) to occasionally visiting a lodge (muhibbân). Yet, the degree of
affinity is beyond the scope of this study.
135 I tend to interpret the unknown category as closer to the negative answer. The reason is
that adherence to a Sufi order is a comprehensive issue that gradually affects and puts
marks on almost all aspects of life, which is more or less traceable. Musicians with Sufi
connection, for instance, almost always compose hymns devoted to the order’s most
influential characters as a way to manifest their devotion. The way I interpret the unknown
category is valid only for this issue and not applicable to other variables.
136 Regarding the complete list of Sufi lodges that functioned at Eyüp, their impact on the
local culture, as well as the interaction among the numerous lodges in the neighborhood,
see Nuran Çetin, “Eyüp Tekkeleri”, Assoc. Prof. Safi Arpaguş (Superviser), Unpublished PhD
119
to influence the social life and gave the areas its character. The religious
architecture takes precedence over any other issue in Artan’s article that focuses on
historical Eyüp. She states that the neighborhood was surrounded with numerous
works of Mimar Sinan (d. 1588) that virtually made an impact on the formation of
social identity.137 Sufi lodges were another facet of the religious life in the Eyüp
district, many of which functioned until 1925.138
The biographical accounts of musicians underpin the idea that religion was an
influential factor on music and thus shaped the musical practices. It is now time to
analyze a couple of individual life narratives to find out how determining was the
locality and religious music culture in the neighborhood.
Zeki Dede (1824-1897) composed music for Mevlevî rites (ayîn-i şerif), also
numerous hymns. Besides, he taught music at the Ebusuud Efendi Primary School in
Eyüp. His son Ahmet Irsoy (1869-1943) became a hafız in the Eyüp Mosque and
served as imam-hatip both in the Cedid Ali Paşa and Hasib Efendi Tekkesi Mosques
of Eyüp. Following the footprints of his father, he became a member of the Mevlevî
order and attended the ceremonies at the Bahariye Mevlevî lodge in Eyüp as a
kudümzenbaşı.
Thesis, SBE, Temel İslam Bilimleri Anabilim Dalı, Tasavvuf Bilim Dalı, Marmara Üniversitesi,
İstanbul, 2012, pp. 395-415 and appendix.
137 Tülay Artan, “Eyüp”, DİA, Vol. 12, 1995, pp. 4-6.
138 Mustafa Kara provides a list, whose author is unknown, of 260 lodges that functioned in
the late Ottoman Istanbul according to the orders they were bound to: “Asitâne-i Aliyye’de
ve Bilâd-ı Selâse’de Kāin El’an Mevcûd ve Muhterik Olmuş Tekkelerin İsim ve Şöhretleri ve
Mukābele-i Şerîfe Günleri Beyân Olunur”, Din Hayât Sanat Açısından Tekkeler ve Zâviyeler,
Dergâh, İstanbul, 1980, pp. 424-435.
120
Photo 4.1. Bahariye Mevlevî Lodge in Eyüp at the beginning of the twentieth
century
Source: M. Baha Tanman, “Musiki Tarihimizde Önemli Yeri Olan Bahariye
Mevlevihânesi’nin Tarihçesi ve Sosyokültürel Çevresi”, Dârülelhan Mecmuası, İÜ
OMAR, İstanbul, 2017, p. 15.
I already mentioned Eyyübî Ali Rıza Şengel (1878-1953), whose musical character
was formed by Rufaî and the Kadirî orders in the Eyüp district. In fact, the study
included his father as another Eyüp-born musician. Served as a scribe in the Excise
Tax Department (Rüsûmat Emaneti) and Ministry for Imperial Religious Foundations
(Evkaf Nezâreti), respectively, Mehmed Cemal Efendi (1847-1916) learned music
from Sheikh Rıza Efendi of Hatuniye lodge in Eyüp and Zekaî Dede. He seemed to
never break off the relations with the Sufi circles, as he became the zâkirbaşı139 at
the Sertarikzâde and Hatuniye lodges in Eyüp and Nureddin Cerrâhî lodge in Fatih.
The fact that his son continued to hold the post of zakirbaşı reveals the continuity
of roughly half-a-century family tradition. Besides, he tirelessly wrote (notated) the
music performed in the Sufi lodges. Sadeddin Heper (1899-1980) was another Eyüp
born Mevlevî musician. His father was a religious functionary in the Eyüp Sultan
Mosque. His home was next door to Ahmet Irsoy, who taught him Mevlevî music.
He also benefited from nayî Hakkı Dede (? - d. 1918) at the Bahariye Mevlevî lodge
in Eyüp. Being a scribe in the Ministry of Finance (Mâliye Nezâreti) until 1946 did
not prevent him from retaining close ties with the Mevlevî culture: composed
139 Similar to the function of a maestro in an orchestra, he conducts the audience in the
course of a zikr ceremony in the Sufi lodges.
121
hymns, Mevlevî rites and was one of the main actors in the revival of the Mevlevî
ceremonies in the first half of the 1950s.140
Two main clusters in Figure 4.3, one on the right and one on the left, depict
precisely the situation in both districts.
Figure 4.3. Comparison of local and visiting musicians’ participation in Kadıköy and
Eyüp
Kadıköy is comparable to Eyüp due to their similar musical frequencies. Eyüp had 25
overall activities, eight of which belonged to the local musicians (32 %), whereas
Kadıköy’s musicians were engaged in only three of 18 activities in their own
neighborhood (16.6 %). The visual additionally presents visiting musicians’ districts
through which one may observe the musical interaction in the city.
140 Yavuz Selim Ağaoğlu, Neyzen Selami Bertuğ’un Anılarından Belgelerle Hazret-i
Mevlâna’yı Anma Törenleri (1942-1974), Kültür A.Ş., Konya, 2013; Particularly to the role of
Sadeddin Heper for the Mevlevî rituals’ re-organization after about thirty years of
interruption, see Burcu Sağlam, “Türk Müziğinin Hafızası: Saadeddin Heper”, Musikişinas,
No. 14, İstanbul, 2015, pp. 46-93.
122
All in all, musicians of Eyüp were not so monolithic. The aferomentioned local
occasion and the dominant Sufi/religious features did not principally shape all the
Eyüp-born ones’ music career. Albeit a few, there were musicians, namely as Kadri
Şençalar (1912-1989) and Muzaffer İlkar (1910-1987), whose life experiences
revealed distinct characters from the musicians stated above. Having said that,
analyses based on the statistical outcomes cannot be blind to the widespread
inclinations, though the study acknowledges disparate life patterns. The hegemony
of the religious music underlined by the vigorous Sufi tradition was one solid
pattern for the Eyüp district. The other typicality was the strong sense of locality. A
sizeable number of musicians have maintained firm cultural ties with the
neighborhood. Both factors were critical in shaping the musical output. Tables 4.4
and 4.5 elaborate on the issue from different perspectives. Comparing Kadıköy, for
instance, with Eyüp in terms of musicians’ strong ties with their local environment
additionally support the assertion.
4.3. Üsküdar: The Composite Structure
The demographic structure of the district reflected the imperial plurality. In 1914,
Üsküdar had a little over 90,000 inhabitants, of which 64 % were Muslims, 20 %
were Armenians, 13 % Greek Orthodox and less than 3 % were Jews.141
The musicians of Üsküdar display two noticeable features in the outcome of Table
4.4 In terms of locality, the study counted overall eighteen musical activities in the
district. The local musicians participated to thirteen (67 %) of them. As has been
already discussed in the section above regarding the Eyüp district and displayed
through Table 4.5, there also appears a strong sense of locality, which means mainly
local participation in the musical events. Yet, these outcomes have to be supported
by additional data. It is true that the strong sense of locality is visible for the
musicians of Üsküdar in Table 4.7.
141 M. Hanefi Bostan, “Üsküdar”, DİA, Vol. 42, 2012, p. 367.
123
Table 4.7. The density of local involvement as compared to total activities in
districts (cross tabulation)
District The Frequency of Local Involvement Activities in Total
Üsküdar 13 (72 %) 18 (100.0 %)
Fatih 59 (56 %) 106 (100.0 %)
Eyüp 8 (32%) 25 (100.0 %)
Kadıköy 3 (17 %) 18 (100.0 %)
Interestingly, the proportion of Eyüp was somehow reduced to 32 % in the same
table, though the study previously underlined the local vein in the Eyüp district (see
Table 4.5). There is not a mistake of reading the outcomes; the reason that is
testing the effect of different independent variables on the dependent variable in a
dataset may produce conflicting outcomes on the very same issue. None of the
outcomes is misleading; simply they highlight the different aspects of it. Table 4.5
searched for the percentage of local involvement in the musical events within the
overall musician population. Besides, the purpose of Table 4.7 is to define the
density of local involvement to the total activities in a district. The requirement
necessarily counts all the activities carried out and thus the local initiative shrinks. It
is the effect of other districts’ musicians. Eventually, Table 4.7 may be interpreted in
a way to stress how intense the interaction was in Eyüp, whereas the district of
Üsküdar was to a large extent isolated due to the rare appearance of musicians
from elsewhere.
The Gephi will provide one visual perspective to the issue, through which the study
will be able to see the precise directions of each individual musician who resided in
Üsküdar. Figure 4.4 visualizes the musical network, which provides a clear picture of
individual practices. The circles in red refer to the districts (see Table 4.1). The 2nd
Daire is Fatih, 6th is Beyoğlu and 12th is Üsküdar neighborhoods. The green and blue
circles symbolize the musicians. The program automatically sets the dimensions of
circles in accordance with the frequency response. The visualization is an alternative
124
display of the Üsküdar row in Table 4.4; however, presents the movements of
individuals in further detail. For example, it portrays that Salim Bey paid visits to 2dh,
3rd and 12th districts, whereas Emin Ongan frequented to 6th and 12th districts.
Figure 4.4. The activity directions of Üsküdar’s musicians
The visualization of the musical network provides a clear picture of individual
practices. The circles in red refer to the districts (see Table 4.1). The 2nd Daire is
Fatih, 6th is Beyoğlu and 12th is Üsküdar neighborhoods. The green and blue circles
symbolize the musicians. The program automatically sets the dimensions of circles
in accordance with the frequency response. The visualization is an alternative
display of the Üsküdar row in the Table 4; however, presents the movements of
individuals in further detail. For example, it portrays that Salim Bey paid visits to 2dh,
3rd and 12th districts, whereas Emin Ongan frequented to 6th and 12th districts.
From the standpoint of Üsküdar’s musicians, the term isolation still needs
reconsideration. It is true that Üsküdar did not generally welcome musicians of
other districts as we see in the Tables 4.4 and 4.7, and the local musicians ultimately
125
dominated the musical events. The statement does not necessarily mean that the
musicians of Üsküdar were hesitant to move outside. Rather, they frequented other
districts in much higher percentages than they participated in local events. In fact,
Üsküdar’s musicians were the most mobile musicians of all. Table 4.8 will first
highlight the percentages of local participation (local), later the frequency of the
same musicians who joined the events beyond the borders of their neighborhoods
(elsewhere) and finally the overall number of musical activities at certain districts.
Indeed, Table 4.8 is designed to indicate the behavior patterns of musicians who
resided in Fatih, Eyüp and Beyoğlu districts, which are very similar.
Table 4.8. Musicians’ local music activities compared to the outside activities
(cross tabulation)
Musicians’ Participation
Districts
Local Elsewhere Unknown Total
Fatih 59 (51 %) 48 (41 %) 9 (8 %) 116
Eyüp 8 (53 %) 7 (47 %) 15
Beyoğlu 7 (58 %) 5 (42 %) 12
Üsküdar 13 (28.9 %) 31 (68.9 %) 1 (2.2 %) 45
Kadıköy 3 (27.2 %) 7 (63.7 %) 1 (9.1) 11
They were part of the musical events both at the local level and elsewhere almost in
similar proportions. The musicians of Üsküdar and Kadıköy, whose musical
directions were towards other districts in greater proportions, maintained the
opposite position. The statements, while strongly entailing uniformity in the
behavior patterns, do not say much about the factors behind this. Outlining the
patterns is one of the principal aims of this study, yet the complex and many-sided
individual life narratives, which simply generate those patterns, are also extremely
important. Even though Fatih, Eyüp and Beyoğlu revealed similar types of behavior,
the biographical accounts emphasize the local nuances and the variety of
motivations for behaving in a particular way.
126
Although Table 4.6 indicated ten Sufi musicians for Üsküdar; there is not a
discrepancy between the two sets of figures; as the footnote 134 clarified the
degree of affinity. The Sufis may also be added to the music-based group as music
was inherent in the profession. İhsan İyisan (1873-1946), for instance, was inside
the Sufi musician group, but his life was not reducible to one category. He was born
and grew up in the Nalçacı Halil Efendi Sufi lodge (the Şabaniyye branch of Halvetî
order) in Üsküdar, where his musical character developed. He held the post of
sheikh in the very same lodge between 1910 and 1925 after his father and older
brother passed away. Meanwhile, he served in the Imperial Office of Land Registry
(Defter-i Hakanî) for a short time; however, the official records do not tell much
about it. Hence, what we know about his other employment is less than complete.
İyisan is included into the Sufi group not just because we have limited information
about his career, but also the bureaucratic milieu was, at best, of minor importance
in his life. Said Özok (1855-1945) is another case in point. He was born in the Saffetî
Paşa lodge in Üsküdar. His father was the sheikh of the lodge, and had succeeded to
his father. He is not in the Sufi group due to his more profound involvement in
official service. Özok has served for more than forty years in the Ministry of Military
Affairs (Bâb-ı Seraskeri, it was renamed as Harbiye Nezâreti in 1908) and thus his life
accounts contain more related material. Reducing them into one category seems to
flatten the peculiarities; however, I would use these rich life samples in the related
arguments. Aziz Dede (1835? -1905) was a Üsküdar based ney player, whose
mobility frequency resembled very much to the pattern of the music-based ones’
group. His musical map tells that he constantly participated in the musical events
throughout the city, being the ser-nayî of three Mevlevî lodges, namely Üsküdar,
Galata (Kulekapısı) in Beyoğlu and Bahariye in Eyüp (Figure 4.3).
The aim of questioning the real income source of musicians is to connect it to a
range of issues, such as the musicians’ mobility, differentiation in music spaces and
their approaches to music. The latter is related to the financial aspect of music,
however the way the question is asked implies the perception of music by
musicians.
127
Two main camps come to the fore in Table 4.9. First, musicians for whom music was
not the chief source of income were Ottoman civil servants. To compare the
occupational distribution among the 10 musicians of Eyüp, only two musicians
earned money out of music, while three were state officials and two were religious
functionaries. The other three were a teacher, a Sheikh, and a merchant.
Table 4.9. The real income source of Üsküdar’s musicians
Frequency Percent
Music 6 22.2
Official Functionary 8 29.6
Religious Functionaries 1 3.7
Teacher (non-music) 1 3.7
Sheikh/Dervish 3 11.1
Doctor, Pharmacist 2 7.4
Engineer 1 3.7
Solicitor 1 3.7
Other 3 11.1
Unknown 1 3.7
TOTAL 27 100.0
In fact, the characteristic, which is clearly seen in Table 4.9 that deals merely with
Üsküdar, principally encompasses almost all aspects of this study. In more general
terms, musicians under study have generated two principal categories; musicians
whose main or primary source of income is music and the musicians who did not
earn a living out of music. Musicians who served in the government posts were
overwhelmingly represented in the latter group. Claiming that the second group
never received money is not possible, the matter is whether they solely depended
on music or not.
In the process of categorizing musicians’ behaviors, I observed certain differences
but also similarities in terms of musical practices particularly between Üsküdar’s
musicians whose chief source of income was music and musicians that served in
public offices. Bestenigâr Ziya Bey (1877-1923), who retired from the the Ministry of
128
Military Affairs in 1916, worked as a music teacher at the Şark Music School,
Üsküdar Music School and in Dâr’ül-Elhân Conservatory. Besides, he offered private
classes to the members of prosperous families, as he was known as hoca due to his
active involvement in music teaching. One encounters his name in many musician
biographies as a regular attendant of musical gatherings, meşks, in various
locations. I have already mentioned Hasan Sabri Bey’s name (1868-1922), when
discussing musicians’ mobility in the city. However, now I will discuss his musical
activities. Shortly after retiring from the Ministry of Education (Maârif Nezâreti) in
1909, music became his focal point. He offered private music teaching and taught
music in the Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî in Fatih. Lemi Atlı (1870-1945) is another
musician case from bureaucracy. He served for almost twenty years in the Ministry
of Interior (Dahiliye Nezâreti), Ministry of Police (Zabtiye Nezâreti), and also worked
for Takvim-i Vekâyi’, which was a state funded newspaper, until his retirement in
1908. The biographical accounts do not provide much information about the latter
part of his life, particularly on the period from his retirement to his death in 1945.
All we know is he taught music at the Şark Music School in Kadıköy for a short while
and continued to attend musical gatherings at various neighborhoods.142
There were Üsküdar’s musicians whose sole income was derived from music. Amâ
Nazım Bey (1884-1920) was a lifetime music teacher, who worked at many schools.
He taught music at the Musikî-i Osmanî School in Fatih between 1910-1912 and
Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî School from 1912 onwards. Yet he was the founder and the
teacher of the İnas Musikî School. Selahaddin Pınar (1902-1960) was one of the
founders of Dârü’l-Feyz-i Musikî School (1918) in Üsküdar. He spent much of his life
performing in music halls (gazinos), yet he signed recording contracts for the songs
he composed. Fuad Sorguç (1904-1970) taught tanbur, played on stage and hence
solely depended on music to get by throughout his life.143
142 Ebubekir Hazım Tepeyran, Canlı Tarihler, No. 6, Türkiye Yayınevi, Ankara, 1947, p. 139.
143 Fuat Sorguç gave an interview about his life and music career. I would like to thank to
Celal Şalçini to provide this audio record.
129
Though we do not know much about whether Pınar has attended any house
gathering, it was a habit for Amâ Nazım Bey and Fuad Sorguç.
Üsküdar’s entertainment places where music was performed among other artistic
forms present a contrast to the way the neighborhood was generally depicted in
literature. In one of his novels, Gürpınar describes the neighborhood as destitute,
ordinary, frozen in time, oriental. Mosques, Sufi lodges, religious schools came to
forefront in such a way that Üsküdar was established for spiritual rather than
material happiness.144 I suppose that the construction of an indivisible and uniform
social structure conceals the neighborhood’s multifaceted character. Furthermore,
describing it in an idealized fashion seemed to have an impact on the scholarship
that emphasizes the religious but particularly the Islamic character of it.145 The
contemporary accounts provide evidences that the neighborhood was socially more
complex and hence had much more to offer than the way it was represented. Even
though Eyüp and Üsküdar had similarities regarding the dominant Sufi lodge-based
music, the latter’s musical atmosphere was much more diverse than Eyüp. In
accordance with the related advertisements compiled by Kalender, Üsküdar’s
entertainment places might be divided into three groups: Theatres, coffee houses
(semaî kahve), and picnic areas (mesire).
144 “… Adım başında minareleri, kubbeleri, damlarıyla gözleri karşılayan hesapsız camiler,
mescitler, tekkeler, medreseler görürsünüz. Hayattan çok ölüme ayrılmış bir memleket...”
Hüseyin Rahmi Gürpınar, Ölüm Bir Kurtuluş mudur?, Everest Publishing, İstanbul, 2010, p.
41, quoted from Fatih Ordu, “Toplumsal Bir Bellek Olarak Hüseyin Rahmi Gürpınar'ın
İstanbul'u”, Asst. Prof. Şeyma Büyüksavaş Kuran (Superviser), Unpublished PhD Thesis,
Ondokuz Mayıs Üniversitesi, SBE, Yeni Türk Edebiyatı Anabilim Dalı, Samsun, 2013, pp. 126-
27.
145 Articles submitted to Üsküdar Symposiums, which has been organized by Üsküdar
Municipality since 2003 is one good example of it. The majority of the articles that were
published are related with the Ottoman and Islamic heritage of Üsküdar. All the published
articles from the first symposiums to the last one are open to public view, see
http://www.uskudarsempozyumu.com/tr/sempozyum/pages/sempozyum-pdfleri/334
(accessed on 9 November 2017).
130
Table 4.10. Places in which music was performed in Üsküdar between 1895-1916
(quoted from Kalender)
Head Musician District Place Other
Musicians
Tahsin Efendi Üsküdar Not given -
Mehmet Efendi Üsküdar Selimiye, Hamam Coffee House Hanende
Şükrü
Hasan Bey Üsküdar Hayalhâne-i Osmanî Company Kemençeci
Ağabey
Hakkı Efendi Üsküdar Kısıklı Mesiresi (Picnic Area) Arif Efendi
Hasan Bey Üsküdar Bulgurlu Mesiresi -
Şevki Bey Üsküdar Bağlarbaşı Theatre146 -
Şevki Bey Üsküdar Bağlarbaşı Theatre -
Bülbüli Salih Üsküdar Küçük Çamlıca Mesiresi Udi Cemil Bey
Bülbüli Salih Üsküdar Küçük Çamlıca Mesiresi -
No name Üsküdar Bağlarbaşı Theatre -
No name Üsküdar İcadiye, Theatre -
No name Üsküdar Paşakapısı, Millî Osmanî
Theatre
-
No name Üsküdar Paşakapısı, Dilküşâ Theatre -
No name Üsküdar İcadiye, Theatre -
Without claiming that the collected advertisements covered every single music
activity at Üsküdar but it helps to catch a glimpse of it. The initial impression from
advertisements is that the role of music in these programs seemed to be secondary
and complementary. For instance, if the drama was not musical, which combines
songs, dialogues and dance, then music was generally performed during a theatre
interval. Many advertisements explicitly stated that music was performed during
146 For further on the Dilküşâ and Bağlarbaşı (Beyleryan or Beyleroğlu) Theatres, see
Mehmet Nermi Haskan, Yüzyıllar Boyunca Üsküdar, Vol. 3, Üsküdar Municipalilty
Publishing, 2001, pp. 1297-1305.
131
the intervals. However, the theatres were indeed functioning as concert places.
Musicians hired them to perform due to the lack of specifically built spaces for
music performance.147
Regarding the picnic areas (mesire) it seems that visiting those places was one
habitual practice for the city dwellers. First of all, it was seasonal; starting around
May and lasting until the autumn. People frequented open-air spaces for many
reasons, which cannot be merely reduced to leisure activities. The practice might be
defined as one of the means of socialization, in which city dwellers interacted with
others. The literature on these informal gatherings explains the unwritten rules of
it. The determining force seemed to be the social status. The wealthier attended
with an entourage that also included musicians and mostly stayed overnight. Many
of the ordinary dwellers gathered around to follow the display. In fact, these
informal gatherings provided an opportunity for the higher-ranking people to be
seen by the public.148
147 Kadıköy'de Apollon tiyatrosunda ince saz takımınca ahenk. Yöneten: Kemanî Aşkî Efendi
(İkdam 7.5.1914 and 13.5.1914), quoted from Kalender, p. 436.
148 Balıkhane Nazırı Ali Rıza Bey, Eski Zamanlarda İstanbul Hayatı, Ali Rıza Çoruk (ed.),
Kitabevi, İstanbul, 2011, pp. 119-123; Fakiye Özsoysal, Metin Balay, Geleceğe Perde Açan
Gelenek: Geçmişten Günümüze İstanbul Tiyatroları, Vol. III: Anadolu Yakası, YKY, İstanbul,
2011, pp. 253-57; Sermet Muhtar Alus, İstanbul Kazan Ben Kepçe, Necdet Sakaoğlu (ed.),
İletişim, İstanbul, 1995, pp. 185-191.
132
Photo 4.2.The Sweet Waters of Kağıthane, Abdullah Fréres, ca. 1890
Source: Bahattin Öztuncay, Vasilaki Kargopulo: Hazret-i Padişâhî’nin Serfotoğrafı,
BOS, İstanbul, 2000, p. 58.
Abdülhak Şinasi Hisar narrates the culture of following or escorting the people of
importance in the Kağıthane and Göksu streams. Similar to the picnic areas, the
crowd was set in a row right behind the boat of musicians to listen the live
performances. Hisar states that the dignitaries’ derived pleasure and satisfaction
from gathering the best musicians for the public. It seems there was a fierce
competition among the notables to hire the renowned musicians. Another
unwritten rule was that the notable who organized the music event would never
sail with the musicians’ boat but follow them from a distance.149 After all, open-air
organizations could not be restricted to the type explained above. In accordance
with Table 10, which provides details, theatre companies undertook the
149 Abdülhak Şinasi Hisar, Boğaziçi Yalıları, Varlık, İstanbul, 1954, pp. 22-23; Abdülhak Şinasi
Hisar, Boğaziçi Mehtapları, YKY, İstanbul, 2010, pp. 46-49, 66-67. Ahmet Rasim narrates the
gathering of boats behind the musicians and explains it in more detail. However, the boat
trip takes place in the Kağıthane brook, see Dünkü İstanbul’da Hovardalık: Fuhş-i Atik, Arba,
İstanbul, 1987, pp. 61-68.
133
responsibility of the entertainment. The private or company-owned enterprises
were all-inclusive: From hiring the place, employing artists and musicians to
promoting the programs by advertising. It appears that the principal driving force
was theater, whereas music was secondary. Some programs also provided comic
entertainers and acrobats.
Considering those with coffee houses, their programs may be defined as the most
music-oriented. Musicians generally performed fasıl programs without interruption.
It appears that musicians played all year around but the peak was during the month
of Ramadan. Some coffee houses were known for their musical quality. Indeed, the
quality of music was related with the social status of frequenters. In other words,
the more esteemed the clients were, the more renown the musicians.150 Fevziye
Coffee House in Şehzadebaşı, Fatih was a typical example of it. The place functioned
almost as a concert hall at the turn of the twentieth century. The fasıl programs
were performed by respected names, such as Tatyos Efendi, Vasilaki Efendi, Udi
Cemil Bey and Lemi Atlı.151 However, coffee houses were not the property of
musicians. They had to share the space with others. Theatre companies hired them
to meet the public. The performers of the shadow theatre (hayâl-i zıl), public
storytellers (meddâhs) and illusionist (hokkabazes) were also being staged in the
coffee houses. After all, none of these traditional performing ways could be
considered distant artistic forms. They rather benefited from each other and hence
reinforced their artistic outputs. Briefly, music is one of the essentials of the shadow
theatre, in which the person behind the curtain (hayâlî) has to sing pieces both from
“classical” and folk repertoires while narrating the story. Probably, the very same
musicians helped in the musical parts.152
150 Sermet Muhtar Alus, İstanbul Kazan, Ben Kepçe: Eski Kıraathaneler, Akşam, 28 Kanun-ı
evvel 1938, quoted from Reyhan Elmas Keleş, “Sermet Muhtar Alus'un Eserlerinde Sosyal
Meseleler”, Assoc. Prof. Muhammet Gür (Superviser), Unpublished PhD Thesis, Marmara
Üniversitesi, İstanbul, 2009, p. 64.
151 Bekir Tosun, “Direklerarası”, DİA, Vol. 9, 1994, pp. 367-68; Salâh Birsel, Kahveler Kitabı,
Koza Yayınları, İstanbul, 1975, pp. 101-119.
152 Hayali Küçük Ali, “Eskiden Karagöz Nasıl Oynatılırdı?”, Türk Folklor Araştırmaları Dergisi,
Vol. 6, No. 140, 1961, pp. 2239-2240; Cevdet Kudret provides the list of song-text
134
I suppose that Üsküdar reflected the colorful musical character of the Ottoman
state. Though Gürpınar emphasized the religious Üsküdar, I found the idea that the
neighborhood was pious or as pious as Eyüp is rather controversial since the
outcomes indicate a more varied musical structure. The existence of religious-based
music enhanced by countless Sufi lodges was almost identical for Üsküdar. The
pattern resembled that of Eyüp. Nevertheless, the neighborhood cannot be reduced
to that. It was socially more diverse, which was manifested by vibrant music life:
Sufi circles on the one hand, music schools, theater companies, coffee houses and
outdoor activities, on the other, bore traces both from Eyüp, as well as from
Beyoğlu. Sermet Muhtar Alus and Ahmet Rasim explicitly emphasized this
complexity in their narratives.
4.4. Beyoğlu or an Essential Tour from Pera to Galata
Though Beyoğlu district (6th Daire) at the turn of the twentieth century covers the
areas such as Maçka to Kurtuluş and Tophane to Galata, Pera and particularly
Cadde-i Kebir (Grand Rue de Péra) come to the fore. There are certain reasons
behind this diagnosis. The overall non-Muslim populace, the very existence of the
Western diplomatic agents, the non-Muslim dominated business owners,153 and the
operations of the 6th District through which the area is considered to be the most
Westernized part of the Ottoman Istanbul. 154 In addition to that, abundant
collections (güfte mecmûaları), that contained the songs played in the shadow theatres.
These collections were published after the second half of the nineteenth century, Karagöz,
Bilgi Yayınevi, 1968, p. 60; Cevdet Kudret, Ortaoyunu, Türkiye İş Bankası Kültür Yayınları,
Ankara, 1973, pp. 52-59; Ethem Ruhi Üngör, Karagöz Musikisi, Kültür Bakanlığı, Ankara,
1989; Ethem Ruhi Üngör, “Karagöz Musikisi”, Karagöz Kitabı, Sevengül Sönmez (ed.),
Kitabevi, İstanbul, 2005, pp. 91-97.
153 Naum Duhanî’s detailed depiction of the area covers not only the histories of buildings
but also their inhabitans. Nevertheless, the narrated Beyoğlu was inhabited by people of
wealth and status, Eski İnsanlar Eski Evler: XIX. Yüzyılda Beyoğlu’nun Sosyal Topografisi,
(trans. Cemal Süreyya), Türkiye Turing ve Otomobil Kurumu, 1982.
154 The 6th Municipality of Paris was the source of motivation as well as the role model for
the ways Sixth Municipality of Beyoğlu (founded in 1857) operated. See the list of the works
and services provided by the Municipality of Beyoğlu from the outset, Özdemir Kaptan
(Arkan), Beyoğlu (Kısa geçmişi, argosu), İletişim, İstanbul, 1988, pp. 126-127; Nur Akın, 19.
Yüzyılın İkinci Yarısında Galata ve Pera, Literatür, İstanbul, 2011, pp. 97-121; related with
the general principals of the Sixth Municipality of Beyoğlu, see Osman Nuri Ergin, Mecelle-i
135
historical material related with Pera dominates the historiography, and hence
marginalizes the Muslim dominated parts as well as the more ordinary non-Muslim
inhabitants’ history.155
Beyoğlu underwent serious changes in terms of its architectural and demographic
structures from the last quarter of the nineteenth century to the Early Republican
years. The frequent fires that destroyed the residential areas and the lives of people
was the significant factor conducive to the physical change. Yet, the public
construction plans, which was partially related with fire damages,-paved the way
for opening new roads, the arrangement of older living spaces and the
transformation of cemetaries into green spaces and residential areas. Thereby, the
predominantly wooden-made residences in the district were replaced by brick and
stone (kagir) made buildings. 156 Regarding the demography of the district, the
predominant non-Muslim populace has disseppeared gradually and the structure
has changed in favor of Muslim inhabitans by the turn of the twentieth century.157
Even though non-Muslim residents diminished gradually, the cosmopolitan
atmosphere of the district seemed to remain in place until the late 1920s. Cezar
Umûr-ı Belediyye, Vol. 3, İBB Kültür İşleri Daire Başkanlığı Yayınları, İstanbul, 1995, pp. 1307-
1343.
155 Debates on the changing perceptions towards Beyoğlu from the turn of the twentieth
century to the modern times are discussed by Edhem Eldem, “Ottoman Galata and Pera
Between Myth and Reality”, in From “milieu de mémoire” to “lieu de mémoire”, The
Cultural Memory of Istanbul in the 20th century, Ulrike Tischler (ed.), München: M.
Meidenbauer, 2006, pp. 19-36; In a similar framework, Çağlar Keyder analyses the
perception of Istanbul through the rising elites of High Republican period (1923-1950) lived
in Ankara. The new policy that was fully based on nationalist sentiments regarded the still
multiethnic structure of the city as impure. The city was a remnant of the past that could
still carry the spirit of the generated empire, “The Setting”, in Istanbul: Between the Global
and the Local, Çağlar Keyder (ed.), Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., New York, 1999,
pp. 3-28.
156 Nur Akın, “Beyoğlu”, Dünden Bugüne İstanbul Ansiklopedisi, Vol. 2, Kültür Bakanlığı &
Tarih Vakfı, İstanbul, 1994, pp. 212-218; 19. Yüzyılın İkinci Yarısında Galata ve Pera, pp. 99,
124-126, and 297-312.
157 According to Cezar, the non-Muslim population has decreased from 190,000 to 127,863,
whereas the number of Muslim inhabitants increased from 125,000 to 145,990 in Beyoğlu
in a period of time from 1886 to 1935, XIX. Yüzyıl Beyoğlusu, Ak, İstanbul, 1991, pp. 357.
136
stated that the decrase of the non-Muslim population in the distrcit started first
with the abolishment of the caputilations by the Treaty of Lozan in 1923. Not only
the foriegners but also their non-Muslim local partners gradually left the city. Yet
the moving of the foreign embassies that were predominantly located in Beyoğlu to
the new capital of the Republic between 1927 and 1929 had an impact on the
cultural transformation of the district. 158
From the standpoint of music, the method of grasping the musical character of the
district through the musicians who resided there is likely to yield poor returns. The
reason is the small number of musicians who resided in the Beyoğlu district. Only
eight musicians lived there. Therefore, the practice of grasping the local vein
through the local musicians’ activities, which I sought for Eyüp and Üsküdar
districts, is not applicable for Beyoğlu. But I suggest that the musicians that poured
from other districts to Beyoğlu for a range of musical activities is fundamental to
understand the musical character of the neighborhood.
Tables 4.3 and 4.4 indicate the flow of musicians into the Beyoğlu district from
elsewhere. Indeed, it is only the Fatih district that slightly superseded Beyoğlu in
terms of overall activities. These two districts are critical to further improve our
knowledge on the late Ottoman music world as they both attracted musicians from
all around the city and were the places of various music organizations. From the
standpoint of the state, these two districts were regarded as first-rate places in the
city in 1908 and thus more tax were imposed to places that provided events such as
theatres and music performances in these two districts.159
158 ibid, pp. 446-447.
159 “Çalgı ve Lu‘biyât Ruhsatiyeleri Tarifesi (Sekizinci madde): “Galata, Beyoğlu ve
Şehzâdebaşı ve yaz mevsiminde Boğaziçi ve Çırçır suyu gibi şerefli mahaller birinci ve bu
yerlere nisbeten şerefi olmayan mahaller ikinci ve ücrâ yerlerdeki kaba çalgıcı esnafı üçüncü
sınıf itibar olunmuştur”, Osman Nuri Ergin, Mecelle-i Umûr-ı Belediyye, Vol. 4, İBB Kültür
İşleri Daire Başkanlığı Yayınları, İstanbul, 1995, pp. 1997-2000.
137
Table 4.11. Overall musical activities in the city
Place of residence Frequency Percent
Fatih 106 31.8
Beyoğlu 102 30.5
Rest (unknowns included) 126 37.7
TOTAL 334 100.0
Eleven (n = 11) activities happened outside Istanbul is not included.
Besides, before dealing with the particular music organizations and performances
held at Beyoğlu, the Gephi visualization will portray the musicians’ locations from
which they mostly frequented the Beyoğlu district. The general rule for the visual is
the more the interaction the bigger the circles. Regarding to the musicians’ mobility
in the city, Beyoğlu welcomed musicians from almost every other neighborhood.
This characteristic only shared with Fatih in similar proportions. Thereby, both
Beyoğlu and Fatih districts lie at the heart of the city music even though both
possessed distinct features. Despite that, many of the features are not comparable,
partly due to the unequal musician populace these two districts possessed (see
Table 4.1).
138
Figure 4.5. The location of musicians who made music in the Beyoğlu district
Musicians of Fatih, Beşiktaş and Üsküdar paid more frequent visits to Beyoğlu
respectively. The precise numbers and frequency are already given in Table 4.4.
With the help of Gephi that additionally visualizes these networks, it becomes easy
to grasp the data. Musicians who visited Beyoğlu under the unknown title are also
the musicians whose precise locations I could not identify.
In terms of music patterns, three types of musical activities appear to be vital in the
Beyoğlu district: Performing music in its innumerable music halls and theatres that
offered singing, dancing, acrobatics and comedy (see Table 4.12). Secondly,
performing religious music mainly in the Galata (Kulekapısı) Mevlevî lodge but also
in other Sufi lodges in the area. Thirdly, the growing industry of the sound
recording, many of the companies operated in the district right after the turn of the
twentieth century. To noted that, Sirkeci and Vezneciler were the alternative
139
centers of sound recording business. 160 There is a scholarly interest in and a
growing literature on the subject matter due to its association with the
technological impact on music, the changing patterns of music consumption, the
expansion of the music market, etc., right after the turn of the twentieth century
(see footnote 7 in Chapter 1). It seems that there was not a clear line of
demarcation between these patterns. Although Sufî in origin, Gavsi Baykara and
Hayri Tümer are two figures whose life stories contained various types of music
makings from radio performances to concerts in abroad and from attending Mevlevî
ceremonies to engaging in the sound recording companies. Sebilci Hüseyin’s (1894-
1975) biography reveals similar patterns: He was a Sufi musician who was raised
and educated by his uncle, Mustafa Hilmi Safî Efendi (1881-1960), the Sheikh of
Uşşakî lodge in Kasımpaşa. When the Sufi lodges were banned in 1925, he got
involved in the music business and hence music provided the income needed for his
subsistence. Performed in Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara for more than two decades,
made sound recordings particularly of a religious music, and was involved actively in
the film industry as a singer.
Nevertheless, not all the Sufi musicians were participants of different types of music
activities stated above. Ataullah Efendi (1842-1910) was born into a sheikh family.
His father, Kudretullah Dede (d. 1872), was the sheikh of Yenikapı Mevlevî lodge.
Ataullah Dede had been the sheikh of the Galata Mevlevî lodge since 1871 when he
died in 1910. Ahmed Celaleddin Dede was assigned to his post and would be the
last official sheikh in the Galata when the Sufi lodges ceased to operate in 1925. The
book called Sonometren, was built on his experiments to explain scientifically the
intervals within the Ottoman makam music. Indeed, it contributed to the studies of
the Committee to Classification and Fixing [of Historical “Turkish” Music], (Tasnif ve
Tesbit Heyeti) which was founded in 1926.161 The committee operated under the
160 Cemal Ünlü, Git Zaman Gel Zaman: fonograf – gramofon – taş plak, p. 90-91; Selçuk
Alimdar, Osmanlı’da Batı Müziği, Türkiye İş Bankası Kültür Yayınları, İstanbul, 2016, pp. 299-
305.
161 Thierry Zarcone claims that Ataullah Dede’s scientific interests seemed to be related
with his friendly connections with the Anglo-Saxon masons, through which he was
introduced to non-Muslim elites of Pera and Galata. The Bulwar (Masonic) Lodge in Pera
140
Ministry of Education (Maarif Nezâreti) and the aim was to preserve (in staff
notation) the Ottoman music in general but the religious repertoire in particular.162
Photo 4.3. Sheikh Ataullah Dede posed with his dervishes in front of Galata Mevlevî
Lodge at Beyoğlu before 1910
Source: le grand tour II: Constantinoble 1905. Fotografies d’Antoni Amatller a
Turquia, Institut Amattler d’Art Hispanic, 2006, p. 63.
Emin Yazıcı (1881-1945), as another Sufi musician, whose habitual music practices I
already mentioned in terms of geographical placement in the city, resided in the
Tophane part of the Beyoğlu district. His biographical material tells that the Mevlevî
order shaped his musical character in most cases. Mehmet Sabri Bey (Tophaneli)
(1848-1914) was also a Mevlevî dervish. Presumably, he personally knew Emin
was at a close distance to the Mevlevî lodge, “Şeyh Mehmed Ataullah Dede (1842-1910)
and the Mevlevîhâne of Galata: An Intellectual and Spritual Bridge Between the East and
the West”, The Dervishes of Sovereignty – The Sovereignty of Dervishes. The Mevlevî Order
in Istanbul, Ekrem Işın (ed.), Istanbul Researh Institute, 2007, pp. 64.
162 Rauf Yekta, “Mukaddeme”, in Türk Musikisi Klasiklerinden İlahiler, Rauf Yekta Bey,
Zekaizade Ahmet Bey, Ali Rifat Çağatay (eds.), Vol. 1, İstanbul Konservatuarı Neşriyatı,
İstanbul, 1931, pp. III-VIII.
141
Yazıcı since both served in the government jobs –albeit in different offices, both
were Mevlevî dervishes and both again lived in the same neighborhood in the
roughly overlapping time period. Nevertheless, his life accounts reveal that he
regularly attended the Mevlevî ceremonies held at the Bahariye Mevlevî lodge at
Eyüp, rather than the Galata lodge, which the latter was walking distance from his
residence.
Regarding the Beyoğlu’s entertainment places is that they differ clearly from the
ones in Üsküdar. In terms of spaces, where the music was heard, theatres, coffee
houses and picnic areas were common in Üsküdar, whereas music halls and taverns
formed the majority in Beyoğlu. Theaters were common in both neighborhoods.
The theatres, at least for the ones in Beyoğlu, need to be explored further due to
their unrecognizable position. Concordia Theatre, founded in 1871, for instance,
was a complex that extended into a large area on Cadde-i Kebir. It contained two
halls; each was used seasonally. Various groups but mainly the ones with the
repertoire of Italian operetta were on stage. Duhanî states that due to its non-
Ottoman owner, the place was legally untouchable by the local authorities, and in
its inner halls it provided the customers with a range of illicit goods and services like
gambling and drugs. Ironically enough, Concordia would put itself in order in the
course of Ramadan, during which traditional Ottoman theatre (ortaoyunu) and
music were performed. Hasan Efendi and Aşkî Efendi’s fasıl groups, whose names
are indicated in Table 15, probably performed music here during the Ramadan
periods. What’s more, after six years from its closing date, a religious building was
constructed over its ruins in 1912, namely St. Antoine Catholic Church.163
163 Yavuz Pekman, Metin Balay, Geleceğe Perde Açan Gelenek: Geçmişten Günümüze
İstanbul Tiyatroları, Vol. II: Beyoğlu, Şişli, Beşiktaş ve Çevresi, YKY, İstanbul, 2011, pp. 59-62;
Indeed, Sermet Muhtar Alus was amazed with this sharp change, see Sermet Muhtar Alus,
İstanbul Kazan Ben Kepçe, pp. 34-35; Said N. Duhanî, Beyoğlu’nun Adı Pera İken, Nihan Önol
(trans.), Çelik Gülersoy Vakfı, İstanbul Kütüphanesi Yayınları, İstanbul, 1990, p. 71 and p. 75.
Meanwhile, the official website of the church does not mention the anecdote while giving a
detailed account of its own history, http://www.sentantuan.com/kilisemiz/tarih/
142
Table 4.12. A list of places where music was performed at Beyoğlu between 1895
and 1916 (quoted from Kalender)
Head Musician District Place Other Musicians
Zafiraki Beyoğlu Galata Beer House164 -
Hasan Efendi Beyoğlu Concordiya Theatre -
Aşki Efendi Beyoğlu Concordiya Theatre -
Hafız Efendi Beyoğlu Yorgancı Garden -
Anastas Beyoğlu Eftalopos Music Hall Sarı Onnik165
Hacı Karabet
Efendi
Beyoğlu Pangaltı Gülistan
Garden Theatre
-
Bülbülî Salih Beyoğlu Galata Harbour Garden -
Afet Efendi Beyoğlu Pangaltı Afropoli Music Hall Kemanî Lambo166
Anastas Beyoğlu Royal Music Hall Kanunî Şemsi167
Memduh Efendi Beyoğlu Eftalopos Music Hall Udî Afet168
Anastas Beyoğlu Aynalı Music Hall Oseb169
Ethem Efendi Beyoğlu Eftalopos Music Hall Kanunî Şemsi170
164 Galata part was another center of entertainment. Places mainly operated as taverns
with live music, which were generally named as baloz by the frequenters, Metin And,
Tanzimat ve İstibdat Döneminde Türk Tiyatrosu (1839-1908), Türkiye İş Bankası Kültür
Yayınları, Ankara, 1972, pp. 213-214.
165 Other musicians were Ovik (sic), Lambo, and kanunî Meyhal (sic).
166 Other musicians were kanuni Karnik, lavtacı Mihran, hanende Şetoruk, Aam (sic), Kirkor,
and kemençe Petri Efendi.
167 Other musicians were udi İbrahim, hanende Karakaş, Ahmet, and lavtacı Ojik (sic) Efendi.
168 Other musicians were kanuni Hafız, hanende Mihritad, lavtacı Şairzade Mihran Bey, and
hafız İbrahim Efendi.
169 Other musicians were udi Mısırlı İbrahim, kanuni Nesip, hanende Oseb, and Setrak
Efendi.
170 Other musicians were udi Arşak, hanende Ahmet, Mihritad, lavtacı Ovrik Efendi, and
Emin Efendi.
143
Table 4.12. Continued
Hasan Efendi Beyoğlu Odeon Theatre171 -
Bogos Efendi Beyoğlu The Garden of Municipality -
Unknown Beyoğlu At Cambazhanesi (?) -
Unknown Beyoplu İğneli Music Hall -
Unknown Beyoğlu Odeon Theatre -
Anastas Beyoplu Hamdi Bey Music Hall Udi İbrahim172
Karakin Beyoğlu Tepebaşı Bolu Beer House Kani Efendi
Unknown Beyoğlu Eftalopos Music Hall -
Arşak Efendi
Beyoğlu Music Hall, Galatasaray Aleko173
Anastas Beyoğlu Eftalopos Music Hall Mısırlı
İbrahim174
Anastas Beyoğlu Taksim Café Türk Mısırlı
İbrahim175
My suggestions concerning the entertainment places in Üsküdar are also valid for
Beyoğlu: Neither places nor musicians in the tables can give a complete musical
setting of the district but probably only a glimpse of it. It is likely that many
unknown musicians performed in many other halls, taverns, and theatres. However,
historiography omits the undocumented pieces of life. Violinist Salih Efendi (Bülbülî,
171 Metin And gives a detailed history of the theatre, however, this narrative is mainly based
on dramas and theatre groups rather than musicians who also hired the place to perform
music, Başlangıcından 1983’e Türk Tiyatro Tarihi, İletişim, İstanbul, 1992, p. 93.
172 Other musicians were udi Selim, kanuni Şemsi, karateci (sic) İbrahim, Oseb, Emin, and
lavtacı Hacı Haçik.
173 Other musicians were kanuni Fethi, lavtacı Lambo, hanende Hafız Yaşar, Üsküdarlı Edip,
and Selanikli Emin.
174 Other musicians were Selim, gırnatacı İbrahim, kanuni Şemsi, hanende Karakaş, gırnatacı
İbrahim, Selanikli Emin, Ağapos, Mihritad Efendi, and lavtacı Onnik.
175 Other musicians were kanuni Şemsi, hanende Mithat, Karakaş, Agapos, and Emin Efendi.
144
d. 1923) is a fine example of a model characterized by a busy and active music life in
his time. His music path is traceable through advertisements that he performed in
the coffee houses, music halls, and picnic areas from Üsküdar to Fatih and to
Beyoğlu, recorded violin solos and accompanied to some of Cemil Bey’s recordings.
However, what survived from those were a bunch of fragmented and sketchy pieces
and details. If it had been otherwise, it would be possible to enhance the inner
working of the music sector through this remarkable person.176
Photo 4.4. Violinist Bülbülî Salih Efendi (d. 1923)
Source: Tanburi Cemil Bey Külliyatı, Kalan Müzik, İstanbul, 2016, p.64
It should be noted that musicians related with Beyoğlu had two other features;
teaching music and attending home gatherings, meşk. Not the tutorage but the
home gatherings appears in many life accounts –albeit in different proportions- that
176 The biographical approach to music brings fresh insights and novel perspectives. Bob
Van Der Linden’s study of the reconstruction of Indian music at the turn of the twentieth
century brings the biographical accounts to the core, Music and Empire in Britain and India:
Identity, Internationalism, and Cross-Cultural Communication, Palgrave Studies in Cultural
and Intellectual History Series, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, UK, 2013; John Morgan
O’Connell’s narrative traces the transition period through the life account of Münir
Nureddin Selçuk, Alaturka: Style in Turkish Music (1923-1938), SOAS Musicology Series,
Ashgate, 2013.
145
transcend categories and thus might be defined as a comprehensive school in
music. The pattern seems to have less power only in the musicians of music halls.
Afet (Hapet) Mısırlıyan (1850-1922), whose music career, for instance, spread over
a large area from Istanbul to Cairo. He performed music in Birinci Tavern at
Yüksekkaldırım, Eftalopos Music Hall and Balozcu Miltiyadi's Tavern in Galata. His
life account, after all, does not bear a piece of information whether he attended to
any house gathering at all. A close resemblance should be noted between Afet
Efendi and Ibrahim Efendi (Avram Hayat Levi, 1879-1948) who also traveled for
music form Damascus to Cairo and from Aleppo to Istanbul. Ibrahim Efendi played
oud in Aynalı Tavern and Hamdi Bey’s Music Halls. Both were in Taksim. Similarly,
Avram Efendi’s life story does not particularly refer to information related to house
gatherings. Ahmet Bey of Salonica (1869-1926) was musically educated by the
dervishes of the Salonica Mevlevî lodge and partly by Refik Karasu (d. ?).
Interestingly enough, he arrived in Istanbul in April 1909 as a volunteer in the Army
of Action in order to suppress the rebellion. After the rebellion was put down
successfully in about ten days, he was not so eager to return to his hometown. It
seemed likely that the decision was taken much before he became a participant of
the armed forces. In Istanbul, he performed music with many musicians until 1920
and died in 1926. His name was among the list of musicians who performed in the
Royal and Eftalopos Music Halls at Beyoğlu. His relatively extended biography, in
which Nazmi Özalp’s narrative claims completely a different trajectory after the
1909 event, however, does not mention any house gathering activity at all.
The social profile and musical behavior pattern of Nail Ökte (1884-1963) largely
coincide with musicians that worked in public offices, whose characteristics I
explained in the Üsküdar sub-chapter. Born and living in Cihangir, Ökte was truly
the musician of house gatherings. As a scribe in the State Harbors, his unique
professional involvement with music occurred in his last years when he performed
at the Istanbul radio together with his musician sons, Burhaneddin Ökte (1905-
1973) and İzzeddin Ökte (1910-1991). It is likely that his two sons were the driving
force behind the radio broadcasts. Karnik Germiyan (1872-1947) belonged to the
Armenian community of Beyoğlu and worked as a private accountant. As another
146
prevalent pattern for non-Muslim musicians, he was introduced to music through
the church choir just like Bimen Dergazaryan Şen (1873-1943). Bimen Şen’s father
was an Armenian priest, from whom he received his primary music education. As an
accountant and exchange broker, though he recorded music and rarely appeared to
perform in the concerts, his music world was mainly about attending house
gatherings.
As stated before, Beyoğlu underwent a process of transformation particularly owing
to the municipal authorities that were intent on creating more green areas out of
“dead spaces” to promise new vitality to city dwellers from the last quarter of the
nineteenth century on. The vast area in Tepebaşı, previously shared both by Muslim
and non-Muslim burial grounds, was transformed into a public garden by the
Municipality of Beyoğlu in 1866, and included a concert hall, restaurant, footways,
playground for children and two theatres that operated seasonally. Asdikzâde
Bogos Efendi’s (1872-1945) group performed music in the Garden of Municipality,
Tepebaşı. In 1870, similar open-air arrangement, namely as Taksim Garden, opened
to public under the responsibility of the Municipality of Beyoğlu. None of these
were non-profit initiatives. The ground was turning into something functional
together with a new revenue source for local authorities.177 Nevertheless, historical
accounts provide limited information regarding the musicians who performed in
those commonplaces.
Eventually, following the chronological order in which they occurred, the radio
broadcast in Istanbul should be considered within the different context. The outset
of radio had a great impact on the lives of musicians and hence on music. However,
it began to operate in 1927. Even though it was based in the Beyoğlu district, to
consider radio together with the musical activities that have been carried out since
the turn of the century, will lead to methodological problems. Thereby, sixth
177 Sermet Muhtar Alus, İstanbul Kazan Ben Kepçe, p. 26; Nur Akın, 19. Yüzyılın İkinci
Yarısında Galata ve Pera, pp. 290-292.
147
chapter will particularly discuss the emergence and the impact of radio within the
framework of continuity and change in music in the Early Republican Period.
4.5. Fatih: The Musical Stronghold of the City
The Fatih district deserves to be the music center of the city since the
overwhelming majority of musicians under study resided in the area. The district is
by far the most densely inhabited with 84 musicians. This proportion is about one
third of the total number of musicians the study contains. Thereby, making social
analyses of musicians would yield more meaningful results that would help to
analyze the musical ground of Fatih and hence the city. Indeed, exploring the
mobility of musicians from Fatih to other districts and from others towards Fatih
could be critical to portray the level of the musical interaction in Istanbul.
Figure 4.6. The activity map of musicians to Fatih and from Faith to other district
The cluster above visualizes the centrality of Fatih regarding the movements of
musicians in the city, the frequency and numerical version of which is already given
148
in the Table 4.4. The relation between red circles (edges) and blue (node) displays
the movements of musicians towards the district and hence portrays the centrality
of it. Fatih attracts musicians from almost all over the city. The size of the edges
(red) is almost the same, which means that the number of musicians that regularly
visited Fatih was close to each other. The only exception was Üsküdar, whose edge
appears slightly larger than other reds. Musicians who visited Fatih under the
“unknown” title are also the musicians living in the city but whose precise locations
are undefined. The light yellow edges, on the other hand, symbolize the local
musicians’ movement towards other districts. The most frequented districts were
by far Beyoğlu, followed by Eyüp and Kadıköy, respectively. Since the local
musicians’ (from Fatih) activities in their own neighborhood were already described,
the cluster deliberately leaves out their proportions from the activity map.
Table 4.13 emphasizes the birthplaces of musicians who resided at Fatih, and will
also separate the proportion of the musicians elsewhere born.
Table 4.13. Birthplaces of musicians who resided in Fatih
Musicians’
Districts Frequency Percent
İstanbul 66 78.6
Other vilayets 12 14.4
Outside Ottoman territory 5 6
Unknown 1 1.2
TOTAL 84 100.0
The outcome indicates that, apart from one unknown, only 17 musicians were born
elsewhere and moved to live in Fatih (20.2 %), whereas 66 of them (77.8 %) were
born in the city that is more than three-quarter of all musicians that lived in Fatih.
The outcome is musically important as it declares that those people got their music
trainings in Istanbul. Ahmet Nuri Canaydın (b. 1881) was musically educated at his
home in Aksaray by his elder sister, who was a kanun player. Kazım Uz (1873-1943)
was a student of Zekai Dede at the Dârüşşafaka (Orphanage) School in Fatih. The
149
father of İzzeddin Hümaî Bey (1875-1950) was Kadirî sheikh in Fatih, from whom he
received his music lessons. The various education types reflect the many forms of
music transmission in the late Ottoman Istanbul, which I will discuss the issue in the
subsequent chapter.
Similar to Üsküdar, the real income sources of musicians reveal two chief patterns;
musicians who make a living out of music and musicians whose economical basis
depend on other professions. Those whose income was not derived from music
were overwhelmingly involved in the Ottoman officialdom. From a different
perspective, the outcomes might be read in two chief groups, namely as salaried
and non-salaried jobs. I define the regular or salaried jobs within the institutional
framework, which by and large indicates the ones that operated in the state
machinery, such as any regular position in the bureaucracy, teaching at state
schools or serving as religious functionary through which the official stipend was
received.
Table 4.14. Income sources of musicians who resided in Fatih
Income Source Frequency Percent
Official Functionary 36 42.9
Music 17 20.2
Teacher (non-music) 3 3.6
Sheikh/Dervishe 3 3.6
Religious Functionary 2 2.4
Artisan 4 4.8
Other 7 8.4
Unknown 1 1.2
MOI 11 13.2
TOTAL 84 100.0
The MOI group contained 11 musicians with multiple professions; however, these
occupations, in most cases, did not overlap with each other (see Table 4.15).
150
Table 4.15. Musicians with multiple income sources who resided in Fatih
Sources of income frequency percent
Music- Official 1 1.2
Music-Sheikh 1 1.2
Official-Rel. Fun. 2 2.4
Official-Sheikh 1 1.2
Official-Trader 1 1.2
Rel. Fun.-Teacher 1 1.2
Rel. Fun.-Artisan 1 1.2
Official-Solicitor 2 2.4
Official-Other 1 1.2
TOTAL 11 13.2
Mustafa Nezihî Albayrak (1871-1964), for instance, was a scribe in the Ministry of
Education (Maarif Nezâreti) whose father was a government official indeed. During
the later part of his life, he retired from the official post and became a tea
merchant. Oud player Cemil Bey (Şekerci, 1867-1928) retired from Imperial Music
Academy (mûzîka-i hümâyûn) in 1911 and went to Cairo as a guest of Abbas Hilmi
Paşa (1874-1944) for a short period of time. Nevertheless, he did not return back to
Istanbul and permanently settled down in Cairo. He offered music classes to the
members of the Cairo’s wealthy families. In between, he opened a candy shop. In
fact, he had been an apprentice to a master candy maker in Grand Bazaar of
Istanbul when he was thirteen years of age. After all, Cemil Bey’s case is the only
one in which two jobs are being held coincidentally and both provided financial
support.
Accordingly, the regular (salaried) jobs are clearly ahead of the non-regular ones.
Government officials, teachers and religious functionaries make about the half of
the total number. Additionally, the “MOI” (more than one income source) category
should be counted in the salaried jobs since eight out of 11 jobs were again salaried
jobs. I refer here to the first jobs of those 11 musicians. Memduh İmre (1891-1956)
was a scribe in the Ministry of Military Affairs (Bâb-ı Seraskeri).
151
After retirement, he was actively involved in music as he joined a music school
(Dârü’t-Ta’lim-i Musikî), the school was active between 1912 and 1939. He
performed in the school’s music group, and he also became part of the teaching
staff. Hacı Kiramî Efendi (1840-1909) was a scribe in the Ministry of Military Affairs
(Bâb-ı Seraskeri). His sorrowful life story begins with becoming a personal religious
functionary (mu’addhin) to Mehmed Reşad Efendi (1844-1918) during the reign of
Abdulhamid II. He was petitioned to palace (Yıldız) due to his association with
Mehmed Reşad. Following that, he was disregarded and publicly looked down
upon. Consequently, social isolation destabilized him psychologically and paved the
way to his suicide in 1909. Even though it is unknown how many years he endured
“killing by silence”, he performed in the Sufi lodges to get by. According to
İbnülemin, though this might be an exaggeration, an official was sent to exile only
due to his presence in a Sufi ceremony while Kiramî Efendi performed. After all, I
am inclined to regard music as an irregular profession and these biographical
examples support my opinion.
A fine example to understand how limited the income that one could gain solely out
of music was is the case of Nevres Bey (1873-1937). It would not be wrong to say
that Nevres Bey could not achieve a decent life standard in return for his high
quality of music both as an instrumentalist and a composer. Irregular job
oportunities, such as accompanying Münir Nurettin Selçuk in his concerts, recording
music to foreign companies, and offering music classes to members of upper class
families were prestigious. Yet these were rare occasions and were not sufficient for
him overcome his poor living conditions.
The financial situation of Refik Fersan (1893-1965) was not far from Nevres Bey. His
memoir clearly reveals the family’s vulnerable economic situation, particularly in his
older ages. It could not actually be called a memoir, as a genre, since his accounts
are mostly the exchange of letters written in different periods of time with his
family members and musician friends. The text also includes notes kept in the form
of diary from 1948 to 1965. Bardakçı collected them to publish in a book without
mentioning whether if he left any letter unpublished. Regarding the diary, he
152
underlines that he published parts of it. Refik Fersan’s father suddenly dies in 1894
and his mother finds shelter in her older sister’s house. The house surely provided
them with an upward socioeconomic mobility in terms of wealth, comfort and
material availability. Under the protection of her aunt, Refik Fersan got the best
possible education in the city. He received his education both from Robert College
and Galatasaray. Additionally, the new house of Fersan was the place where artists,
intellectuals and musicians gathered regularly. Mabeynci Faik Bey (1870-1937), the
elder son of the house, provided financial support to many artists, among whom
there was Tanburi Cemil Bey (1872-1916). It was the house of art where Refik
Fersan grew up and became a disciple of Cemil Bey.
Photo 4.5. Refik Fersan, Cemil Bey and Musa Süreyya in 1914 (from left to right)
Source: Mes’ud Cemil, Tanburi Cemil Bey’in Hayatı, (ed. Uğur Derman), Kubbealtı,
İstanbul, (Third Edition) 2012, p.188.
Nevertheless, things were about to change for every person in the Ottoman state,
when the Ottoman revolutionaries took the control of state affairs in July 1908. At
the micro level, it was more than destructive for Refik Fersan and his family. Since
Mabeynci Faik Bey belonged to the close circle of Abdulhamid II, the new political
order meant being the target of accusations. In 1917, Faik Bey secretly left Istanbul
153
for Cairo then for Switzerland, and was able to return to Istanbul only during the
first years of the Republic. Oddly enough, this distinctive life account became the
focus of neither an academic interest nor a biographical study. Though Refik Fersan
became a radio member in the newly founded republic, it seemed that he would
never ever be able to come close to the living standards he had had before. The
deteriorating economic conditions were explicitly voiced in many parts of his letters
and diaries.178 Without overemphasizing the ups and downs Nevres Bey and Refik
Fersan underwent, the biographical accounts tell that a larger part of these two
esteemed musicians’ life was about a struggle to improve poor living conditions.
In terms of professional continuity of Fatih’s musicians, the bureaucratic tradition
predominates over all other occupations. Indeed, the trend of holding governmet
jobs shows a correlation between fathers and sons. According to the proportions
above, 15 out of 25 official functionary fathers’ children sought a career in
bureaucracy (60 %). In the general table, 37 followed the family tradition out of 73
bureaucrat fathers (51 %).
178 From his diary, “Allah’a çok şükür olsun, şu ara cümlemiz sıhhatteyiz. Ben biraz nezleyim.
Yegâne üzüntümüz ise, parasızlık. Hâlâ kömürümüzü alamadık. Gerçi havalar da iyi gidiyor.
16 October 1947.” Refik Bey… Refik Fersan ve Hatıraları, Murat Bardakçı (ed.), Pan, İstanbul,
1995, p. 67. Another passage from a letter written to his son, “… bu paranın beş-altıyüz
lirasını kömüre ve öteberiye sarfetmiş olduğumuzdan eczacı Sâkine hanımdan bir kısmını
borç alarak bir aylık kirayı tamamladık. 9 November 1963, Refik Bey…, p. 29.
154
Table 4.16. The occupational continuity (cross tabulation)
Fathers’
occupations
Income sources of children
Music
Official
Func.
Religious
Func.
Sheikhs
Artisan
Other
TOTAL
Rel. Func. 1 7 1 1 1 1 12
Sheikh/Derv. 2 2 1 5
Off. Func. 4 15 6 25
Artisan 1 3 2 1 7
Musician 2 2
TOTAL 8 27 3 3 2 8 51
Note: The table contains selected professions for both fathers and offspring.
Perhaps the most striking feature in the table is the problem of continuity in the
religious functionaries. Only one out of 12 religious functionaries’ offspring
continued the family profession (8.3 %), but overwhelmingly made their choice for
bureaucracy (58.3 %). The overall pattern is also typical. Only four out of 28
religious functionaries’ children continued with the same profession (14 %), and 15
of them chose the bureaucratic career (54 %). As underlined before, digging for
roots why they did not choose to walk in the same line with their fathers and
sought their main source of income elsewhere, almost always in bureaucracy, is
beyond the research interest of this thesis.
Who were these two sheikhs that walked the same path as their fathers? Mehmed
Celaleddin Dede (1849-1908) held the post of sheikh in the Yenikapı Mevlevî lodge
after his father Osman Selahaddin Dede’s death in 1886. He grew up in this lodge
that typically operated as a music school. He played tanbur and composed a
Mevlevî ceremony in the mode of dügâh. Another Sufi was Nurullah Kılıç (1879-
1975), whose father was the sheikh of Pirî Pasha Sünbülîye lodge (a sub-branch of
Halvetî order). He was musically cultivated by Hüseyin Fahreddin Dede (1853-1911)
and eventually became a ney player. As a sheikh of Merkez Efendi lodge, he was in
155
charge of the ceremonies that took place there, and he also attended to the Sufi
rituals at the Yenikapı and Bahariye Mevlevî lodges.
After all, the individual life stories of Sheikhs question the validity and the social
acceptability of state intervention against the Sufi lodges. Even though the lodges
officially ceased to function after 1925, the decision did not necessarily mean the
abolishment of the social networks among the Sufi circles. What was the social
response of the Sufis to this intrusion? Having said that the tradition was severely
affected, sheikhs still continued to be regarded as sheikhs among the people and so
did dervishes. Moreover, the ceremonies largely persisted in alternative ways,
among which there were the house gatherings. Both the life of Gavsi Baykara and of
Sebilci Hüseyin formed a basis for this claim. They belonged to the Sufi world before
1925; however, the new circumstances directed them into different professions, for
which they relied upon the credentials they possessed from their Sufi background.
They survived due to the fact that they had the ability to adapt their music to the
market expectations. Nurullah Kılıç, for example, lived a half century after the state
decision to close dervish lodges in 1925 and was still regarded to be the last official
sheikh of the Merkez Efendi lodge in his social milieu until his very last breath.179
Table 4.17 indicates that almost one third of musician population in Fatih was
connected to a Sufi order (29.50 % in total). As mentioned before, the idea here is
rather than dealing with how deep their connection was to understand the
relationship between Sufi music culture and their musical output.
179 Even though the interview contains bias and an amount of indoctrination, it still offers a
glimpse of Kılıç family’s Sufi past, see https://odatv.com/bizde-hic-basortulu-yoktu-annemsapka-
takardi-3008151200.html (accessed on 11 June 2018).
156
Table 4.17. Affiliation to a Sufi order among the musicians of Fatih
Sufi order Frequency Percent
Mevlevî 14 16.7
Kadirî 3 3.6
Other Sufi orders180 8 9.2
Non-Muslim 4 4.8
Unknown 55 65.5
TOTAL 84 100.0
The Mevlevî order was by far the leading Sufi order to which the musicians were
affiliated. Some life stories in order to examine the interactions between Sufi
culture and music therefore will come from the Mevlevî musicians. Ahmet Rasim
Bey (1864-1932) received his elementary music education in the Darrüşşafaka
(Orphanage) School. His music teacher at school was Zekai Dede (1824-1897). Yet,
his music class continued in the Bahariye Mevlevî lodge since his teacher was a
frequenter of the lodge. There he also met Hüseyin Fahreddin Dede (1853-1911)
who additionally helped him to deepen his musical knowledge. Interestingly, Kazım
Uz (1873-1943), another Mevlevî musician who resided in Fatih, would pursue
precisely the same order of music education, from Dârüşşafaka to Bahariye lodge
with Zekai Dede. Rauf Yekta Bey (1871-1935) was another product of Mevlevî order
but this time at another lodge, at Yenikapı. He was musically educated by
Celaleddin Dede, for tanbur, and Nayî Cemal, for ney in the lodge. He was a prolific
writer of music, also a musician who attended Mevlevî rites at the Yenikapı and
Galata lodges with his ney. Hayri Tümer (1902-1973) is a solid evidence of continuity
of tradition. He got his primary music education at Vefa Middle School by Kazım Uz,
who was a disciple of Zekai Dede. As one identifies the music education patterns,
the social networks of musicians become more apparent. Furthermore, biographical
accounts provide the ground on which the teachers and teachings methods that
180 Here the situation is, seven Sufi orders (Rufaî, Uşşakî, Halvetî, Sadî, Nakşî, Halidî, and
Bektaşî) have one musician affiliated to. Yet one regularly visited more than one lodge,
hence I placed him in the “affiliation unclear” category.
157
dominated the field. Even though the subject matter is promising, I will not further
discuss it since the issues of the differences and similarities between teaching
methods as well as the genealogic understanding of transmitting the musical
knowledge will be elaborated upon in the following chapter.
The practice of teaching, either privately or in a music school was characteristic
among the musicians who resided in the Fatih district. Mehmed Eşref Efendi (d.
1930), for example, offered private classes at his home in Cerrahpaşa and ran a
music store in Divanyolu Street, Sultanahmet. It is odd that he only accepted
women for his classes. Ahmet Nuri Canaydın (b. 1881) resided at Vefa, where he
regularly organized musical gatherings. He was also among the teaching staff of
Dârü’l-Musikî-i Osmanî, which began to operate in 1908, in the Koska neighborhood
of Aksaray. Another Fatih located musician was Memduh İmre (1891-1956). As
mentioned before, he was under the contract of the German Polidor recording
company. The job did not prevent him from teaching music at the Dârü’t-Ta’lîm-i
Musikî, founded in 1912 by Fahri Kopuz (1885-1968) in the Bayezid neighborhood.
Violin player Abdülkadir Bey’s (Töre, 1872-1945) life was devoted to musicology and
teaching music. His home at Cerrahpaşa operated literally as a music school, and
eventually was transformed into a fully music school in 1918, named Gülşen-i
Musikî. The biographical accounts reveal the situation that the Fatih district was the
place of a large number of music schools that began to function after the first
decade of the twentieth century. The meaning of their presence and their overall
effect on the musical setting of the city will be debated in the Chapters 5 and 6.
The list of places where the music was performed helps to further portray the
musical structure of Fatih. Kalender’s article contained more than 90 musical
activities together with a great number of musicians regarding to the Fatih district.
The very reason of preparing the table is to emphasize the places where music was
performed, so my catalogue mentiones each place once only.
158
Table 4.18. Places in which music was held in Fatih between 1895 and 1916
(quoted from Kalender)
Head Musician District Place Other
Musicians
Şevki Bey Vezneciler Hâne-i Osmanî Company -
Tahsin Efendi Şehzadebaşı Abdurrezzak Theatre -
Memduh Efendi Şehzadebaşı Şehzadebaşı Theatre -
Aşkî Efendi Şehzadebaşı Şark Theatre -
Unknown Şehzadebaşı Ferah Theatre -
Dârü’t-Talîm-i
Musikî
Şehzadebaşı Millet Theatre -
Salim Efendi Sultanahmet The Garden of Municipality
Udi Saim181
Celal Efendi Edirnekapı Beylerbeyi Fountain -
Tatyos Efendi Şehzadebaşı Fevziye Coffee House Udi Afet,
Kanuni Ali Bey
Memduh Efendi Şehzadebaşı İrfan Coffee House -
Tahsin Efendi Şehzadebaşı Şemsi Coffee House -
İbrahim Efendi
(Avram)
Bayezid Merkez Coffee House kemençeci
Ağabey182
Kâtib Salih
Efendi
Şehzadebaşı Ali Çavuş’s Coffee House Violinist Aşki
Efendi
Aşki Efendi Yeşiltulumba,
Aksaray
Dilküşa Coffee House Violinist Aşki
Efendi
Zafiraki Vezneciler Osmanî Coffee House Kanuni
Nesip183
İbrahim Efendi
(Avram)
Divanyolu Arif’s Music Hall His brother
Selim184
Yorgi Efendi Fener Midilli Music Hall -
Aşkî Efendi Hasköy Türkiye Music Hall -
İbrahim Efendi
(Avram)
Fener Serafim’s Music Hall His brother
Selim185
181 Other musicians were kanuni Âmâ Ali, Karakaş Efendi, Ahmet Bey.
182 Other musicians were kemani Harun, kanuni Abduh, hanende Selim, Salomon Efendi.
183 Other musicians were lavtacı Lambo, udi Serkis, hanende Ağopos, Seras, Pol Efendi.
184 Other musicians were kanuni Abdah, Kemani Şükrü.
185 Other musicians were kanuni Abdah, Kemani Harun.
159
Table 4.18. Continued
Unknown Fener Dünya Music Hall -
Bülbülî Salih Fener Kılburnu Music Hall Hanende
Ahmet186
Memduh
Efendi
Fener İskele Music Hall Kanuni Şemsi187
Each neighborhood promoted a street or a specific area at which the majority of
musical activities were held. It was Cadde-i Kebir in Beyoğlu or Bağlarbaşı Street in
Üsküdar where the theatres, music halls and concerts carried on. The counterpart
of it was unquestionably Şehzadebaşı Street in Fatih where the well know
Direklerarası was. Almost all the coffee houses listed above were located on the
street. Regarding the atmosphere, however, there was a considerable difference
between other musically prominent streets and Şehzadebaşı mainly owing to its
location that was/is at the intersection of the major mosques, namely Süleymaniye,
Fatih, and Şehzade. Probably because of that Direklerarası was highly associated
with the Ramadan nights in the nineteenth century Ottoman Istanbul. When
precisely the street started to operate in that way is unknown, however, the
concentration of various forms of artistic performances seemed to have increased
towards the last quarter of the nineteenth century. The time period also refers to
the expansion of local theatre groups’ activities. It is likely that theatre and music
attracted people to the area. Many coffee houses corresponded to that and began
to function as theatres or music halls. Alus stated that the street and hence the area
retained the vitality and dynamism until the end of the 1920s.188
186 Other musicians were Mihran, udi Selim, Hafız Efendi.
187 Other musicians were Karakaş Efendi, Mihran Efendi, Ahmet Bey, Udi Selim.
188 Sermet Muhtar Alus, İstanbul Kazan Ben Kepçe, pp. 101-113; Sermet Muhtar Alus,
“Direklerarasında Ramazan Piyasası”, Tarih ve Toplum, January 1994, Vol. 122 and February
1994, Vol. 130, Taha Toros Archive, No. 001580761010, İstanbul Şehir University; Salâh
Birsel, Kahveler Kitabı, pp. 101-163; Bekir Tosun, “Direklerarası”, 367-368.
160
Photo 4.6. A general view of Direklerarası Street at Fatih in the Late Ottoman
Istanbul
Source: Fakiye Özsoysal, Metin Balay, Geleceğe Perde Açan Gelenek: Geçmişten
Günümüze İstanbul Tiyatroları: Suriçi İstanbul’u, Bakırköy ve Çevresi, Vol. I, YKY,
İstanbul, 2011, p. 37.
The places on the list together with innumerable places where music was
performed, such as music schools, coffee houses and Sufi lodges, produced a
vibrant and dynamic musical climate. This is the reason for the highest
concentrations of musicians who resided in Fatih. The musicians who combined
music with other occupations but particularly with official service is near to one half
for Fatih. Given the distance from many of the state offices might be another
underlying factor.189
189 The geographical setting of the Ottoman administrative mechanism in Istanbul covered
the areas from Sultanahmet to Bayezid throughout the nineteenth century, Yasemin Avcı,
Osmanlı Hükümet Konakları, Tanzimat Döneminde Kent Mekânında Devletin Erki ve Temsili,
Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, İstanbul, 2017, pp. 38-48.
161
Map 4.2. Tentative arrangements of musical places on the Direklerarası and
Çukurçeşme (was renamed Fevziye) Streets at Fatih
Source: https://gis.fatih.bel.tr/webgis/ (accessed in 26 August, 2018).
162
Map 4.2 is taken from German Blues Map of 1914 and it is cropped from the section
of J7 (Feuille No J7) that covers the areas between Bayezid, Sehzadebaşı and
Süleymaniye.190 The map displays the Direklerarası Street in Fatih, where the bulk of
the places with live performances and music schools were concentrated. The
location of some places is tentatively described, such as the Şehzade Theatre or
Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî. All we know is both places operated on this street. Another
loosely described location belonged to Dârü’l-Elhân Conservatory, which hired an
estate (konak) on the Fevziye Street. However, the map is more precise in
identifying some others. Fevziye Coffe House operated at the corner of the Fevziye
Street and right at the opposite of the Şehzadebaşı Fountain. Musikî-i Osmanî hired
the second floor of the same estate. The location of Ferah and Millet Theatres were
precisely identified thanks to the map of Jacques Pervititch. Pervititch map also
indicated explicitly the Letafet Apartment, where the music school, Dârü’l-Bedayî-i
Musikî was.
4.6. Conclusion
The chapter, while exposing the musical setting of Istanbul at the turn of the
twentieth century, also underscored the contribution of certain districts to the
overall musical structure. Fatih, Eyüp, Beyoğlu, and Üsküdar, as the main arteries
due to the frequency of inhabited musicians and the musical activities, sustained
the system. In accordance with the quantitative analysis, Fatih, Beşiktaş and
Üsküdar appear to be the main places where the musicians resided (the residential
centers), whereas the districts of Beyoğlu and Fatih emerge as the performance
centers of Istanbul. Nevertheless, Fatih should be considered as residential as well
as performance center of the city.
190 As mentioned above, I used the digital version of the map. It is an open source provided
by Fatih Municipality. Yet, German Blues are published by Istanbul Metropolitan
Municipality in 2006 and 2007, Alman Mavileri: 1913-1914, I. Dünya Savaşı Öncesi İstanbul
Haritaları, İrfan Dağdelen (ed.), İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediye Başkanlığı Kütüphane ve
Müzeler Müdürlüğü, İstanbul, Vols. 1 and 2 in 2006, Vol. 3 in 2007.
163
Focusing more on the city helped indeed to emphasize the pluralities at the local
level, which might alternatively be regarded as the musical characteristics of certain
neighborhoods. Music was largely diffused through theaters, coffee houses, Sufi
lodges and seasonal picnic areas in Üsküdar, whereas music halls, taverns, theatres,
music stores with all kind of musical instruments, recorded music (gramophones)
and sheet music, and the radio broadcast mainly characterized the Beyoğlu district.
Fatih was the place of tradition but also of transformation. House gatherings, Sufi
lodges and the music organizations at the immense coffee houses were part of the
story. What was new was the rapid increase of the number of music schools in the
city, the majority of which were concentrated in Fatih after the turn of the
twentieth century. That was the cornerstone of music in many ways, including the
changes in the educational patterns, the huge expansion of concert giving, and
probably the most critical of all, the transition from private patronage to “public”
patronage, which will be debated in the following two chapters.
Indeed, taking into consideration the biographical accounts in order to explore
music across the city, I observe common features but also divergences:
i. To emphasize first the widespread practices, musicians overwhelmingly shared a
common ground: Musical gatherings, musikî meclisi. Both “professional” and “nonprofessional”
(these terms refer to the financial relationship of music) musicians
met at this common music space. The motivations might be different. It could
happen at the beginning of a music career in order to learn music, or it might be
solely to perform music. Other reason of attendance was socialization, which
suggests that the way the organizations operated was akin to musicians’ union. All
these suggestions point to the multiple layers of these social gatherings.
ii. Another common space was music schools, which expanded rapidly after 1908.
Musicians from both groups were actively involved in these institutions. In fact, the
schools were musician enterprises in most cases. There, music classes were held,
concerts were organized, all of which eventually brought a new energy to music.
However, there was a significant distinction between house gatherings and music
164
schools. The former’s audience was principally musicians or the musician
candidates at best. The places were designed based on musical rather than financial
concerns. The principal target of music schools was to assemble wider group of
people, who had lesser musical credentials. The point was critical for the
contextualization of music.
iii. Offering music teaching either privately or to a group was a well-established
practice among musicians. Regarding the official functionaries, I noticed that
musicians’ lives became more music-oriented immediately after they retired from
office. Music teaching, either privately or in the music schools, was the most
common practice for them to survive. Even though they had a regular retirement
payment, an additional income was needed. The cases of poverty, which I discussed
in the previous chapter, confirm the argument.
iv. Interestingly, non-professional musicians almost never performed in the music
halls even after they retired and music became the focal point of their lives. It
seems that there was a line, which should not be crossed by some musicians. That
music halls were places where alcohol was consumed might be a reason. Another
one could be the commercial purposes through which music halls treated music as a
product to make profit. However, the biographical accounts of Lemi Atlı, Hafız Sami,
Ahmet Rasim reveal that they did not seem to question the issue in terms of being
ethical or moral as they enjoyed listening to live performances in the gazinos. I also
find it questionable whether they disapproved it for the reason that music was
solely performed for entertainment. I disagree with such an elitist approach that
implies too much solemnity and gravity in Ottoman music. Burdening it with rigid
moral codes eventually makes music colorless and uniform in which neither
köçekçes nor the numerous profane songs could be understood. I believe that the
matter was not about whether there was an approval or disapproval. My
understanding of the non-professional musicians’ stance to music halls in general is
more pragmatic rather than ethical. These places had their own unwritten rules.
Music was only a part of the whole business, and other musicians recognized the
situation. They seem to have tried not to exceed the line of demarcation. Besides, it
165
was a matter of network, a kind of business connection, which had been established
among certain musicians. I only encounter the names of these gazino musicians in
the contemporary daily news, many of whose life narratives seldom, if ever, are to
be found in the biographical accounts.
I deliberately made a distinction between the musicians who performed in the
music halls and those who did not. The articles and memoirs related to the musical
atmosphere of the city at the turn of the twentieth century confirm my opinion.
Ruhi Kalender’s article is a fine example. The article scanned one daily paper, İkdâm,
from 1895 to 1916 in order to portray the colorful music life of the city. It reveals a
great variety of information: The names of the musicians, the locations of musical
activities, the places of music institutions as well as private music teachers, and
even the stores at which music scores (fasıl notations) and instruments were
produced and sold.191 The eyewitness accounts of Sermet Muhtar Alus (1887-1952),
which were published in some daily newspapers, but particularly in Akşam, from
1930 to 1940, are other sources that I refer to. Many of his articles were elaborate
explanations of the city’s music life. The majority of his articles were republished
after the second half of the 1990s,192 which seemed to arouse academic interest
indeed.193 Based on these accounts, I encountered only a handful of musicians, such
as Memduh Efendi, Tatyos Efendi, Afet Efendi and Arşak Efendi who exceeded the
191 Ruhi Kalender, “Yüzyılımızın Başlarında İstanbul’un Musiki Hayatı”, AÜİFD, No. XXIII,
1978, pp. 414-437.
192 İstanbul Yazıları, Erol Şadi Erdinç, Faruk Ilıkan (eds.), İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi,
İstanbul, 1994; İstanbul Kazan Ben Kepçe, Necdet Sakaoğlu (ed.), İletişim, İstanbul, 1995;
Masal Olanlar, Nuri Akbayar (ed.), İletişim, İstanbul, 1997; Eski Günlerde, İletişim, İstanbul,
2001; 30 Sene Evvel İstanbul: 1900’lü Yılların Başlarında Şehir Hayatı, Faruk Ilıkan (ed.),
İletişim, İstanbul, 2005.
193 Neslihan Seven, “Sermet Muhtar Alus'un Romanlarında ve Öykülerinde Eski İstanbul”,
MA Thesis, Assoc. Prof. Alâattin Karaca (Superviser), Yüzüncü Yıl Üniversitesi, Van, 2006;
Meral Demiryürek, “Sermet Muhtar Alus: Hayatı – Sanatı - Eserleri”, Unpublished PhD
Thesis, Prof. Şerif Aktaş (Superviser), Gazi Üniversitesi, SBE, Türk Dili ve Edebiyatı Anabilim
Dalı, Yeni Türk Edebiyatı Bilim Dalı, Ankara, 2006; Reyhan Elmas Keleş, “Sermet Muhtar
Alus'un Eserlerinde Sosyal Meseleler”, Assoc. Prof. Muhammet Gür (Superviser),
Unpublished PhD Thesis, Marmara Üniversitesi, SBE, İslam Tarihi ve Sanatları Anabilim Dalı,
İstanbul, 2009.
166
line of demarcation that I emphasized. In other words, they interacted with both
groups’ social networks, which probably was the reason why they left more
historical account. The overwhelming majority of the musicians appear to be
historically silent characters giving voice to them is difficult due to insufficient
evidence.
167
CHAPTER 5
CULTIVATING MUSIC
The aim of this chapter is to reveal the musical characteristics of the targeted group
in order to make a debate on the social meanings behind it. The instrumental
distribution analysis, for instance, will not only provide the proportions for each
instruments or singers, but will pave the way for exploring singers or oud players
socially. Factors such as age and family impact on the musical development will be
instrumental to understand the issue of being a musician in the late Ottoman
period. The chapter will separate the sampling on the religious differences for the
first time to analyze and thus to compare the educational models of Muslims and
non-Muslim musicians. The idea is to observe the level of musical interactions
between the people of different religions, particularly at the initial stages of music
education. On the part of the Muslim musicians, the section will question the
religious ground of music by highlighting the networks that paved to the
dissemination of the religious repertoire in the Ottoman music. Therefore,
musicians with Sufi affiliation, musicians who have received religious education and
particularly the reciters of Qur’an will be the center of interest. Besides, the chapter
will contribute to the debates related with the Hamparsum notation usage at the
turn of the twentieth century by offering quantitative outcomes on the subject
matter. Finally, Gephi visualizations on the educational networks of musicians will
offer a novel way of observing the significant channels (people and styles) in the
late Ottoman Istanbul.
5.1. Distribution Based on Musical Instrument
The debate on the musical skills will highlight the popularity of instruments and the
mostly applied combinations between them. Outcomes will give an insight into the
social aspects of instruments like whether there was a common pattern among
violin practitioners or typicality related with the piano players. The part will also
question the reasons of musicians’ instrument choices and will seek connections
among a range of issues such as inheritance of traits as well as financial benefits.
168
Table 5.1. Musical specialty
Instrument Frequency Percent
Voice 72 28.1
Tanbur 12 4.7
Kanun 13 5.2
Ney 18 7.0
Oud 32 12.5
Kemenche 9 3.6
Violin 26 10.1
Piano 6 2.4
NPI 16 6.2
Other 2 0.8 (79.6 cumulative)
Moi 51 20.4
TOTAL 257 100.0
Two musicians in the other category played clarinet and santur. Yet Moi category
(more than one instrument players) contained eight musicians with other (nongrouped)
instruments, which were santur, lute and clarinet. NPI category that
gathered 16 musicians meant the non-instrumental association, whose situation
should not be considered with unknown category. In fact, the instrumental
distribution table is one of the most representative in the study considering the
general number of unknowns (black holes) in the statistical outcomes presented
previously.
I suppose the more complex one is the singer category, which represents the
biggest group. To put it briefly, the general rule in the Ottoman music education is
to give the sounds correctly by mouth. Thus the instrumental instruction no matter
which one is, almost always comes with the voice practice. The idea here is if one
might respond to the sounds correctly with his mouth then it proves that one has
musical ear, which leads to the next step as seeking these correct sounds in the
instrument. The practice has no difference for the singers at all. İbnülemin describes
in detail the way Dede Efendi taught music to his two eminent students, namely as
Dellalzâde and Zekai Efendi. His method was based on two principles: Hear (musical
169
ear) and store (memorization) it. To underline it, singing correctly and having a
beautiful sound are quite apart from each other. The former expresses that one can
technically learn music and advance in the art, whereas the latter is a God-given
quality. The explanation eventually underlines that each one in the sampling were
able to use voice as expected. The reason why 72 musicians placed in the table as
singers is because they were originally educated to sing and thus gained expertise in
voice. But for the rest (instrumentalists), it came in as a part of the education
package. Given the difficulty of a clear demarcation between singing and playing,
the table, however, is designed to indicate the principal one, either voice or an
instrument. But the things are more precise for instruments in general, if not stated
otherwise. If one played kemenche or kanun, for instance, she/he would not be
associated with ney or violin. The exceptional cases are always minor in number.
Only two musicians were able to play kanun and viola, two again were involved
both with tanbur and viola.
Though oud and tanbur are both stringed instruments and it is possible to sing
while playing, there occurred a gap between the participants of both combinations.
Only one musician both sang and played tanbur, whereas 17 musicians played oud
and sang. The conventional patterns appear clearly in the Moi category regarding
the popularity of oud. The underlying reasons lie in the comparison of these
instruments both technically and practically. From a technical perspective, playing
tanbur while singing is challenging due to its lengthy and fretted fingerboard (neck).
It surely demands more concentration on the instrument, whereas the oud allowed
the instrumentalist to sing along due to its short and fretless neck. Another
technical concern is related with the structures of instruments. The oud is evidently
more durable to pressure, damage, and humidity due to its body form and the type
of woods it is produced from. The fragile form of tanbur, on the other hand, often
creates problems; including the dislocation of neck from its body (sap atma) and
the collapse of its very slim cover (kapak çökmesi). Indeed, oud practically produces
louder sounds, which precisely what was needed for a music predominantly
170
performed together with many instruments and singers.194 Though the economical
part was not mentioned in my sources, picking an oud should be more affordable
for ordinary people. My suggestion is mainly influenced by the current price
differences in the music market, a tanbur is much more expensive than an oud of
the same quality.
The position of oud and tanbur in music was also a matter of historiography.
Historians of music debated the issue in order to explain the contribution of
Kantemir’s (1673-1723) treatise, kitâb-ı ‘ilmü’l mûsikî ‘alâ vechi’l hurufât.195 All in
all, variety of sources might additionally be interpreted to display the significance of
oud in the late Ottoman music world. The instrumental reference books (guide)
were overwhelmingly written on oud.196 Secondly, oud was the mostly encountered
instrument in the fasil music on the list of taverns and the musician groups of
Istanbul. As presented in the previous chapter, the source listed the names of
musicians together with instruments.197 Finally, the early history of sound recording
overwhelmingly carried out by companies, including Colombia, Favorite, Odeon,
194 Fiket Karakaya points to more technical issues but also provides information on its
historical evaluation throughout the ages, “Ud”, DİA, Vol. 42, 2012, pp. 39-41.
195 According to the argument, the text apparently underlined the shift from oud to tanbur
in music, which had been under the theoretical and musical domination of the former
before the beginning of the seventeenth century. The time period also signals the gradual
emergence of Ottoman way in music, tarz-ı Osmânî, and Istanbul as the center of musical
production. Though the date could not be precisely identified but oud regains popularity
after the mid-nineteenth century. My research findings apparently support its triumph over
other instruments at the turn of the twentieth century. Behar stated that its re-emergence
might be related to the importation of the instrument with lute (lavta) from Arabic
provinces and Egypt and the arrival of luthiers from same regions to Istanbul by the midnineteenth
century, Cem Behar, Kan Dolaşımı, Ameliyat ve Musıkî Makamları: Kantemiroğlu
(1673-1723) ve Edvâr’ının Sıra Dışı Müzikal Serüveni, Yapı Kredi Yayınları, İstanbul, 2017, pp.
160-170; Eugenia Popescu-Judetz, Prens Dimitrie Cantemir: Türk Musıkisi Bestekârı ve
Nazariyatçısı, (Selçuk Alimdar, trans.), Pan, İstanbul, 2000, pp. 36-62.
196 Hafız Mehmed Efendi, Ud Muallimi, İkdam, 18.8.1901, 11.1.1902, 5, 8, and 11. 2. 1902;
Muallim Fahri [Kopuz], Nazarî ve Amelî Ud Dersleri, İstanbul, 1336; Ali Salâhî, Hocasız Ud
Öğrenmek Usûlü, İstanbul, 1336; İlâveli Ud Muallimi, İstanbul 1340; Şerif Muhiddin Targan,
Ud Metodu (ed. Zeki Yılmaz), İstanbul, 1995.
197 Ruhi Kalender, “Yüzyılımızın Başlarında İstanbul’un Musiki Hayatı”, Ankara Üniversitesi
İlahiyat Fakültesi Dergisi, Vo. 23, 1978, pp. 414-437.
171
Owner’s Voice (Sahibinin Sesi), The Gramophone (Zonophone), is another
indication. Oud together with violin was the two most popular instruments, either
in solo or in combination, in the early recordings.198 Eventually, it appears that all
these factors played a role in its growing popularity in the late Ottoman musical
world.
The outcome supports this fact given the higher proportion of oud playing among
other instruments and its frequency in the Moi category.
Table 5.2. Oud combined with other instruments
Combinations Frequency Percent
Oud and Voice 17 6.6
Oud and Piano 3 1.2
Oud and Kanun 2 0.8
Oud and Tanbur 1 0.4
Oud and Ney 1 0.4
TOTAL 24 9.4
When 32 oud players are totaled with musicians in the Moi category (means oud
players, n = 24), the proportion reaches 22.2 % at the total. Together with violin
players who are counted as 36 (14 % in total), the overall outcome indicates that
more than one third of the musicians under study concentrated on these two
instruments (36.2 %). The popularity of oud and violin among musicians as well as
the leading role in the music market should also be seen through the related
outcomes.
198 For the list of the oud players in the early history of phonograph recordings, see Pan
Publishing’s online catalogue
http://tasplak.pankitap.com/index.php?pg=1&firma=&katalog_no=&eser=&makam=&yoru
mcu=ud
http://tasplak.pankitap.com/index.php?firma=&katalog_no=&eser=&makam=&yorumcu=k
eman (both accessed on 2 August 2018).
172
I collected different occupations under non-music-based category, which the official
functionaries, as anticipated, held the biggest proportions for two instrumentalists
with 18 (that makes 60 % in the non-music-based, 31.6 % in the total) musicians
among the oud and 10 (62.5 % in the non-music based, 27.7 % in the total)
musicians among the violin players.
Table 5.3. The chief income source of oud and violin players
Income Type Oud Violin
Frequency Percentage Frequency Percentage
Music-based 21 37.5 18 50.0
Non Music-based 30 53.5 16 44.5
Unknown 5 8.9 2 5.5
TOTAL 56 100.0 36 100.0
Although the music-based income percentages do not seem strikingly high, I believe
that they are powerful enough to underpin the argument. For example, only five
musicians’ chief source of income was music (22.7 %) within the 22 kanun players,
whereas the number even dropped to four out of 21 for ney players (19.0 %). None
of the instrument in the list comes close to the percentages that oud and violin had.
The only exception seems to be the kemenche. The musical income for kemenche
players was 63.6 %. Nevertheless, the number of players who played the instrument
should be taken into consideration. It was only 11 musicians in total. The statistical
outcomes could also be interpreted to understand the employment of instruments
in the music, which means that some instruments, such as oud, violin and
kemenche, were more visible in the market whose financial gain was critical when
compared with ney and kanun, which were less commercial and unprofitable.
Piano appears to be an interesting case. Kösemihal’s study still the chief historical
study about the beginning of European music in the palace, underlines the
instrument first emerged in Europe around the beginning of the eighteenth century
and did not wait long to circulate particularly in the wealthy households of non173
Muslim families of Istanbul. But its entrance to the palace was a little later, during
the reign of Abdülmecid (1839-1861).199 From that period on, the piano stood firm
in the palace and was used to perform Western rather than Ottoman music. Though
the piano does not belong to Ottoman music, many accounts underlined its limited
presence in the Ottoman music. The instrument even appeared in the Mevlevî
lodges, though on rare occasiones, to accompany Mevlevî rituals. The oldest known
accompaniment of piano to a Mevlevî ritual was in the Galata Mevlevî lodge during
the period of Sheihk Galib Es’ad Dede (d. 1799). According to the biographical
account of Hüseyin Fahreddin Efendi who was the Sheikh of Bahariye Mevlevî lodge
in Eyüp until his death in 1911, he was practicing Western music with his ney,
accompanied by his nephew’s piano. Ahmed Hüsameddin Dede (1839-1900), the
kudümzenbaşı of Yenikapı lodge, was another Mevlevî dervish, who liked to play
peşrevs in the piano during his visits to the house of Mısırlı Halim Paşa (1863-
1921).200 Still, the individual cases were not sufficient to change its marginal place in
music. Therefore, it would not be incorrect to state the piano never became a
mainstream instrument in music and neither for the Ottoman society in general.
199 Mahmut Ragıp Kösemihal, Türkiye – Avrupa Musiki Münasebetleri (1600-1875), Vol. 1,
İstanbul Nümune Matbaası, 1939, pp. 93-94.
200 Mahmut Ragıp Kösemihal, Türkiye – Avrupa Musiki Münasebetleri, p. 94. Sadettin
Nüzhet Ergun provides more detailed biography of Ahmed Hüseyin Dede; Türk Musikisi
Antolojisi: Dinî Eserler, Vol. II, İstanbul Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi Yayınları, İstanbul,
1943, pp. 494-495. Meanwhile, Kösemihal reported an interesting event regarding to the
presence of piano in Istanbul, which relates the issue to ney. The author underlines that
Salim Bey (1830-1934) trimmed the length of his instrument in order to accompany the
piano. The passage simply implies the story behind the arrival of mansur ney (its accord
corresponds to piano with A440 Hz) into the Ottoman/music (ibid, p. 94). The statement is
open to contestation. Ali Tan’s doctoral dissertation, which focused on the historical
development of ney and to what extent the instrument responded to the change of sound
intervals from the beginning of the eighteenth century, examined 65 neys held in various
museums and private collections, from 1718 to 1951. The earliest recorded mansur ney
belonged to the first quarter of the eighteenth century, which proves that mansur ney was
already in circulation more than a century ago in the Ottoman Istanbul and hence
Kösemihal is clearly mistaken about his statement, “Ney Açkısının Tarihi ve Teknik Gelişimi”,
Unpublished PhD Thesis, Ass. Prof. M. Nuri Uygun (Superviser), Marmara Üniversitesi, SBE,
İslam Tarihi ve Sanatları Bilim Dalı, İstanbul, 2011, pp. 190-191; For the images of
instruments he had focused on during his dissertation project, see Ali Tan - Mustafa Çıpan,
Ney…, Konya Valiliği, İl Kültür ve Turizm Müdürlüğü, Konya, 2013. The book, Ney…, provides
the image of Kazasker Mustafa İzzet Efendi’s (1801-1876) mansur ney additionally proves
its much earlier presence in the Ottoman music.
174
The employment of piano in Ottoman and Western musical cultures is not
comparable for different reasons. The place of the piano in the Western music
was/is fundamental,201 while it was tried, not accepted commonly and hence stayed
as an outsider in the Ottoman music largely due to musical concerns. The
instrument simply proved to be inappropriate to sound intervals of the Ottoman
music; also some sounds in the Ottoman music did not exist in piano. Even so, the
historical sound records show that it was still used but without taking the leading
role. Above all, a corresponding piano-centered social analysis could not be done
because of its minor musical role and of the inadequate historical material.
Therefore, based on the 14 pianists in my sampling, questioning their social
background could yield limited results but, still, it might indicate whether they
belonged to upper classes or not, since the instrument was rare, and expensive to
purchase.
It seems that only two fathers shared the lowest social status and income among
the fathers of pianists. The first was a military fireman and musician Giriftzen Asım
Bey (1851-1929) whose children, Fatma Nihal Erkutun (1906-1989) and Musa
Süreyya (1884-1932), played the piano. Another was Leon Hancıyan Efendi (1860-
1947) whose father was a moderate servant (odabaşı) in a state office. What
additionally made their case similar was the fathers’ intimate relationship with
music. They were practitioner musicians. The first was a ney player and later girift (a
201 The piano, nevertheless, had a completely different story in the English case. It was only
around the mid-nineteenth century when the piano became increasingly accessible for
middle-class English people. It was partly economic. The increased level of income rendered
middle class to go more often to the concert halls to listen to performers but also buy
products that were beyond their means previously. Besides, piano manufacturers were
critical in the process of musical commercialization. They produced cheaper and lower
quality forms of the instrument. Even its size was shrunk deliberately to fit into the houses
of middle-class people, which could hardly be called a piano in terms of the musicality and
appearance. From a sociocultural perspective, the widespread acceptance of piano, being
able to attend concerts, availability of piano education for children were indications of
cultural refinement and a way of affiliation with the standards of upper classes. Cyril
Ehrlich, The Piano: A History, Revised Edition, Oxford University Press, New York, 2002, pp.
9-27 and 88-107; Derek B. Scott, “Music and Social Class in Victorain London”, Urban
History, No. 29, 1, 2002, pp. 60-73. Interestingly, the cultural aspirations of middle-class
English people of previous century related to piano appear to be quite similar to the social
meaning attributed to it in modern Turkey.
175
similar but a smaller version of ney), while Leon’s father, Nazaret Efendi, played lute
while his mother played oud.
Table 5.4. Pianists’ family background
Frequency Percent
Official Func. 6 40.0
Religious
Func.
1 6.7
Military 3 20.0
Other 1 6.7
Unknown 4 26.7
TOTAL 15 100.0
Fathers of Mualla Anıl (1909-1985) and Osman Nihat Akın’s (1905-1959)
occupations were recorded as unknown, however, with a note that they were from
notable families (eşrafdan) of Manastır and Çorlu respectively. Muhlis Sabahattin
(1889-1947) and Neveser Kökdes’s (1904-1962) father was Hurşit Bey, who was sent
to exile from Istanbul by Abdulhamid II because of his critical position
(başmabeynci) during the reign of Abdulaziz, who preceded him. Leyla (Saz) Hanım’s
(1850-1937) father, Hekim İsmail Pasha (1807-1880), served in the high-ranking
official positions, such as the governor of Girid, Salonica, İzmir and as the Minister
of Trade and Public Works (Nafia ve Ticaret Nezâreti).202 Mustafa Nuri Bey’s
(Menapirzâde, 1841-1906) father was Yusuf Menapir Pasha who served as the
Governor of Maraş. Medenî Aziz Efendi’s (1842-1895) father was an imam in
Medina. When he died during a visit to Damascus, child Aziz was adopted by a
palace servant in Istanbul and grew up in the palace circles. The sad situation after
all would be highly beneficial for him as he would have the opportunity to be
202 The memoir of Leyla Hanım portrays in detail the piano education in the Çırağan Palace.
She even provides the names of royal family members who had proficiency in piano.
Because the thesis discusses the employment of piano in the Ottoman music, whereas the
memoir of Leyla Hanım points deliberately to the presence of Western music in the palace,
her account remains beyond the scope of the thesis, Memoirs of Leyla (Saz) Hanımefendi,
The Imperial Harem of the Sultans: Daily Life at the Çırağan Palace During the 19th Century,
Landon Thomas (trans.), Hil Yayın, İstanbul, 2001, pp. 131-136.
176
musically educated by Kazasker Mustafa İzzet Efendi (1801-1876). Fatma Enise Can
(Elisabeth, 1896-1975) and Emine Fulya Akaydın (Panfilia, 1906-1975) were sisters.
They were of Greek origin and Orthodox Christians who later embraced Islam. Their
family background record is unknown but they both received private piano
education from a certain Oresti Çalapatani, which might be read as a sign of their
economical level.
What might eventually be said related with the pianist musicians is that they
predominantly belonged to notable families who could afford to own a piano and
provide tutorage. Yet it appears that the existence of piano at home attracted the
attention of other members in the family. Six musicians in the group had family
relationship. Another interesting aspect to be underlined is the high number of
female participants, almost half of the pianist population (seven out of 15). Since
the overall number of female musicians in the sampling was 23, such an atypical
gender pattern upon any other instrument could not be the case. The outcome
indicates that female musicians were regularly distributed between other
instruments, with an exception of singing. The outcome shows ten female singers.
But the female concentration on the voice category is far below the piano group. It
is 10 out of 72 musicians (13.8 %), while the amount is beyond comparison for
pianists (46.6 %).
5.2. The Age of Music Education
The part will seek to analyze the relationship between music education and age
groups. What was the general tendency for the onset of music training among the
musicians? Yet it will question whether or not instrumentalists or singers reveal any
particular pattern regarding the age groups. Searching the links between learning
types of music and age combinations will provide an alternative perspective to
further discuss the role of Istanbul in the overall music culture. The argument will
be supported by the statistical results comparing the models of learning between
Istanbul and elsewhere born musicians.
177
Table 5.5. Age of music education
Age Categories Frequency Percent
Earlier than 10 170 66.1
10-15 39 15.2
15-20 14 5.4
Unknown 34 13.2
TOTAL 257 100.0
It might generally be said that biographical accounts of musicians have
shortcomings by modern standards. One is that they do not precisely point the
starting age for music education but give rough information about it. Rather, there
are phrases such as “educated musically when s/he was a child” or “his music
education started in her/his childhood”. Thus, my categories, which have five-years
intervals, are in parallel to the imprecise statements regarding the musicians’
education records.
No matter how vague the descriptions were, the accounts still overemphasized the
music education at early ages (see Table 5.5). 170 musicians were instructed
musically before they reached to the age of 10. It appears the onset of education
after 10 years of age was atypical and considered to be too late probably. The
outcome shows that less than one third received music education after 10 years of
age (20.6 %). Besides, the place where the education took place is reported in most
cases. The musicians were predominantly educated at home. Thus I grouped those,
who learned music at home during the childhood period, under the “earlier than
10” category.
Accounts also emphisize the role of the family in the educational process. For those
whose music education began at home were generally supervised by a family
member, which might be father, mother, older brother/sister, a close relative or a
combination of them. While the family impact was almost a prerequisite for the
musicians grouped in the first category (earlier than 10), the next category
(between 10-15), on the other hand, includes musicians whose families did not get
178
involved in music education. Therefore, whether one was introduced to music
through family and one did not, became one of the criteria through which the age
categories were separated from each other.
Table 5.6. Family impact among the age categories (cross tabulation)
Age Categories Frequency Percent
Earlier than 10 113 95.8
10-15 4 3.4
Unknown 1 0.8
TOTAL 118 100.0
The table above proves how decisively two groups were in contradistiction to each
other regarding to the role of family (see Table 5.6). It could yet be said that music
for those whose involvement did not begin at early ages (apart from the first
category) did not inherit anything from the family and may even be perceived as
“outsiders” to the art. In fact, the criterion that represented those musicians’
education was anything but private tutorage.
Table 5.7. Private tutorage distributed to age categories (cross tabulation)
Age Categories Frequency Percent
Earlier than 10 131 67.5
10-15 32 16.5
15-20 9 4.6
Unknown 22 11.3
TOTAL 194 100.0
The role of the family members that did set the boundaries between first and next
two groups in the previous table could not be the case for private tutorage.
Statistically, 131 musicians out of 170 in the “earlier than 10” group and 32
musicians out of 39 in the “10-15” group have received private tutorage, which
makes 77 % in the former and 82 % in the latter. According to that, the private
179
tutorage model was highly prevalent in both categories. Hence, due to its strong
presence in both categories, the private tutorage could not be regarded as how
characteristic the family association was for the musicians in the “earlier than 10”
and made the distinction decisively with other age groups. Statistically again, family
involvement according to the general table was 113 out of 170 in the “earlier than
10” group (66.5 %), whereas it showed a drastic drop for the next one; only four
musicians received a family advantage out of 39 (10.2 %).
An alternative interpretation regarding the difference between family involvement
and private tutorage might be that the former points to a process in which children
were exposed to music due to the musical atmosphere at home and were
eventually accustomed to it. The same, on the other hand, could not be said for the
latter, which seemed to be a more deliberate attempt, a more personal matter that
demanded more effort clearly.
Photo 5.1. Santurî Ziya Bey (1868-1952) posed with his daughter, Bergüzar
Source: Halil Nadaroğlu, “Santurî Ziya Santur’la Bir Konuşma”, Türk Musikisi Dergisi,
1 Ekim 1948, pp. 24-28.
180
Whatever the case the outcomes revealed that those 170 musicians in the earlier
than 10 group were significantly more advantageous than the rest, as their families
created the appropriate circumstances, which would increase the chances of
success in music. Favorable conditions were innumerable, such as meeting with the
art in the early stages of the life, growing up in a musically dominant environment.
Not needing to struggle to find a music teacher or an instrument and so on. It
seems that they had everything that was needed.
Table 5.8. Types of learning in the earlier than 10 years of age (cross tabulation)
Models Frequency Percent
Family 19 11.2
Tutorage 38 22.3
Mûzîka-i Hümâyûn 8 4.7
Self-taught 4 2.4
Music School 2 1.2
Unknown 1 0.6
Family and Tutorage 80 47
Family-Tutorage-Music School 9 5.2
Family and Music School 5 2.9
Tutorage and Music School 4 2.4
TOTAL 170 100
While the age patterns point to the musicians’ first touch with music, nonetheless,
learning is a process that demands years of endeavor. As reported in many
accounts, it should be enriched by numerous stages of music education, such as
having private tutorage, meeting with musicians, being in house gatherings,
attending activities of music schools, following live performances and even listening
to recorded music. The place of house gatherings among the musicians will be
debated separately, so the table does not count the popularity of it. The table
shows the various forms of learning for each musician without totaling the cases
that had two types to single ones. That would help to identify not only the
181
proportions separately but also the most frequent combinations between the
learning models.
Eighty-nine musicians (52.2 %) combined the most popular two types, namely the
family involvement and private tutorage. It appears that both models functioned
together in order to support one another and enhance the musical output. Astik
Aga’s (Asadur Hamamciyan, 1840-1913) uncle, Mofses Papazyan, was an actor, who
also taught him how to sing. Additionally, he benefited from a music teacher,
Aristakes Hovannesyan. The case reveals how the musical knowledge was inherited
and family transmitted to next generation. Astik Aga taught what he got from his
uncle to his son, Bogos Efendi (Astikzâde, 1872-1945). Another musician who
combined family support with private tutorage was İhsan İyisan (1873-1946), whose
uncle was musician Behlül Efendi (d. 1895). Biographical accounts underlined that
Behlül Efendi and his nephew İhsan İyisan were always closely in touch with Sufi
circles. While Behlül Efendi benefited from Sheikh Osman Dede of Yenikapı, İhsan
İyisan frequented Sünbül Efendi Sufi lodge to be raised by zakirbaşı Sinan Efendi.
Hasan Sabri Bey (1868-1922), the son of a military doctor, learned to play oud from
his mother, Zehra Hanım. A scribe in the Ministry of Education (Maarif Nezâreti), he
was further instructed by Hayık Usta (d.?) and oud player Cemal Bey (d.?).
Self-taught category sounds very strange at first sight. One may assume that
musicians in the group were thoroughly isolated from the culture and pursued
success by self-effort. The suggestion, in fact, is not convincing and only acceptable
in one respect. The category emphasized not the music in general terms but the
instruments that the musicians became an expert of. In fact, they were involved in
music through different ways, either because of their family or by self-interest.
Eventually they picked an instrument and struggled to overcome the technical
issues on their own.
Sedat Öztoprak (1890-1942) learned how to play the oud alone. However, one has
to consider the fact that he regularly followed the Mevlevî ceremonies held in
Konya, the city where he grew up. It is likely that he inspected carefully the tanburî
182
dervishes to grasp the technique while he was enriching his repertoire in general
during the Mevlevî rituals. Naci Tektel (1902-1975) was a self-taught violinist.
However, one should not overlook the impact of his father, a well-known clarinet
player, İbrahim Efendi (d. 1925), on his overall progress in the art. İbrahim Efendi is
a critical figure because it is believed to be he was the musician who introduced the
clarinet to Ottoman music. The biographical accounts of Ömer Altuğ (1905-1965)
did not mention any teacher in his hometown in Sivas. A particular detail,
nevertheless, gives information about his music education. A self-taught tanbur
player, he had listened to the records of Cemil Bey passionately. The life story of
Halûk Recai (1912-1972, although his real name was Haldun Menemencioglu, he
never used it throughout his music career) revealed similar details indeed. Growing
up in a family, whose members were amateur musicians, he was strongly inspired
by Cemil Bey’s music, which directed him to play kemenche. He acquired skill on the
kemenche without a teacher. What these individual cases emphasized is the
process of learning contained a range of models, which truly contributed to each
other. Therefore, the self-taught model of learning music should be understood in
the narrow sense. Finally, being in provinces might also be related to the cases of
self-taught owing to the general scarcity of musicians and hence music culture
outside of Istanbul; nevertheless, this suggestion demands more evidence.
Fourteen musicians in the “15-20” years of age category might be considered as
further marginal due to their late engagement with music. In the light of the
debates related to the importance of family involvement for the offspring’s musical
development in the early ages, the absence of family involvement in this group was
surely a negative factor. The outcome underlined they were coming from families
who were unrelated to art.
Yet one issue, which was emphasized in the self-taught part and considered to be
inapplicable due to the limited number of cases, seems worth to be questioned for
all age groups.
183
Table 5.9. Birthplace compared to age categories (cross tabulation)
Birth Place Earlier than 10 10-15 15-20 unknown
Istanbul 135 22 5 24
Out of Istanbul 33 17 9 9
Unknown 2 - - 1
TOTAL 170 39 14 34
In the light of the quantitative analysis, it is now reasonable to connect the issue of
being outside of Istanbul to the cases of late engagement with music. Table shows
the wide difference between “earlier than 10” and other groups. 79.4 % of
musicians in the first group were born in Istanbul, while the percentage is reduced
to 56.4 in the subsequent one and even dropped to 35.7 in the “15-20” group. The
percentages makes possible to claim that they were latecomers to music partly
owing to the fact that they did not have the musical opportunity as others had
plenty in Istanbul. The conditions were simply unequal. The raw data, which the
argument is based on, indicates that nine musicians were born outside of Istanbul
(in the 15-20 group) but have moved to Istanbul without exception. However, they
all completed primary education in their birthplaces except one, according to their
education records. It was Muhiddin Erev (1884-1952), who was born in the sanjak
of Siroz of Salonica province and completed the primary level at Bayezid. The
number rises up to 3 in the secondary level education. Aziz Efendi (1842-1895)
came from Medina and studied in Üsküdar, while Kemal Niyazi Seyhun (1885-1967)
from Acre sanjak of Beirut province was enrolled to Galatasaray High School. The
educational records show that they did not arrive in Istanbul before 10 years of age,
which also had an impact on their late entrance to music. In fact, the outcomes
confirm the centrality of Istanbul in music from an alternative perspective.
After all, two models of learning were widespread for 14 musicians in the “15-20”
years of age category. Having a private tutor and enrolling to a music school were
distributed almost evenly. Six musicians had only private tutorage, while four
continued only to music schools. Three musicians applied both models, whereas the
184
last one was a self-taught musician. All in all, when the multiple cases were added
together, it comes out as nine musicians taught music privately, seven through
music schools. Ahmed Celal Tokses (1898-1966) was born in Aydın province. He
settled in Istanbul and was enrolled to Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî, which began to
operate at Şehzadebaşı in 1912. Şerif İçli (1899-1956) registered to Beşiktaş Music
School in 1921, which was founded by İhsan Aziz Bey (1884-1935) in 1921.
Meanwhile, İhsan Aziz Bey appears to be an enthusiastic figure in organizing
musicians towards profit oriented projects. He was also among the founders of
Musikî-i Osmanî and Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî. It might be argued that he understood
well the impact of newly founded educational institutions in music and oriented
quickly towards new opportunities in the expanding music market. Mustafa Çağlar
(1910-1961) first registered to a music school in Balıkesir. Ali Hikmet Ayerdem
(1877-1939) was the founder of the first music school in the area. As a former
Ottoman Pasha, he was appointed as the corps commander to Balıkesir in the newly
founded republic. Since his inauguration in the city started in 1925, the school could
not be opened before it. Çağlar moved to Istanbul in 1931 and was enrolled to
Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî. The date is problematic owing to the fact that the school
closed down in 1931. It seems that Çağlar either moved to Istanbul before 1931 or if
the date of arrival was correct then he could only be educated there at best for less
than a year. Muzaffer İlkar’s (1910-1987) music education stated only one type of
education: He registered to the Şark Musikî Cemiyeti in Kadıköy. The school was
founded in 1915 through the cooperative efforts of musicians, including Ali Rıfat
Çağatay (1869-1935), Sami Bey (1876-1939), Bestenigâr Ziya Bey (1877-1927) and
Nuri Duyguer (1877-1963).
185
Photo 5.2. The members of the Şark Musikî Cemiyeti
Ali Rıfat Çağatay sits at the center.
Source: Cem Atabeyoğlu, “Musiki âlemimizden…”, p.21, Taha Toros Archive, No.
001527875006, İstanbul Şehir University.
Music schools from the late Ottoman to the Early Republican years could not only
be restrict to age categories but to be explored from many perspectives. These
institutions were new phenomena, which deliberately provided new spaces to
music but created problems as well. I will deal with them more profoundly while
discussing the change and continuity in a transitional period from empire to nationstate
in the sixth chapter.
The next analysis will seek links between age categories and instrumental
distribution. The idea is to check whether any instrument has specifically
concentrated on an age group or whether or not singers show any particular
pattern for music education.
186
Table 5.10. Instrumental distribution to age categories (by frequency)
Instrument Earlier than
10
10-15 15-20 Unknown TOTAL
Singer 47 13 4 8 72
Tanbur 10 0 1 1 12
Kanun 6 4 0 3 13
Ney 11 4 1 2 18
Oud 19 5 2 6 32
Kemenche 5 2 2 0 9
Violin 19 3 1 3 26
Piano 5 1 0 0 6
NPI203 7 2 0 7 16
Other 0 2 0 0 2
Moi204 41 3 3 4 51
TOTAL 170 39 14 34 257
It is widely believed that the younger the children engage in music the more their
musical potential would develop. It could be argued that this commonly held belief
was apparently practiced in the Ottoman music based on the overall age
distribution outcome (66 %). Besides, the numbers above showing the dominance
of “earlier than 10” over others, further confirm the argument. The majority of
musicians that belonged to any of the instrumental categories were involved in
music in the earliest possible ages. Tanbur is apparently by far leading instrument.
Even though the frequency of tanbur among the age groups may seem odd due to
its lengthy fingerboard, luthiers overcame the problem by producing appropriate
versions for children as well as women, just like the way piano producers solved the
problem in England. Eventually, because the figures in the table seem predictable
203 The NPI category refers to the musicians without instrumental association, as stated
before. The distinction between NPI and singer was explained previously indeed.
204 As anticipated, the far leading combination was voice and oud playing (16 in total). The
rest was allocated evenly between other instruments but was low in numbers. Voice was
almost always one part of the combination. The underlying reason was the significance of
singing in the Ottoman music culture.
187
and yet none of the pattern reveals a kind of atypical response, that leaves not
much to interpret. Perhaps the only thing it underscores is the popularity and hence
the vitality of engagement in music in infancy.
Photo 5.3. Ercüment Batanay (1927-2004) posed with tanbur adjusted to his age
Source: Muhittin Serin, Kemal Batanay, Kubbealtı Neşriyat, İstanbul, 2006, p. 75.
5.3. Non-Muslim Musicians and Music Education
Questioning in particular the music training among the non-Muslim musicians is
reasonable to see the dominant and less significant models of learning as well as to
reconsider the musical relationship between Muslim and non-Muslims. From a
historiographical perspective, encounters seem not to be exceptional and highly
positive. One can assume the Ottoman music world was a kind of mutually built
society. İsmail Hakkı Bey (1865-1927) had knowledge on the Jewish religious
repertoire, who even contributed to it by composing and was one of the music
teachers of Nesim Sevilya (1856-1949).205 Armenian musician Kirkor Çulhayan
(1868-1935) invited his friend Rauf Yekta Bey (1871-1935) to the Armenian Church
in Kumkapı in order to listen to his religious composition in the mode nihavend.
205 Maureen Jackson, Mixing Musics, pp. 32-34.
188
İbrahim Efendi (Avram Hayat Levi, 1879-1948) was actively involved in music as an
oud player, one might even encounter him performing in the music programs
during the Ramadan nights. Pappas examined particularly the intimate relationship
of Tanburi Cemil Bey (1872-1916) with Rum musicians of Istanbul and the
interaction between musicians who belonged to different religions. 206 These
individual cases may be extended easily to emphasize the mutual relationship. The
picture, below, might be interpreted to support the argument, which shows an
ensemble formed by Muslim and non-Muslim musicians.
5.3.1. Musical Specialty Questioned
My sampling might be instrumental to enhance our understanding to what extent
the harmonious relationship expressed in the individual life accounts was reflecting
the general tendencies. As stated previously, the sampling contained 28 non-
Muslim musicians, 21 of whom were Armenian, four belonged to the Greek
Orthodox community and three to Jewish community.
Table 5.11. Instrumental distribution among the non-Muslim musicians
Instrument Frequency
Voice 7
Oud 4
Kanun 2
Kemenche 2
Violin 5
NPI 2
Moi 6
Oud-Voice 4
Violin-Piano 1
Kanun-Kemenche 1
TOTAL 28
206 Miltiadis Pappas, “Tanburi Cemil Bey ve Rum Müzisyenlerin Karşılıklı Etkileşimleri”, in
Tanburi Cemil Bey Sempozyum Bildirileri, Hasan Baran Fırat-Zeynep Yıldız Abbasoğlu (eds.),
Küre Yayınları, İstanbul, 2017, pp. 117-129.
189
The outcome shows the figures for the non-Muslim group run parallel to the
general trends in musical specialty, namely as voice, playing oud and violin.
Interestingly, non-Muslims had a preference neither for the ney nor for the tanbur.
Ney demands a special treatment not only because non-Muslim musicians did not
have a tendency to play it but also for a number of reason. The study will soon
discuss the sociocultural as well as religious aspects of the instrument exclusively.
The reason why non-Muslim musicians did not seek to play tanbur is an open
debate. The argument proposed previously in order to understand the radical
popularity of oud against tanbur might also be helpful to analyze the situation. The
primacy of oud and violin over ney and tanbur in the history of early recordings as
well as in the musician lists who played in the music halls, coffee houses and
theatres at the turn of the twentieth century has to be taken into consideration.
The historical records indicated that tanbur and ney were not preferred mainly by
musicians who performed music in public. I need to emphasize at this point that my
arguments are not exclusively based on the names appeared in the recording
business and the list of musicians published by Kalender. Besides, regarding the
tanbur players, it could not be said that the instrument was entirely excluded from
music market. My sampling contains tanbur players, who derived a living from
music. Another point is my sampling does not entirely consist of musicians who
were active participants of music business. Therefore, the argument about the
insignificant place of tanbur and ney is only relevant to more market oriented
musicians (professionals), and not applicable to the whole. Even so, exploring the
degree of non-Muslim musicians whose chief source of income was music would
provide an explanation to the argument that certain instruments were more
appropriate to the demands of market than others.
Table 5.12 reveals that the percentages of the Muslim and non-Muslim musicians
that regarded music as the main income source are clearly quite the reverse. After
all, results might generate controversy owing to the situation that Muslim musicians
constituted the majority in the sampling, while the non-Muslims formed slightly
more than 10 %.
190
Table 5.12. The chief source of income for Muslim and non-Muslim musicians
Income Type Muslim Non-Muslim
Frequency Percentage Frequency Percentage
Music-based 66 28.8 20 71.4
Non Music-based 156 68.1 7 25
Unknown 7 3.1 1 3.6
TOTAL 229 100.0 28 100.0
Without disregarding the dangers of deducing from the disproportionate number of
non-Muslim musicians, it could be argued that the situation, however, is largely due
to the general absence of non-Muslim musicians in the historical sources, which I
have already overemphasized. On the part of the non-Muslim musicians’ outcome
reliability, there seems to be ways to counterbalance and hence to increase the
validity of the results. The method of cross tabulation analysis, which has been
applied throughout the thesis, is one of them. The study revealed the proportions
of musical specialty for the non-Muslims and compared the results with the overall
trends. The comparison yet helped to indicate to what extent the non-Muslims
were typical. In addition to that, instruments that became prominent in the general
table were also in fashion within the non-Muslim group. The results showed that
two categories have run parallel to each other. To further prevent the
disproportionate influence, the second cross-examination would be on the fathers’
occupation. Yet the analysis would be instrumental to interpret the high proportion
of music-based income among the non-Muslim musicians.
191
Table 5.13. Fathers’ professions of Muslim and non-Muslim musicians compared
Income Type Muslim Non-Muslim
Frequency Percentage Frequency Percentage
Music-based 5 2.1 6 21.5
Non Music-based 166 72.5 10 35.7
Unknown 58 25.4 12 42.8
TOTAL 229 100.0 28 100.0
The analysis, nevertheless, should not be confused with the role of family in the
educational process. Therefore, the table, above, simply questions the fathers’
profession but not the musical propensity. On the part of the non-Muslim
musicians, the figures above do not strongly suggest music as a family tradition.
However, the high number of Muslim and non-Muslim fathers in the unknown
category should be taken into account. Even the proportions were to be
appropriate to the argument; children’s career choices could not be explained
through fathers’ profession alone. A range of factors, from social to economic
would play a role during the process.
The comparison still indicates two critical points from fathers to the offspring. One
is the upward trend in two generations of non-Muslim family members whose
source of income was music. It advanced from 21.5 % up to 71.4 %. Similar trend is
apparent for Muslim families, whose percentages have risen from 2.1 % to 28.8 % in
one generation. Another is the corresponding proportion of the professions other
than music. The situation was not different at all for Muslim families either.
Statistically speaking, the proportion of professions other than music for Muslim
families was almost equal to each other in two generations, which was 72.5 % for
fathers and 68 % for offspring. What created the difference was music-based
income between fathers and offspring. As mentioned before, the method of
comparing the outcomes with the general patterns is functional to compensate the
potential shortcomings of research findings regarding the non-Muslim musicians.
192
With regards to the music specialty, instruments might indeed be interpreted
through an alternative perspective. It is possible to establish a correlation between
musicians who played certain instruments and the ones who gained a living out of
music. Put differently, instrument-centered quantitative analysis might provide
insights into the characteristics of instruments; also the results might be helpful to
explain why the percentage of professional non-Muslim musicians was so high (71.4
%).
Table 5.14. Musical specialty compared to source of income
Instrument Music Based Non Music-based Unknown TOTAL
Singer 30 72 1 103
Oud 20 32 2 54
Violin 17 17 2 36
Tanbur 7 12 2 21
Ney 4 17 - 21
Kanun 5 17 - 22
TOTAL 83 167 7 257
The reason why the figures for music specialty differed from the general table
presented at the beginning of the chapter is I added up the musicians in the Moi
category to corresponding instrument. Even though the numbers have changed in
the musical specialty classification, however, the musicians in the Moi category
corresponded to general patterns that the majority were singers, oud and violin
players, respectively. Thus the increased numbers of each instrument did not cause
a change in the musical specialty patterns. What is the contribution of figures to the
overall debate is certain instruments were more market oriented than others. 29.1
% of singers gained a living through music, the percentage advanced to 35 % for oud
and peaked to 47.2 % in violin. Although the numbers are not strikingly high, they
could not be overlooked for the thesis, which underlines the different aspects and
features of music and the significance of music practitioners whose source of
income revealed diversity. Music as main source of living was 22 % for kanun,
193
whereas the percentage further dropped to 19 % for ney. Apparently, only tanbur
weakens the argument, which reached to 33 % in terms of income source. Although
explaining the outcome that seems to generate unanticipated results is demanding
but claiming that one argument could explain the story behind every single
instrument is simply unrealistic. The debate on the pianists, for instance, would not
be appropriate to understand the musicians who played ney. Yet my sampling
contains musicians from a range of historical sources, which brings to the forefront
the diverse backgrounds and hence entails different social analysis to explain
musicians.
5.3.2. Who Teaches Whom Among the Non-Muslim Musicians?
On the question of the music training, a general picture of the Non-Muslim
musicians points to the family involvement and community based musical transition
as predominant models. The family association with music or houses in which music
was heard regularly was not a rare phenomenon for the musical cultivation of non-
Muslim children. The part that discussed the types of music learning within the
different age categories pointed to the significance of it.
The community based music learning means musicians were instructed by a teacher
who belonged to the same community. Those hired ones were often an extended
family member or the member of the religious institution, to which they were
attached. Such a self-sufficient model explicitly contradicts the idea of mutual
relationship between musicians from different religions that one may often
encounter in historical accounts. After all, my sampling demonstrates that the
presumed interaction was limited at least in the process of music training.
The father of Ovrik Kazasyan Efendi (1872-1936) was an amateur lute player. The
uncle Kazasyan was the deputy of Patriarch; which shows the role of church in his
musical development. Additionally, Sarı Ovrik Efendi was his lute teacher. Sarkis
Efendi (Suciyan, 1885-1943)’s father, Onnik Ohannes Efendi, played kemenche and
was the person who introduced music to his son. Violinist Aliksan Aga taught him
music. Another Armenian musician, Sahak Hocasar (1889-1946) was trained by
194
Aram Efendi for the violin and learned how to read notation. Izak Elgazi’s (1889-
1950) father was a cantor in Izmir, who sang liturgical music and leaded prayer in
the synagogue. He also benefited musically from Şemtov Şikar (1840-1920) and
Hayim Alazraki. Oud player Hrant Emre Kenkiloğlu’s (1901-1978) father, Garabet
Efendi was a carpenter whose musical knowledge was not mentioned in his
biography. His music teachers were all Armenians; violinist Dikran, violinist Agob
and oud player Kirkor. The trend is apparent among the non-Muslim musicians that
the majority did not learn music from a Muslim teacher.
Apart from the pupils who grew up in a house with music and entirely benefited
from the situation, the children of families whose involvement with music was at
the marginal level if any, had to rely on a music teacher. Thus it was more probable
for those to find a Muslim teacher, however, they indeed sought help from the
community they were the part of. It seems that only a small number of cases
submitted the mentioned interaction but even those life stories showed that it was
not so decisive. Isak Varon (1884-1962) was the scribe in the law office in Salonika
that was owned by well-known Manyasizade Refik Bey (1853-1909). Because Refik
Bey had undertaken the defense of Midhat Pasha at court, he was exiled to Kavala,
Salonika during the reign of Abdulhamid II. The Ottoman general election held in
1908 made him first the deputy of Istanbul, later the Minister of Justice. Apart from
his political identity, Refik Bey was a well-known composer, who taught music to
Isak Varon. However, his biographical accounts pointed to his father’s musical role
before he met with Refik Bey. The story behind the move of Bimen Şen
(Dergazaryan, 1873-1943) from Bursa to Istanbul when he was 13 years of old was
already stated. In Istanbul, he benefited from a group of eminent musicians,
including Hacı Arif Bey, Haci Kiramî Efendi, Nedim Bey, and so on. Above all, his
father, Kasbar Dergazaryan was a priest and Bimen Şen was already a member of
the church choir who sang liturgical music before his involvement with those names
in Istanbul. The short life story of kanun player Nubar Efendi (b. 1885) appears to be
unique in a way that it mentions violinist Âma Ali Efendi as his only music teacher.
195
Biographies emphasized the role of religious institutions in the development of non-
Muslim musicians. A considerable amount of non-Muslims were equipped with
religious music either by listening to choirs in the days of public religious worship or
by participating to religious choirs. Even though Leon Hanciyan (1860-1947) grew
up in the house in which family members were amateur musicians, he was familiar
with the Armenian religious music. Priest Kapriel taught him the notation system
called Hamparsum. Ovrik Efendi (1872-1936), Karnik Garmiryan (1872-1947), Kirkor
Berber (1884-1959), Izak Elgazi (1889-1950), Marko Colakoglu (1896-1957) were
among the musicians that religious music held at the Orthodox Churches and
Synagogues formed the basis of music education and helped to shape their musical
identity.
I argue that a range of historical sources, such as biographies, musical
advertisements, programs of music halls, coffee houses, and theatres but
particularly the photographs of music ensembles lead to a teleological view of the
past due to which many historians of music took for granted that the interaction
was always there. The research results, albeit derived from a small number of non-
Muslim musicians, call into question the reductionist type of historical
understanding by demonstrating that the presumed interaction barely existed
during the process of non-Muslim musicians’ training. The argument, however,
does not provide for the entire music careers, which the interaction seemed to be
more widening for the performers. In order to perceive the overall tendencies, the
situation should be questioned vice versa, from the Muslim side. Therefore, the
subsequent part will analyze the limits of interaction by concentrating more on the
Muslim musicians. The part will indeed look into the role of the corresponding
Muslim religious institutions, such as the mosques and Sufi lodges, during the
musical development of Muslim musicians.
5.4. Social Analysis of Muslim Musicians
Muslim musicians constitute the majority of the sampling. The part will call into
question to what extent religion formed the basis of music through analyzing
musicians whose family backgrounds; education types and musical output
196
manifested more religious colors. Given the difficulty of such a task to explore the
religious character of music, the part will emphasize the patterns produced by
musicians who received religious school education, trained to be a reciter and were
influenced by Sufi music and its culture. The socio-cultural analysis of those
musicians will also provide insights into the social changes they have experienced
particularly in the field of music. The last sub-section will focus on the ney and
musicians of this instrument to its center. Rather than overemphasizing the musical
background of practitioners by questioning the predominant model of music
training and teachers, which would essentially bring Mevlevî lodges to forefront,
the part will approach to ney and its players in a way to explore the social history of
the instrument.
5.4.1. Debating the Religious Character of Music through
Sheikh Cemaleddin Efendi (1870-1937)
The previous part emphasized the vital role of religious music in the course of the
non-Muslim pupils’ musical identity formation. This section will call into question
the influence of religion on the Muslim musicians, as many biographical accounts
provide plenty of details related with the subject matter.
Focusing on the musicians whose fathers were religious functionaries will provide a
basis to the argument. As mentioned before, 28 fathers served in a range of
positions, from religious scholar to imam and from priest to synagogue cantor,
which the study placed them all under the category of religious functionary.
Because the part will particularly discuss the Muslims, three non-Muslims will be
excluded from the analysis. The outcome indicated that 25 fathers were critical for
the musical development of their offspring in two ways: They either personally
trained their children or arranged a tutor from their personal network for the
purpose, which the patterns resembled the music learning process for the non-
Muslims. However, the explanation does not restrict the music education to fathers
but emphasizes the importance of it. The importance of family involvement in the
early ages, also in the part dealt that with the professional continuity. Regarding the
children of religious functionaries’ music education, the outcome clearly supports
197
the argument. Out of 25 Muslim musicians, only three were educated in the
Imperial Music Academy (mûzîka-i hümâyûn). The rest (n = 22) was either trained
within the family, or by a tutor. The educational details show that the tutor was
either a colleague (a religious functionary with a skill in music) or a musician that
father knew personally.
Kadı Fuad Efendi’s (1890-1920) father was Hafız Ahmed Efendi who asked Tanburî
Ali Efendi to train his son. Tanburi Ali Efendi and Cemil Bey personally knew each
other, and often participated in musical house gatherings. It is possible that Fuad
Efendi was introduced to Cemil Bey through Ali Efendi. Similar pattern is apparent
in the course of the Hadi Bey’s (Yeniköylü, d. 1920) musical refinement. His father
was the imam of Tarabya Mosque and a friend of Hasan Efendi (Yeniköylü, 1822-
1910). Hadi Efendi musically benefited from Hasan Efendi whose considerable
repertoire was transmitted from his teacher, İsmail Dede Efendi (1777-1846).207
Sheikh Cemal(eddin) Efendi of Kasımpaşa (1870-1937) is one of the distinctive
characters in the late Ottoman music, whom historiography failed to notice. Cemal
Efendi retained his father’s position as the imam of Küçük Piyale Pasha Mosque in
Kasımpaşa. Being one of the students of Yeniköylü Hasan Efendi ultimately made
him one of the next carriers of İsmail Dede Efendi’s legacy.
Photo 5.4. Sheikh Cemal Efendi of Kasımpaşa (1870-1937)
Source: M. Nazmi Özalp, Türk Mûsikîsi Tarihi, Vol. 2, MEB, İstanbul, 2000, p. 167.
207 Sadettin Nüzhet Ergun provides more detailed biography of Yeniköylü Hasan Efendi
(1822-1910); Türk Musikisi Antolojisi: Dinî Eserler, Vol. II, p. 444.
198
However, even though the musical inheritance made him so special, it is not the
reason of bringing him to the forefront. What makes him even more noteworthy is
his active involvement with music teaching. The outcome indicates 12 musicians
who learned music through one religious functionary. It seems that Cemal Efendi
was one of the popular music teachers of his time.
Table 5.15. Religious functionaries who instructed music
Musician Names Music Teachers
Emin Yazıcı (b. 1945) Cemal Efendi
Vefalı Ali Rıza Bey, (b. 1855) Osman Efendi (Beylerbeyi Mosque)
Kemal Gürses (b. 1882) Cemal Efendi
Kadı Fuad Efendi (1890) his father
Kemal Batanay (b. 1893) Cemal Efendi
Besim Şerif Üstünöz (b. 1893) his father
Sebilci Hüseyin Efendi (b. 1894) Cemal Efendi
Cevdet Kozanoğlu (b. 1896) Cemal Efendi
Mustafa Nafiz Irmak (b. 1904) imam Hafız Aziz (Ortaköy Mosque)
Sadi Hoşses (b. 1910) Cemal Efendi
Sadettin Kaynak (b. 1895) Cemal Efendi
Süleyman Ergüner (b. 1902) Sadettin Kaynak (Sultan Selim Mosque)
Abdulkadir Töre Bey (b. 1904) Hafız Vehbi Efendi
Yeniköylü Hadi Bey (b. ?) his father
Cemal Efendi could not teach music to Vefalı Ali Rıza Bey logically due to the age
gap. He was fifteen years older than Cemal Efendi. The list associated him with
seven musicians. Besides, a broader search in the sampling indicated two more of
his other students: Hulusi Gökmenli (1902-1975) and Salahaddin Demirtaş (1912-
1997), both grew up in the Sufi circles of Istanbul. It should be noted that, Cemal
Efendi was not only an imam but also a Sufi sheikh and a well-known zakirbaşı.
Meanwhile, his mosque in Kasımpaşa also functioned as a Sufi lodge, in which he
was the Sheikh as well as the one who lead the rituals, zikr sessions. The situation
explains how the last two names met with Cemal Efendi and eventually became his
disciples both religiously and musically. Although one would often encounter his
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name in musicians’ biographies, but particularly in the book of Ergün, he still
remains as a forgotten character in the history of music. His “re-appearance” is
largely due to the employment of network analysis methods.
Figure 5.1. Music sources of Sheikh Cemal Efendi and his students
Figure 5.1 shows Cemal Efendi’s music teachers on the top with brown circles and
the green colored musicians point to his students. Figure 5.1 includes his students
that were in my sampling group, which means that he had more students than it
stated above.
His biographical account revealed that his musical expertise was largely on religious
music. He had proficiency in the musical forms particularly performed in the Sufi
lodges, such as hymns, şugls (religious praise in Arabic) and duraks (a form of
unmeasured hymn, which was sung by a person called durakçı, in a notably slower
rhytm to regulate the gradually increased tempo of the zikr). Indeed, he had a deep
knowledge on the Şazelî way of Sufi rituals, explicitly showing the Sufi order he
belonged to. It seems that Hasan Efendi (1822-1910) was the chief source of his
classical repertoire or the non-religious musical forms (lâ-dinî). The suggestion is
200
critical to understand the types of music transmitted from Cemal Efendi to his
students. Those who learned music from Cemal Efendi and listed above, almost
always had other teachers who were rather more specialized on non-religious
music. Kemal Gürses (1882-1939) studied with Bestenigâr Ziya Bey (1877-1923) and
Hacı Kiramî Efendi (1840-1909), while tanbur player Kemal Batanay (1893-1981)
studied with a number of musicians, including Rauf Yekta Bey (1871-1935) and Refik
Fersan (1893-1965). Oud player Cevdet Kozanoğlu (1896-1986) additionally learned
from Santur Ziya (1868-1952) and Ali Salahi Bey (1878-1945). Sebilci Hüseyin Efendi
(1894-1975) benefited from the non-religious repertoire of Ahmed Efendi of
Salonika (1869-1926) and oud player Abdi Bey (b. 1868).
The presence of several teachers in the course of music education should not be
considered as showing that Cemal Efendi was not an accomplished musician in the
non-religious field and that his students needed more skillful masters. In fact,
studying with multiple teachers was highly a common practice among musicians. If
one were to play tanbur he would not merely engage with a tanbur teacher to
achieve a particular end. He would need musicians who had proficiency in
repertoire or religious/non-religious forms. The above-mentioned musicians
provided a good example of this general rule. Besides, musicians in the sampling
predominantly studied with much more than one teacher; an issue that I will deal
with in more detail by exploring musicians’ networks. A small passage from the
biographical record of ney player Emin Yazıcı (1881-1945) underlines how
comprehensive one had to be in the Ottoman music:
He first learnt Mevlevî rite in the Rast mode from certain Haşim Efendi.
Kudümzenbaşı Raif Dede of Galata Mevlevî lodge taught him more
Mevlevî rites with emphasis on rhythmic structure. Ahmed Celaleddin
Dede (1853-1946), the Sheikh of Üsküdar Mevlevî lodge, taught him a
few more rites. Hobçuzade Ahmed [Gavsi] Efendi (d. 1908)208, the
zakirbaşı of Kadirî lodge at Tophane, trained him on miraciye. He
208 Further information on him and his extended family, whose members continued as the
Sehikh of Kadirî lodge in Tophane for three genertions, see Sadettin Nüzhet Ergun, Türk
Musikisi Antolojisi: Dinî Eserler, Vol. 2, pp. 483-484; Hasan Aksoy, “Mehmed Şâkir Efendi”,
DİA, Vol. 28, 2003, p. 530.
201
continued to study with his brother Hobçuzade Rıza Efendi (d. 1924)
after the death of Ahmed Gavsi Efendi. Bolahenk Nuri Bey (1834-1911)
taught him two Mevlevî rites composed by himself, on the modes of
Buselik and Karcığar. Rauf Yekta Bey (1871-1935) helped him to be
familiar with hamparsum notation and theoretical issues in music, while
Şevket Gavsi (1873-1954) trained him on the Western notation. He was a
student of Sheikh Cemal Efendi particularly on the religious forms.209
The quotation underlines the fact that religious music consisted of innumerable
sub-branches. One should also keep in mind that Emin Yazıcı’s proficiency was in
the instrument of ney, not in voice. From an alternative interpretation, the situation
underscores that it was the contribution of each participant that ultimately made
the Ottoman music culture immensely deep and diversified.
5.4.2. Musicians with Religious School Education and Reciters of Qur’an
The sampling contains a considerable amount of musicians who received religious
school, medrese, education and/or musicians who were educated to become
Qur’an reciters. This particular situation could not be overlooked to analyze the
religious basis of music.
Nine musicians were trained in the religious schools to become a member of the
ilmiyye class. However, six out of nine musicians could not accomplish the task
successfully and left their school without a certificate. Their biographical accounts
did not mention much about the failure stories. Only one out of these six
incomplete students ended up in memorizing the Qur’an hence became a reciter,
hafız. That person was Kemal Batanay (1893-1981), whose case of we saw within a
different context. Ali Rıza Sağman (1890-1965) was the only musician that
succeeded in graduating from Süleymaniye Religious School and he also achieved
the task of memorizing the holy book of Islam.
On the part of the Qur’an reciters, the sampling contains more than a few number
of musicians. As the task did not essentially entailed religious school education, they
209 Sadettin Nüzhet Ergun, Türk Musikisi Antolojisi: Dinî Eserler, Vol. 2, p. 669.
202
predominantly studied under the supervision of an experienced reciter. In addition
to Batanay and Sağman, the study included 26 reciters, a proportion of 11 %. Thus,
social and musical analysis of those is necessary to put their case within the general
picture.
According to Table 5.16 reciters were coming largely from rather more spiritual
families. These religiously more devoted families were religious functionaries and
Sufi families. Interestingly, probably for the first time the outcome does not indicate
any official functionary family background.
Table 5.16. Profession of reciters’ fathers (cross tabulation)
Profession Frequency Percent
Rel. Func. 12 42.9
Teacher 1 3.6
Sheikh/dervish 4 14.3
Artisan 1 3.6
Merchant 1 3.6
Military 3 10.7
Unknown 6 21.4
TOTAL 28 100.0
Regarding the association of family types to the process of education, the family
involvement or influence once more appears as a prominent model of training even
though only a few cases explicitly stated that fathers or close relatives trained the
reciters: Süleyman Hikmetî Efendi, the imam of Cedid Ali Pasha Mosgue in Eyüp,
was the father of Zekai Dede (1824-1897). His father was his calligraphy teacher,
while his uncle, İbrahim Zühdi Efendi, known as Pepe Hoca, was his Qur’an teacher
when he was enrolled in primary school in Eyüp. Mustafa Zeki Çağlarman’s (b. 1900)
father, Raşid Efendi, was a scholar in the Fatih religious school. Rakım Elkutlu (1872-
1948)’s father, Şuayip Efendi, was the imam of Hisar Mosque at İzmir. Nevertheless,
the small amount of fathers who were reported to raise their offspring for the
purpose of being a reciter does not generate controversy. The argument gives
203
emphasis to pervasive religious atmosphere in the family and the professional
networks set by fathers, but not necessarily the direct engagement of fathers. The
network points out, among other advantages, to the case of procuring a teacher
without great effort.
Besides, the study stated previously that out of 28 religious functionary fathers only
four continued with the family tradition and served as religious functionary, which
was a clear downward trend for the profession. The majority’s professional future
was shaped in the bureaucracy by serving in various posts and positions (see Table
3.17). In other words, the proportions told explicitly that children of religious
functionaries did not prefer to follow the footprints of their fathers.
The majority of the reciters came from similar family background (religious
functionaries), which indicates the strong family impact. However, there is not any
inconsistency or contradiction between the outcomes of Table 3.16 and the
outcomes in Table 5.16. They simply analyze two different things: Table 5.14
emphasized the main income sources of children whose fathers were religious
functionaries. Table 5.16 provides figures for the occupation of reciter musicians’
fathers. As mentioned before, being a reciter neither entails to serve officially in the
religious affairs nor restrains one to get engaged in other occupations. Eventually,
when one compares two associated datasets it would not be wrong to interpret the
situation that 12 out of 28 musicians whose fathers were religious functionary, have
learned the principal part of the job, memorizing Qur’an, but only four chose to
continue professionally. The majority (n = 24) sought career opportunities
elsewhere.
How then these reciters made a living is a good question to understand the future
career choices of those 28. Because it seems there is a correlation between them.
204
Table 5.17. Main income source of reciters
Income Source Frequency Percent
Music 3 10.7
Official Functionary 9 32.1
Religious Functionary 9 32.1
Sheikh/Dervish 1 3.6
Artisan 2 7.1
Self-employed 1 3.6
MOI
3 10.8
Rel. func - Teacher 1 3.6
Rel. func - Artisan 1 3.6
Off. Func. – Self emp. 1 3.6
TOTAL 28 100.0
Table 5.17 brings two jobs to the forefront. Religious functionaries would slightly
exceed official functionaries when the jobs in the “more than one income source”
category totaled. It has to be noted that, four out of nine religious functionaries
fathers were also religious functionaries, whose cases were just discussed above.
Briefly, being a reciter occupationally made those closer to be a part of the religious
affairs. Another set of outcome regarding to the chief income source of musicians in
total provides a basis to the argument as well. The study contained 257 musicians,
in which 16 musicians were official religious functionaries (6.3 % in total). Thus nine
out of those 16 were reciters.
Yet the table indicates only three reciter musicians whose main income source was
music: Zekai Dede (1824-1897), Mehmed Esref Efendi (d. 1930), and Hafız Burhan
(1897-1943). Actually, Zekai Dede’s case was more or less the traditional patronage
relation which is a pattern not many musicians in the sampling shared with. He lived
under the artistic patronage of Mustafa Fazıl Pasha (1829-1875) for about twentyfive
years. Mehmed Eşref Efendi owned a music store in Divanyolu Street,
Sultanahmet, where he traded music instruments, printed (sheet) music and held
205
music classes. Hafız Burhan was a significant figure in the music market. He
recorded innumerable songs and gazels for Colombia recording company.210
Eventually, the study discussed to what extent being a reciter had an impact on the
future career choices of reciters. It was surely more helpful to find a position in the
religious affairs and hence it was the predominant pattern among the reciters.
What about the musical advantages of it? It is possible to discuss the issue through
the musical specialty distribution among reciters.
Table 5.18 does not leave much room to analyze the outcomes. The dominant
musical specialty was profoundly related with the background of musicians.
Table 5.18. Reciters’ musical specialty
Instrument Frequency Percent
Voice 18 64.8
Tanbur 2 7.1
Ney 1 3.6
Oud 4 14.3
NPI 2 7.1
Tanbur-Piano 1 3.6
TOTAL 28 100.0
A reciter was essentially a singer whose musical education was decisively focused
on how to use the voice correctly and efficiently. They were already prepared and
trained before entering the music market. That explains the high frequency of voice
at the expense of other instruments. Probably the only interesting case is the one
who played tanbur and piano. He was Medenî Aziz Efendi (1842-1895). He was born
as a son of an imam but was adopted by Abdulmecid’s daugher Fatma Sultan’s
210Online catalogue prepared by Pan Publishing House, Istanbul, lists the Hafız Burhan
recordings:
https://tasplak.pankitap.com/index.php?pg=1&firma=&katalog_no=&eser=&makam=&yor
umcu=haf%C4%B1z%20burhan (accessed on 22 August 2018).
206
household and he was raised in the palace. That explains his engagement with
piano.
The subsequent part will continue to analyze those whose musical character was
mainly shaped by religious music. The section will place the Sufi lodges to its center.
The impact of Sufi institutions to music and musicians raised in the Sufi lodges will
be the main topics of the following section.
5.5. A Sociocultural Analysis of Musicians with Sufi Affiliation
The part together with subsequent sections will particularly focus on two issues:
Analyzing the characteristics of musicians who were affiliated to a Sufi organization
and the Sufi impact on the music education. Indeed, it will pay particular attention
to the Mevlevî order, whose participants constituted the bigger proportion in the
distribution of orders among Sufi musicians.
Table 5.19. Sufi involvement distributed to orders
Mevlevî 40 15.6
Rufaî 10 3.9
Nakşî 2 .8
Hâlidî 1 .4
Kadirî 5 1.9
Halvetî 5 1.9
Ahmediyye, Uşşakî 1 .4
Cemâliyye, Nasuhî 1 .4
Bektaşî 1 .4
Sadî 2 .8
Affiliation unclear
(visiting more than one
lodge)
4 1.6
Other 3 1.2
Unknown 182 70.8
TOTAL 257 100.0
207
The frequencies are based on the clear statements on the Sufi involvement in the
biographies. As mentioned previously, the term includes a wide range of positions,
from being an official member of certain Sufi order to paying visits to a Sufi lodge
irregularly (muhibbân).
Related with the unknown category, it also contained 28 non-Muslim musicians, 11
%. It does not obviously mean that a Non-Muslim would not visit a Sufi lodge; in
fact, there were non-Muslims who frequented the Sufi lodges. However,
biographies of non-Muslim musicians in the sampling did not refer to such an
involvement. The unknown category particularly for this case should be considered
in the negative sense. I pointed the underlying reasons when I analyzed the
musicians that were resided in the Eyüp neighborhood.
According to the results, the Sufi association reaches 29.2 % of the total. Within
these 75 musicians, the Mevlevî order was the predominant one. In fact, the sum of
other orders was smaller than the Mevlevî musicians. The situation entails more
concentration in the Mevlevî order and the musicians who were in a range of ways
affiliated to it.
5.5.1. Mevlevî Musicians Reconsidered
Exploring the family background of musicians in the Mevlevî category reveals that
about one third (32.5 %) of them belonged to families of government officials, while
20 % were born into Sufi families (mostly members of Sheikh families). As to the
statistics on the birthplaces, Istanbul was clearly the main city. It was the birthplace
of 32 Mevlevî musicians, 80 % of the Mevlevî musicians in total. Yet the same
number of musicians received primary education there. Higher education rates in
the group were also considerable: Fourteen musicians (35 %) received higher
education. When the percentages are compared to the overall educational
statistics, one may realize that Mevlevî musicians shared a notable part. Seventyeight
musicians (30.3 %) in the sampling have received higher education, while the
Mevlevî musicians constituted 18 % of it. Interestingly, only two received higher
education in the religious studies. However, none have completed it: They were
208
Nurullah Kılıç (1879-1975) and Gavsi Baykara (1902-1067). The frequency of reciters
was also significant in the group. The study included 28 reciters. Amongst them the
number of Mevlevî musicians was nine that eventually made 32% of the group.
Regarding the cultural contribution of Mevlevî musicians, almost half of the group
was active in writing and publishing on musical and non-musical issues. Seventeen
musicians in the group (42.5 %) published books, wrote articles to journals and
newspapers.
Searching into the occupational distribution, the outcome described the situation
that 42.5 % served in the bureaucracy, while 15 % gained income from musical
activities. Yet the results pointed to four Sufis (10 %), who all passed away before
the state officially closed the Sufi lodges in 1925. Otherwise they would have
searched for an appropriate occupation. The rest of the musicians were religious
functionaries, teachers, artisans, and doctors, more or less represented equally in
the sample. In a broader perspective, questioning 75 musicians’ occupational
distribution in the Sufi group does not generate radical change but represents
similar income trends: 44 % employed in public offices, while 14.7 % financially
supported by music and 12 % made a living through a Sufi lodge. All in all, the socioeconomic
basis of the Sufi organizations might be derived from the occupational
distribution results. The argument is relevant to the Mevlevî order since it
presented similar patterns as well. The order achieved to attract the attention of
musicians from different layers of society and the condition was not contrary at all
given the sociological background of the Ottoman music, which the study
underlines it from different perspectives.
5.5.2. The Sufi Impact on the Music Education
Musicians in the Sufi category did not produce an atypical picture in terms of
training models when the proportions are compared to the general trends. The
family impact and private tutor were apparently two dominant models of learning
within the Sufi musician category:
209
Table 5.20. Music education types among Sufi musicians
Types Frequency Percent
Family 2 2.7
Tutorage 29 38.7
Music School 1 1.3
Self-taught 2 2.7
Mûzîka-i Hümâyûn 2 2.7
Unknown 1 1.2
Combined types
Family and tutorage 32 41.6
Other combinations 6 7.8
TOTAL 75 100.0
In fact, analysis of learning models presented above would be in parallel with the
interpretations on the previously debated musicians. However, focusing more on
the educational details brings one feature to the forefront and it is what would
make the real difference with other categories. The educational records
overemphasize the spot where the music education has taken place: It was the Sufi
lodges but particularly the ones belonging to the Mevlevî order. Fify nine musicians
out of 75 had ties to a Sufi lodge in order to learn music, which is 78.7 % in total.
Mehmet Cemal Efendi (1847-1916) was truly a musician of Sufi production. He was
trained by Sheikh Rıza Efendi of Hatuniye Sufi lodge in Eyüp. Zekai Dede (1824-
1897) also played role in his education process. Yet he studied to learn hamparsum
notation system with ney player Baba Raşid. It was not others but Sufi musicians
who trained him at every stage of his music education. Two stages were critical for
the musical development of Ahmet Rasim Bey (1864-1932). The music classes held
during the elementary level at Darrüşşafaka (Orphanage) School and the musical
atmosphere in the Bahariye Mevlevî lodge, to which he paid visits in his early life.
Zekai Dede was the source as well as the one who linked the two places for Ahmet
Rasim. İzzeddin Hümaî Bey’s (1875-1950) father was a sheikh of Kadirî order in
Fatih. His father and zakirbaşı Mehmed Efendi instructed him musically. The father
210
of Ali Rıza Şengel (Eyyübî, 1878-1953) was zakirbaşı in the Cerrahî lodge in Eyüp and
his uncle was a Sufi sheikh, which shows that extended family networks and the
surrounding community already determined his musical path. Behlül Efendi (d.
1895) was affiliated with Sheikh Osman Selahaddin Dede (1820-1887) of Yenikapı
Mevlevî lodge, where he received music training. When Kazım Uz (1873-1943)
decided to compose a na’t, his music teacher Zekai Dede told him to acquire
knowledge and skill from Behlül Efendi, “na’t ve durağın tavrını bu zattan öğren”.
The attitude particularly declared the authority of Behlül Efendi in certain religious
forms. The relative examples might easily be extended, nevertheless, brief
quotations from biographical accounts demonstrate clearly the significance of Sufi
lodges in the Ottoman music world. Eventually, the research findings lay a solid
foundation to the often-encountered historiographical debate about the
educational function of Sufi lodges.
Focusing more on the Sufi musicians’ instrumental specialty will provide an
alternative perspective to the debate.
Table 5.21. Musical specialty among Sufi musicians
Instrument Frequency Percent
Singer 31 41.3
Ney 16 21.3
Tanbur 1 1.3
Kanun 1 1.3
Oud 3 4.0
Kemenche 1 1.3
Violin 2 2.7
NPI 6 8.0
Moi 14 18.2
TOTAL 75 100.0
The outcome demonstrates that musicians in the Sufi group explicitly concentrated
more on two instruments: The voice and the ney. The oud would follow those when
one totals its frequency in the Moi category. The two instruments were
211
undoubtedly the ones who took the lead in Sufi rituals, particularly in the Mevlevî
ceremonies. However, I do not specifically deal with the music performed in the
lodges. The musicians who learned music in Sufi lodges did not constrain their
musical identity to religious music only. In fact, one encounters references to
musical gatherings playing non-religious repertoire even in the Sufi lodges. Thus,
musicians either Sufi in origin or not would be familiar with all the forms, religious
and non-religious. The musician networks confirm the opinion. As their case has
been discussed before, even the reciters, who were supposed to be the most pious
of all, were in close relation to the teachers who had more proficiency in nonreligious
music, in order to get the relevant repertoire.
Fourteen musicians in the Moi (more than one instrument players) group included
primarily singers and oud players.
Table 5.22. Musical specialty among Moi group
Instrument Frequency Percent
Singer-Kanun 3 4.0
Singer-Oud 5 6.7
Singer-Violin 1 1.3
Kanun-Oud 1 1.3
Kanun-Violin 1 1.3
Ney-Oud 1 1.3
Oud-Piano 1 1.3
Ney-Other 1 1.3
TOTAL 14 18.2
Zekai Dede, who joined the Mevlevî order in his older ages, might be an example of
an opposite case. Therefore, all those individual cases point the general rule in the
Ottoman/music that, no matter which instrument the specialty was, musicians were
to be familiar with all the forms without any restraint. However, the special field
was to demand more time, energy and sacrifice. It was the underlying reason of
studying with multiple teachers, which would essentially help to broaden the
musical knowledge.
212
Indeed, the research findings call for an explanation on ney, which the instrument
demonstrated a huge concentration considering the overall number of ney players
in the sampling. Nineteen out of 21 ney players in the sampling were Sufi affiliated
musicians, 90.4 % of the total.
5.5.3. A Brief Social History of Ney and the Players
To write on ney is in a way undemanding due to extensive literature on the subject.
However, the situation also limits the author because the literature predominantly
and repeatedly underlines its role within the Mevlevî culture.
Photo 5.5. Ney, the principal instrument of Mevlevî music
Source: The photograph was taken by Sébah and Joailler, from Engin Çizgen,
Photography in the Ottoman Empire, 1839-1919, Haşet, İstanbul, 1987, pp. 120-121.
The general consensus on the role of the instrument in the religious music acts as
an impediment in the way of developing alternative approaches to the issue.
Historians of music have not yet produced a biographical study of a ney player to
analyze the social change that the Ottoman music underwent from the late
213
Ottoman to Early Republican periods. Cem Behar’s study on Hayri Tümer (1902-
1973) is still an exception in the field.211 In brief, the author underscored Tümer’s
hesitations to take a more liberal stance towards the changing conditions of music.
Due to the lack of biographical researches, it is still difficult to grasp the impact of
change at the micro level, on the participants of this music who experienced the
time period in question. Thus, given the limitations of literature, the section will
collectively analyze ney players in order to reveal the typical and atypical patterns
they have produced.
Table 5.23. Profession of ney players’ fathers
Profession Frequency Percent
Official Func. 5 23.8
Religious Func. 3 14.3
Teacher 1 4.8
Sheikh/dervish 5 23.8
Military 1 4.8
Unknown 6 28.6
TOTAL 21 100.0
The table indicates that the social background of ney players was not
unconventional, as they were coming either from government officials or Sufi
families. When the percentages are compared to reciters’ fathers there appear
differences. To be noted, reciters and ney players did not overlap with each other,
so comparing both groups will enhance the analysis. Yet why these two groups
consisted of different musicians should be questioned. The fathers’ occupational
distribution shows that reciters were predominantly coming from religious
functionary families (42.9 %). It might be considered that they responded in a more
conservative way towards their offspring and raised them as reciters. For the ney
players, the occupational distribution of fathers does not imply such a pattern.
211 Cem Behar, “Gelenek ve Modernlik Arasında Bir Yirminci Yüzyıl Neyzeni: Hayri Tümer
(1902-1973) ve “Ney Metodu”” in Musikiden Müziğe, Osmanlı/Türk Müziği: Gelenek ve
Modernlik, YKY, Second Edition, 2008, İstanbul, pp. 117-134.
214
Statistical analysis on the birthplace of ney players reveals that 17 out of 21 were
born in Istanbul (81 %), except one who lived in Izmir. Three out of four non-
Istanbul born musicians moved to Istanbul where they received primary education.
Attendance to higher education was significantly high as the results show that nine
out of 21 have received higher education (42.9 %). Three ney players further
studied in religious field but only one succeeded in completing. He was Ahmed
Celaleddin Dede (1853-1946) who studied in the al-Azhar at Cairo.
Questioning the language skills between ney players, reciters, and pianists might
yield results for the argument. Persian and Arabic were most frequent languages
among ney players; each language had seven musicians. Four of them spoke French,
while seven musicians’ language skill was unknown. Given the Mevlevî literature,
which fundamentally relied on Persian, this high frequency is reasonable since the
number slightly exceeds the amount of sheikh families. The proportions for
language skills run in parallel to the reciter’s language patterns. Out of 28 reciters in
total, seven were familiar with Arabic and six with Persian, while only three had the
knowledge of French language (10.7 % in total). Nevertheless, comparing the
figures with pianists might be interesting: French language, for instance, is
dramatically high among the pianists. Seven out of 15 pianists were familiar with
French (46.6 %) while none of them showed interest in Persian. Yet the outcome
shows that only one pianist was familiar with Arabic. Yet, there was not any pianist
that came either from religious functionary or from Sufi families. Although
statistical outcomes on language results and family background alone are not
adequate to classify and hence perceive certain instrument as more traditional or
less modern in the Ottoman music, however, they do provide insights into the
argument.
215
Table 5.24. Income source of ney players
Income Source Frequency Percent
Music 4 19.0
Official Func. 10 47.6
Religious Func. 1 4.8
Sheikh/dervish 4 19.0
Doctor 1 4.8
Military 1 4.8
TOTAL 21 100.0
Official service appeared as the prevailing way of providing income. However, the
argument that associated reciters with religious functionary occupationally cannot
be applied to practitioners of ney. Neither their family background nor the
professional career choices generated characteristics similar to those of reciters.
Based on the research results it might be said that being a reciter was more
influential in the career paths of those than musicians who were affiliated with ney.
The outcome showed four ney players derived income from music at least more
regularly than others. Cemal Efendi (İzmir, 1874-1905), Tevfik Kolaylı (1879-1953),
Gavsi Baykara (1902-1967) and Burhaneddin Ökte (1905-1973). The case of Gavsi
Baykara was already mentioned in the context of the financial insecurities related to
music. One may also question Tevfik Kolaylı who with his life choices challenged the
established rules. No matter how misfit he was, music and thus music-based
income represented him more than anything else. It could not be said that other
musicians never benefited from ney financially, as it was in the case of İhsan Aziz
Bey (1884-1935). He served in the Ottoman bureaucracy for long years and his
music career began immediately after his retirement. Therefore, the study grouped
those according to their primary occupations.
Given the musical homogeneity among the ney players, I still emphasize certain
points. Ney players were taught the ney almost always in a Sufi and mainly in a
Mevlevî lodge. Yenikapı, Bahariye, Galata and Kasımpaşa Mevlevî lodges were
216
frequently stated places of music education in the biographical accounts. Apart
from the highly encountered names such as Aziz Dede (d. 1905) and Hüseyin
Fahreddin Dede (1853-1911), accounts pointed out to the names of Hilmi Dede (d.
1921), Hakkı Dede (d. 1918), Celâl Dede (Hafız Melek), and Halid Dede as ney
teachers of significant musicians.212 Although they were serneyzens of Mevlevî
lodges in Istanbul at the turn of the twentieth century, I could not include them into
the sampling owing to the insufficient biographical material. There was only one
case of self-taught in the group: Hafız Hüsnü Efendi (1858-1919). Rifat Bey (Sermüezzin,
1820-1888) and Hacı Faik Bey (d. 1890) trained him musically in the
Imperial Music Academy (mûzîka-i hümâyûn) on voice.
5.6. Hamparsum Knowledge Among Musicians
The transmission of musical knowledge in the Ottoman music heavily relied on
memory from the very beginning, as stated previously. Although the practice of oral
transmission was the most common model, there were a number of attempts to
develop musical notation from the second part of the seventeenth century on.213
212 Burhaneddin Ökte described elaborately his music education in the Yenikapı Mevlevî
lodge with Hilmi Dede, Celal Dede and Halid Dede, see Burhaneddin Ökte, “Musiki
Âleminde 30 Sene”, Türk Musikisi Dergisi, No. 35, 1950, pp. 10 and 24, No. 36, 1950, pp. 10
and 24.
213 To briefly touch upon the critical figures, a multifaceted palace musician Ali Ufkî (d. circa
1677) recorded on paper more than 500 pieces that belonged to 21 different modes. His
musical notations included a range of musical forms, from song repertoire to instrumental
compositions. However, his (Western-based) musical notation indicated a reverse
direction: from right to left, see the critical publishing of Şükrü Elçin, Ali Ufkî: Hayatı,
Eserleri ve Mecmûa-i Saz ü Söz, MEB, İstanbul, 1976. The Sheikh of Galata Mevlevî lodge,
nayî Osman Dede (d. 1730) and Kantemiroğlu (1673-1723) developed musical notations
similar to one another, both of which were based on Arabic letters, see Kantemiroğlu,
Kitabu 'İlmi'l-Musiki 'ala vechi'l-Hurufat, Musikiyi harflerle tesbit ve icra ilminin kitabı, Yalçın
Tura, (ed.) 2 Vol., YKY, İstanbul, 2001. Only about 70 instrumental pieces that were notated
by Osman Dede survived to today. The grandson of Osman Dede, Abdülbaki Nasır Dede
(1765-1821) developed a musical notation based on the Arabic letters, which again
resembled to Kantemiroğlu to a certain degree. Hrisantos, a member of the Greek-
Orthodox church developed a musical notation on the ancient Byzantine model in around
1820s. Under the support of the Church, the notation of Hrisantos also spread into nonreligious
Greek music (exoteric) and Ottoman music from 1830s on, see Nâsır Abdülbaki
Dede, Tedkîk ü Tahkîk, Yalçın Tura (ed.), Pan, İstanbul, 2006; Eugenaia Popescu –Judetz,
Türk Musiki Kültürünün Anlamları, Bülent Aksoy (trans.), Pan, İstanbul, 2007, p. 49; Cem
Behar, Musikiden Müziğe, pp. 250-252.
217
Nevertheless, none of the aforementioned notation models can compare to musical
notation developed by Hamparsum Limonciyan (1768-1839) in terms of popularity
among musicians.
A member of the Armenian Catholic society of Istanbul and a chorist in the church,
Limonciyan’s model was not entirely innovative but a modified version of the
ancient khaz system, the history of which dates back to ninth century. In fact, the
underlying reason for Hamparsum was to preserve the Armenian Church music as
well as to prevent the further impact of Greek Orthodox music on the Armenian
repertoire. Nevertheless, his colleagues stood against his system on the ground that
their authority on the religious repertoire would be shaken. He overcame the
confrontation by offering classes outside of church and by building connections
with Mevlevî musicians. Kerovpyan stated that he frequented to Beşiktaş Mevlevî
lodge in order to make it known that his notation could be effective on the Ottoman
music. Hence, the system, which was essentially formulated for the Armenian
religious music, overran the ethno-religious boundaries and was gradually spread
into the Ottoman music due to its easy application and simplicity. Towards the last
quarter of the nineteenth century, his notation has also gained ground in the
Armenian Church, however, he was not alive to witness it.214
The recent study of Jacob Olley on the writing culture of music in the late
nineteenth century Istanbul offered fresh insights into the subject matter. Oley did
not only question the emergence of Hamparsum notation in the socio-cultural
context, but also considered its employment both in the Armenian religious
repertoire and in the Ottoman music in general. Yet, his quantitative analysis, which
was based on the 69 manuscripts covering about a century from the early
nineteenth century up to the turn of the twentieth century, is highly relevant to my
thesis. The statistical outcome showed that the Hamparsum notation was used by a
small number of musicians and was not as popular as it was believed to be.
214 Eugenaia Popescu –Judetz, Türk Musiki Kültürünün Anlamları, pp. 50-52; Aram
Keropvyan – Altuğ Yılmaz, Klasik Osmanlı Müziği ve Ermeniler, Surp Pırgiç Ermeni Hastanesi
Vakfı Kültür Yayınları, 2010, pp. 93-106.
218
Statistically, It was lower than 10 % before 1880 and it was likely to become around
25 % for the latter period. He also argued that the Armenian musicians recorded 45
out of 69 manuscripts, 65 % of the total. The situation showed clearly that the
Hamparsum notation was under the Armenian domain, even though the proficiency
among Muslims, particularly among the Mevlevî musicians seemed to rise steadily
towards the end of the nineteenth century.215
My research findings on the popularity of Hamparsum notation among musicians
run parallel to the conclusion of Olley. In fact, my statistical outcome showed that
the percentages were even less than the percentages he has pointed out. Only 31
musicians’ biographies explicitly stated that they knew the notation. It is equal to 12
% of the total.216 Nevertheless, the numbers should be approached with caution
since the statistical anlaysis is based on the biographical material. Barkçin
emphasized the issue in his biographical work on Ahmed Avni Konuk (1868-1938).
His students declared clearly that he did not know how to read musical notation.
Even the author hesitated to comment on whether he was familiar with
Hamparsum or not, due to the fact that all the songs he selected for his song-text
collection, Hanende, were already notated in Hamparsum.217 The biographies of
Abdülkadir Töre (1872-1945) and his disciple Ekrem Karadeniz (1904-1981) who
were deeply concerned with the theoretical aspects of music and even developed
alternative notation model, did not mention anything about the issue. Even so, one
cannot be convinced that they were unfamiliar to it.
The source of knowledge is traceable in some biographies. Mehmed Cemal Efendi
215 Jacob Olley, “Writing Music in Nineteenth-Century Istanbul: Ottoman Armenians and the
Invention of Hampartsum Notation”, Martin Stokes (Superviser), Unpublished PhD Thesis,
King’s College London, 2017, pp. 203-205.
216 Muslim musicians familiar with Hamparsum notation were Ataullah Dede, Celaleddin
Dede, Hüseyin Fahreddin Dede, Rauf Yekta, Cemil Bey, Nevres Bey, Refik Fersan, Sadettin
Heper, Ahmed Irsoy, Emin Yazıcı, Mehmed Cemal Efendi, Suphi Ezgi, Hüseyin Sadettin Arel,
Mustafa Nezihî Albayrak, Fehmi Tokay, Hayri Tümer, and Halil Can.
217 Savaş Ş. Barkçin, Ahmed Avni Konuk: Görünmeyen Umman, Klasik, İstanbul, 2009, pp.
129-130.
219
(1847-1916), the zakirbaşı of Sertarikzâde and Hatuniye lodges in Eyüp and
Nureddin Cerrâhî lodge in Fatih, learned the notation from Baba Raşid. However,
little is known about his life except that he was a palace musician. Yet his affiliation
with the Mevlevî order is unclear, as it was the case for the majority of the ney
players in the sampling. The Hamparsum source of Hüseyin Fahreddin Dede (1853-
1911), the sheikh of Bahariye Mevlevî lodge in Eyüp, was Sheihk Halim Efendi of
Rıfaî order at Kozyatağı.218 Sheikh Halim Efendi (d. 1896) played the tanbur and ney
and Aziz Dede regarded him as the true master of the instrument.219 Rauf Yekta Bey
(1871-1935) benefited from Ataullah Dede (1842-1910) and Celaleddin Dede (1849-
1908), the Sheikhs of Galata and Yenikapı Mevlevî lodges, respectively, on the music
theory and notation systems. Nevertheless, searching one generation prior to find
out who instructed Hamparsum to those two sheikhs remains uncertain.
Rauf Yekta seems to be the main source of Hamparsum training since many of the
musicians’ biographies pointed out his name. Emin Yazıcı (1881-1945), and Fehmi
Tokay (1889-1959) were among those. Ahmed Irsoy (1869-1943) the son of Zekai
Dede (1824-1897), learned Hamparsum from Emin Yazıcı, who was actually his
repertoire teacher. It appears that Emin Yazıcı taught Hamparsum notations to his
ney students, who frequented the Galata Mevlevî lodge before the closure of the
Sufi lodges in 1925: Hayri Tümer (1902-1973) and Halil Can (1905-1973). Mustafa
Nezihî Albayrak (1871-1964), who was related to Dede Efendi through the maternal
side of the family, were taught by Ahmet Irsoy, in Hamparsum notation. Besides, he
developed one musical notation, which he named as the “Stenographic Notation of
M. Nezihî Albayrak”.
Another argument put forward by Olley highlights the Armenian presence on the
production of manuscripts he studied.220 My findings underscore its popularity
218 Nuri Özcan, “Hüseyin Fahreddin Dede”, DİA, Vol. 18, 1998, pp. 546.
219 Nuri Özcan, “Halim Efendi”, DİA, Supplement No. 1, 2016, 522-523.
220 Afet (Hapet) Mısırlıyan published a journal in 1910, Saz ve Söz. To make the public
familiar with the Western type of music notation, the journal published the same
compositions that were written both in Hamparsum and staff notations.220 Arşak Efendi
220
among Armenian musicians and hence support his argument from a different
perspective. Only three out of 21 musicians did not know the notation for sure,
while three biographies were silent about the subject matter. One musician, Hırant
Emre Kenkiloğlu (1901-1978) had been blind since infancy. Eventually, 14 out of 21
musicians were equipped with the Hamparsum notation, which makes 66.6 % in the
Armenian musician group.221
Consequently, two groups were apparently engaged more with Hamparsum
notation. Armenians constituted the first. Their religious music background surely
played a role in that. Most of those were trained in the church choirs since
childhood and hence were accustomed to repertoire that was largely written with
Hamparsum. There were also practical reasons. Many of them made music in
professional terms and offered music classes. It was easy to follow or remember a
composition through Hamparsum notation while performing or teaching. Another
group was Mevlevî musicians. When Hamparsum Limonciyan required his notation
to be known outside the church community, he first visited a Mevlevî lodge. He
probably anticipated that Mevlevîs with an institutional structure, refined music
tradition and advanced writing culture would respect and welcome his system.
Besides, the Mevlevî support would pave the way for the utilization of it in the
wider circle of Muslim musicians. Time proved that he was right. His system
gradually spread among Muslim musicians but particulary within the Sufi circles
during the late Ottoman period. Nevertheless, the popularity should not be
exaggerated due to its limited percentage indicated by statistical results. Olley also
(Çömlekciyan, 1880-1930) published many fasıl series in his music store. Kirkor Çulhayan
Efendi (1868-1938) was even entrusted with the task of notating Jewish religous music
through the reference of Izak Varon (1884-1962), Izak Elgazi (1889-1950) and Moshe (Moiz)
Kordova (1881-1965). Karnik Garmiryan (1872-1947) was a participant of church choir and
learned the Hamparsum notation from his master, Kapril Efendi. His life story corresponds
to Bimen Şen, who was a part of the church choir as well. Thus, the familiarity of Bimen Şen
with the Hamparsum notation is open to debate.
221 Musicians with Hamparsum knowledge were Afet (Hapet) Misirliyan, Arşak Efendi
(Çömlekciyan), Astik Ağa (Asadur Hamamciyan), Bogos Efendi (Asdikzade Hamamciyan),
Hosep Efendi (Ebeyan), Karnik Garmiryan, Kirkor Berber, Kirkor Çulhayan Efendi, Leon
Hanciyan Efendi, Melekzet Efendi (Mustafa Nuri), Nubar Tekyay, Serkis Suciyan, Tatyos
Efendi (Keseryan).
221
pointed out two political events, the diminishing of Armenian community in size
and the closure of the Sufi lodges in 1925, with which I also agree in terms of its
effects.222 In fact, those external factors were not only critical for the decreased
popularity of Hamparsum notation but had more important effects on the
weakening of the Ottoman music culture.
Photo 5.6. Leon Hanciyan (1860-1947, on the left) poses with Hamparsum notation
Source: Aram Kerovpyan and Altuğ Yılmaz, Klasik Osmanlı Müziği ve Ermeniler, Surp
Pırgiç Ermeni Hastanesi Vakfı Kültür Yayınları, İstanbul, 2010, p. 106.
5.7. Exploring Musicians’ Networks: Who Teaches Whom?
Given the complexity of the task, the quantitative analysis will not only give an idea
about the most popular music teachers of the time period, but will also show the
predominant styles through which music was transmitted. Among the musician
sampling nine names come to the forefront that were more actively involved with
music education.
222 Jacob Olley, “Writing Music in Nineteenth-Century Istanbul”, pp. 241-242.
222
Table 5.25. Most popular music teachers
Names Student Frequency
İsmail Hakkı Bey (1865-1927) 23
Ahmet Irsoy (1869-1943) 22
Bestenigâr Ziya Bey (1877-1923) 19
Zekai Dede (1824-1897) 18
Tanburi Cemil Bey (1872-1916) 17
Rauf Yekta Bey (1871-1935) 16
Haci Kiramî Efendi (1840-1909) 12
Hüseyin Fahreddin Dede (1853-1911) 11
Leon Hanciyan (1860-1947) 10
Zekai Dede presumably would have more students if he had lived one more decade
more due to the number of musicians in the sampling who were born after 1890s.
When one totals his students with the students of Ahmet Irsoy, his son, it would not
be a misleading statement to say that the family was the most fertile school of
music training from the late Ottoman to the Early Republican periods. Yet the
outcome apparently reveals the increased role of music schools immediately after
the first decade of the twentieth century. Five out of nine musicians on the list
either owned a music school or taught in the music schools.
As stated previously, students might have more than one teacher and it was
actually the case for musicians in general. Thus, the student numbers in Table 25
contained cases of overlapping students, which the Gephi visualizations would
better express those musicians.
Besides, a couple of points should be noted in relation to the problems in the
process of developing educational statistics and visuals for musician networks. The
networks did not include musicians beyond the sampling. For example, Ali Rıfat
Çağatay’s (1869-1935) nephew Hatif Efendi was the student of Cemil Bey. The
network analysis did not mention his name since he was not in the musician
sampling. In other words, the statistical analysis is confined to musicians under
223
study and explores the interactions between them. Another issue is related to the
childhood period of musicians, whose houses welcomed musicians for live
performances. In fact, these cases are not so few as to be overlooked. The amount
of musicians could vary from only a handful to more than ten musicians and even
more. For sure, all these teachers had a role in the musical refinement of the
children at home, and their name could be written to the list of music teachers.
However, to prevent further complexity, the network map visualized the people
whose names stated as the music teacher(s) in the biographical accounts.
Finally, the visuals show the teacher at the center, whose students might be
followed by arrows. Arrows help to locate his teachers and his students in different
directions, which the teachers are generally above and are indicated with same
color. The students are in a variety of color and their circles are in different
dimensions in general. These differences do not mean anything for the particular
network map of certain musician. It actually makes sense for the overall network
map of musician sampling for the various algorithms that were used by Gephi.
Figure 5.2. İsmail Hakkı Bey’s (1865-1927) teaching network
224
Figure 5.3. Ahmet Irsoy’s (1869-1943) teaching network
Figure 5.4. Zekai Dede’s (1824-1897) teaching network
225
Figure 5.5. Cemil Bey’s (1872-1916) teaching network
Figure 5.6. Rauf Yekta Bey’s (1871-1935) teaching network
226
Figure 5.7. Hacı Kiramî Efendi’s (1840-1909) teaching network
Figure 5.8. Hüseyin Fahreddin Dede’s (1853-1911) teaching network
227
Figure 5.9. Leon Hanciyan’s (1860-1947) teaching network
5.8. Conclusion
The outcomes indicated that some instruments were apparently more popular than
others and thus provided evidences to write more on their social history. Practical
reasons could explain the popularity issue to a certain degree but some were more
related to the growing commercialization of music right after the late nineteenth
century. Oud, for instance, was the leading instrument among the musician sample
as well as the most visible instrument in the more and more commercialized music
world. The advertisements for live performances in the music halls, theatres, and
concerts, the documents of record companies all underpinned that. Instrumental
reference books were mainly written on oud. Ney indeed produced enough for a
social history. Outcomes on the players’ music education models revealed that Sufi
lodges were the real center to learn it. Another outcome helped to reveal more on
the lodges is that musicians instructed there were predominantly ney players and
singers, since these are the principal instruments of this kind of music. The place of
religious institutions in the musical development was critical for the non-Muslim
musicians as well. The research findings show that their musical education started
228
in the religious choirs. Interestingly, non-Muslims revealed a more conservative
pattern in that they have barely studied with Muslim teachers, a fact which is likely
to generate controversy with the mainstream historiography. The Gephi analysis on
the overall music education networks brought to the forefront some new names.
Sheikh Cemal Efendi of Kasımpaşa was one of them, on whom historiography has
not produced something serious. But the network maps pointed him as the critical
musician particularly for transmitting the religious repertoire. Yet collective network
analysis highlighted the multiple sources of many musicians, which may contribute
to the future studies that would follow the transmitting of one particular repertoire,
such as focusing on the durak form, a Mevlevî repertoire, or to explore the
Hamparsum chain in the late Ottoman era.
229
CHAPTER 6
RECONSIDERING CHANGE AND CONTINUITY IN MUSIC
THROUGH THE CAREER PATHS OF MUSICIANS
The previous chapter has dealt with the models of music training and becoming a
musician in the late Ottoman Istanbul. In other words, the main concern was
musicians’ initial steps to the art. This chapter is in a way designed to keep up with
the point where we have left in the previous chapter. To follow the career paths of
musicians will enhance our understanding regarding the change and continuity in
music from the late Ottoman to the republican period. By following the career
patterns of musicians, the aim is to provide new perspectives to the
historiographical debates regarding the breaks with tradition, modernization as well
as continuity in music. The chapter will pay particular attention to music schools
and state radio through a new perspective with a view to reevaluate their roles in
the process of change in music. Yet, the latter part will question the process of
change from a gender perspective to emphasize the women’s responses to change.
6.1. Interpreting the Career Changes
In order to grasp the change and continuity, I analyzed each musician’s career paths
in the sampling and categorized them accordingly. My categorization is not based
on occupations, which means that one may encounter official functionaries in each
group.223 An official, whose professional career might evolve into music after
retirement from the official post, would be a proper case of change at the turn of
223 The basis of the categorization differs from the classification done by Güneş Ayas. The
aim here is to observe and identify the career changes in the sampling in order to see if the
musical opportunities increased, to what extent the musicians were the participants of the
change and eventually what sort of new patterns they generated in the period under
question. Ayas defined Musa Süreyya (1884-1932), for instance, as a proper example of
musicians who adjusted his stance to justify the Early Republican politics in music and thus
to marginalize Ottoman music. The author’s classification sought to explore changes in the
cultural stance of musicians. Nevertheless, Musa Süreyya is included in the group of
musicians whose career path did not reveal a change over time. See Mûsiki İnkılâbı’nın
Sosyolojisi: Klasik Türk Müziği Geleneğinde Süreklilik ve Değişim, Doğu Kitabevi, İstanbul,
2014, pp. 197-210.
230
the republican era. A musician, on the other hand, who was in the music market
(piyasa) from the beginning of his musical career and continued to do so
throughout his life, would be interpreted in the group of musicians who did not
change the career track.
6.1.1. Change in Career Patterns Towards Music
As mentioned above, the categorization does not point to the number of musicians
whose main source of income was music. It simply shows the ones whose careers
had evolved elsewhere but inclined towards music over time. In other words, the
career changes are observed. It is not possible to precisely set the onset date of
change but based on the biographical accounts one may roughly estimate the time
period. It seems that the change in most cases begins with the end of the first
decade of the twentieth century. To state that, there are exceptional cases but
small in number.
Table 6.1. Career changes towards music
Frequency Percent
Yes 80 31.1
No 174 67.7
Unknown 3 1.2
TOTAL 257 100.0
Social background analysis of those 80 musicians’ brings officials to the forefront
once again. The majority of those who experienced career shifts towards music are
the official functionaries. Forty-two former officials sought career opportunities in
music, 52.6 % of the total. Other professions were distributed evenly among
teachers (3.8 %), religious functionaries (6.3 %), self-employed people (5 %), traders
(3.8 %) artisans (2.5 %), doctors (2.5 %) and so on. The previous occupations of two
cases were in the unknown category.
Dürrü Turan (1885-1960) was in the “yes” group due to his professional career
231
change. He was the son of an official functionary whose father, Saffet Bey, served in
the Ministry of Finance. Turan completed his higher education in the Ottoman
University (Dârülfünûn-ı Osmanî) and taught Turkish literature in the public schools.
In between, he was taught music by a number of musicians, including Mustafa
Servet Efendi (1840-1918) and Cemil Bey (1872-1916). He was in the teaching staff
of the Dâr’ül-Elhân Conservatory in 1917 and when it was re-opened in 1923. The
school was transformed into the Istanbul Municipal Conservatory in 1926. He
played tanbur, taught music and Turkish literature in this institute throughout his
life. Indeed, he was among the first musicians of Istanbul Radio, the broadcast of
which began in 1927. He toured Anatolia with a group of musicians and
musicologists to collect traditional folk music in 1927, which was the practice that
characterized the Early Republican politics in music.
Another musician whose career trajectory was mainly shaped in the Early
Republican period was Emin Ongan (1906-1985). He was born into a military family
in Edirne and completed his education in the Edirne High School (Sultanî). His
professional life began in the Tobacco Monopoly (Tütün İnhisarı) in 1936, from
where he retired in 1951. Although he started to play violin in his early ages, his real
music education has begun only after his graduation from the high school. His
family had moved to Üsküdar and he was enrolled in Dârü'l-Feyz-i Musikî, whose
history was closely linked to that of Emin Ongan. The conditions during the World
War I was troublesome for a music school to keep up with the regular education.
Hence the school was closed, the precise date of the closure is unknown, but it was
re-opened by Atâ Bey (Telgrafçı, d. 1934) in 1920 under the name of Anadolu Music
School.224
224 Nurettin Öztan, “Üsküdar Musıkî Cemiyeti ve kurucusu ATÂ BEY”, Musıkî ve Nota, Vol.
10, Issue. 1, August 1970, pp. 16-19.
232
Photo 6.1. The musicians of Anadolu Music School, 1920
Source: Nurettin Öztan, “Üsküdar Musıkî Cemiyeti ve kurucusu ATÂ BEY”, p. 16
Eventually, the school was re-named as the Üsküdar Musikî Cemiyeti in 1923. It
seems that there is a controversy among historical sources regarding Emin Ongan’s
involvement in the school. His musical career evolved in this school while he still
served in the Tobacco Monopoly. He was first enrolled as a music student, and then
became a teacher and eventually the head of the school. Yet his teaching career
continued in the Istanbul [University] Municipal Conservatory from 1945 on and in
the Istanbul Technical University Conservatory from 1976 on.
Indeed, there were musicians inside the “yes” group, who did not engage in music
teaching either privately or in the music schools but derived income from other
musical practices. Although smaller in number (n = 9), they performed music in
various places, including coffee houses, theatres, music halls and so on.225 Hafız
Hüsnü Efendi (1858-1919) was born into a moderate religious functionary family.
His father, Mehmet Hakkı Efendi, was the imam of the Harem Mosque in Üsküdar.
Hüsnü Efendi was educated in the Imperial Music Academy (mûzîka-i hümayûn)
225 Hafız Hüsnü Efendi (1858-1919), Mehmed İzzet Efendi (1861-1894) Ahmet Bey (Selanikli,
1869-1926), Asdikzâde Bogos Efendi (1872-1945), Ali Rıza Bey (Kaptanzâde, 1881-1934),
Tahsin Karakuş (1892-1959), Hüseyin Efendi (Sebilci, 1894-1975), Marko Çolakoğlu (1896-
1957), Hakkı Derman (1907-1972).
233
whose theachers were Rifat Bey (1820-1888) and Hacı Faik Bey (d. 1890). He was
assigned prestigious positions in the palace, such as teaching to read Qur’an in the
enderûn (Imperial School) and being the second imam of the Hırka-i Şerîf room in
1900. Although the retirement date from the palace could not be determined, his
life account states that he was an active practitioner in the music market. He was a
member of the Hafız Burhan’s (fasıl) group for many years, which was on stage in a
music hall in Şişhane in the Beyoğlu district. Marko Çolakoğlu (1896-1957) was born
into the Rum community of Karaman. After his family moved to Istanbul, he began
to learn music as a disciple of the first cantor (Protopsaltis, başmuganni) Iakovos
Naupliotis (1864-1942) in the Orthodox Patriarchate at Phanar (Fener). He was a
self-employed broker and commissioner. His account does not mention why and
when he changed his career track but he bought a tavern in the Arnavutköy shore,
where he played oud and sang with his (fasıl) group.
İsmail Safa Olcay (1907-1969) presents an interesting case as his career trajectory
ran in the opposite direction. He was born into a low class religious functionary
(vaiz) family in Amasya. In fact, he was quite lucky to meet an important musician
from Istanbul in his hometown. He got his initial training in music by Asım Bey
(1851-1929), who was a political exile to Amasya in the Hamidian era and was
forced to live there for almost twenty years. When Olcay moved to Istanbul after
1921, he worked with Vitali Efendi and Artaki Efendi to play kanun. In Istanbul, he
was a practitioner musician who played violin and kanun in the (fasıl) groups of
Leon Hanciyan and Kemani Serkis. It is likely that he was not satisfied with working
in the music market and was seeking a career opportunity that would allow for
regular working hours with a steady income. Eventually, he found a regular job.
Between 1937 and 1954 he taught making and repairing wooden structures in a
school in Eskişehir, which belonged to the State Railways. Then he was appointed to
a factory in Adapazarı that produced wagons. His biographical account does not
mention that he ever returned to Istanbul close to his death in 1969.
What comes out from the biographical accounts is that former civil servants were
the subjects of the change in most cases. They were musicians by nature and hence
234
shifting to a career in music was not anticipated. However, the aim is to explore
what sort of patterns they produced in their careers that took a new turn. It
appears that many of them concentrated on the music education but particularly
teaching at the music schools. Therefore, there appears to be a connection
between musicians with the official past and the music schools. Moreover, there
are musicians in the “no” category, who associated with the music schools. I argue
that the music schools, in majority a joint enterprise of musicians, stood at the
center of the change in music. I will further develop my argument in the part that
would deal with these institutions’ impact on music and musicians.
6.1.2. The Consistent Musicians
Musicians whose life stories did not show critical track change in the professional
terms formed the “no” group (n = 174). Many of those were “professional”
musicians and were placed in this group, on the ground that their source of income
continued to be based on the art that they were the experts of. Indeed, an artisan,
whose musical world was shaped largely by musical gatherings or within the Sufi
circles and did not seem to change the musical habits, was inside the group of
consistent musicians.
235
Table 6.2. Continuity observed among the occupational groups
Source of Income Frequency Percent
Music Based 74 42.5
Official Functionary 44 25.3
Religious Functionary 8 4.6
Teacher 9 5.2
Sheikh, dervish 7 4.0
Artisan 6 3.4
Doctor, Pharmacist 3 1.7
Engineer 3 1.7
Writer (journalist, etc.) 4 2.3
Self-employed 3 1.7
Other 8 4.6
Unknown 5 2.9
TOTAL 174 100.0
The concentration of musicians in the group is not surprising since I placed
professional musicians here. Among those 30 musicians were strictly bound to the
music market (40.5 %), whereas the proportion was only 11.5 % for the musicians in
the “yes” category.
In fact, what was the main characteristic for those 74 musicians was their lesser
connection with the music schools and hence with teaching music. That was a
significant difference between the musicians that were organized in these two
different groups allowing us to observe the continuity and the change in their
careers. The statistical outcome shows that 72.5 % of musicians in the “yes” group
(58 out of 80), whose career paths shifted to music, were in connection with music
schools in a range of positions, from teaching to performing. The proportion for the
musicians with unchanging career paths dropped sharply to 28 % (49 out of 174). I
will discuss the issue of music schools in more detail in the next part.
236
One of those 30 musicians was violinist Memduh Efendi (1868-1938) who was born
into a musician family in Istanbul and whose father was violinist Emin Aga. He was
part of the music groups performing in the coffee houses and music halls of the city
(see Tables 15 and 22 in the Chapter Four for places where he performed). He
opened a music store in Kapalıçarşı in 1908 in order to sell musical instruments as
well as to offer music classes. Later on, he began to run a tavern in Kadıköy with a
group of musicians. Yet he recorded music for various companies.
Arşak Efendi (Çömlekciyan, 1880-1930) who learned to play violin from the customs
officer Kirkor Çulhayan (1868-1938), performed at music halls and taverns of
Beyoğlu. Yet he owned a music shop, where he sold instruments, wrote and
published fasıl notations and taught music. Similar life pattern was that of the
kanun player Nubar Efendi’s (b. 1885). His musical performances in the taverns,
music halls and coffee house extended over a wider geographical area, from
Istanbul to Cairo and to Baghdad. He eventually settled in Aleppo and ran a tavern
there. Neither the place where he died nor the date is known.
Ahmet Mükerrem Akıncı (1885-1940) was born into a religious functionary family.
His father served in the Davutpaşa Kışla Mosque. After he graduated from Menşe-i
Küttab-ı Askeriye, he entered the official service at the Ministry of Military Affairs. In
between, he voluntarily served in the same mosque after his father’s death. It
seems that he did not receive a proper music education since he was a self-taught
oud player. Only in 1919, he began to study music with kanun player Mehmet Bey,
who was the student of Latif Ağa from the Imperial Music Academy. According to
İbnülemin, his official life ended in 1909. However, his personal record shows that
he was still in the office in September 1911.226 More importantly, his career did not
evolve into a musical career, in opposite to many of the former official
functionaries’ career trajectory that I examined. His musical habits did not change
much as he was connected to the music by musical gatherings. It seems that he did
226 “…şubesi Hesab Kısmı mümeyyizliğinde mumaileyhin müdavim ve hüsnü ahlak
ashabından olduğu tasdik kılınmışdır…13 Eylül 1327”, BOA, DH.SAİD, 183-13 (13).
237
not give up this practice throughout his life. Musicians were gathering in his house
first in Fatih and then in Bostancı after he moved there.
Hadi Bey (Yeniköylü, d. 1920) was a scribe in the Regie Company (Reji Şirketi). His
father was an imam who helped to develop his musical character. In between, he
was taught music by one of Dede Efendi’s (1777-1846) students, Hasan Efendi
(Yeniköylü, 1822-1910). He particularly specialized in the religious music due to his
lifetime affiliation with the Sufi circles of Istanbul. After his official duty ended, the
precise date of which is unknown, he was not employed by one of the music schools
even though he was known for his immense song repertoire, nor did he perform
music in public apart from the Sufi lodges.
The father of Hulusi Gökmenli (1902-1975) was a reciter of Qur’an, which helps to
explain his association with the Sufi milieu of Istanbul. He paid visits to the Tahir
Aga Sufi lodge in Cibali (Fatih), of which Sheikh Cemal Efendi (1870-1937), Kazım Uz
(1873-1943), Kemal Batanay (1893-1981) and Saadeddin Kaynak (1895-1961) were
the avid frequenters. Indeed, he was the student of Sheikh Cemal Efendi. The
classes were held in the Küçük Piyale Pasha Mosque in Kasımpaşa, where Cemal
Efendi served as an imam. He owned a glass factory and ran a shop where he traded
glass in Eminönü. Partly owing to his well-established business on glass and partly to
his affiliation with Sufi circles and hence his attachment to the religious music, he
never performed in the music market. He was nicknamed Camcı Hulusi.
As the story of his life reveals, Cevdet Çağla (1902-1988) seems to be a proper
example due not only to his consistency in music but also his ability to adapt to a
range of new musical opportunities, including recording music, employment in
music schools and membership in Istanbul and Ankara radios. He was born into a
musical family. His mother played the piano and his father organized regular
musical gatherings at home. Antonyadis, who was then the violin teacher of the
Dârü’l-Elhân Conservatory, taught him Western-style violin. In between, he was a
regular student of the Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî, where he was employed as a music
teacher for a long time. When the Istanbul radio operated between 1927 and 1938,
238
he was in the first group of musicians to attend the programs. Between 1938 and
1949, he was an Ankara radio musician. He returned to Istanbul with the re-opening
of the radio in 1949 but this time he was there only for six years. Between 1956 and
1959, he was invited as a music teacher to the Baghdad Conservatory with a group
of musicians, including Mesud Cemil (1902-1963).
Eventually, the aim was to define the change in better terms and to see how
comprehensive the change was in music. Based on the statistical outcomes, roughly
one third of the musicians in the sampling whose previous careers had evolved into
other professions, sought financial gain in music. The amount might easily be
interpreted as a growth in the music market. It is noteworthy that slightly more
than half of those newcomers to the music sector were former official
functionaries. The finding has to be further explored, as none of the people
belonging to other occupations entered into music professionally as the officials
did. Therefore, the following part will call into question the music schools and the
officials, who avidly participated in this novel space of music.
6.2. The Social Basis of the Music Schools
Music schools whose number increased rapidly after the first decade of the
twentieth century were totally a new phenomenon for the Ottoman/Turkish music.
The model, which did not exist a generation ago, provided a new understanding on
the process of music training and quickly spread into the musical centers of the city.
Indeed, the cases indicate that this type of organization reached wider areas in the
empire, which meant more people got in touch with music than before.
Furthermore, the music schools provided students with more musical opportunities
under one roof. A high number of musicians and a range of instruments were to be
found in a music school. Such a comfort should be considered serious due to the
often-encountered expressions of musicians regarding the difficulties they
experienced in the course of music training.227 Finally, public concerts organized by
227 Burhaneddin Ökte is a good example of troublesome music training, see Burhanettin
Ökte, “Musiki Âleminde 30 Sene”, Türk Musikisi Dergisi, No. 35, 1950, p. 10.
239
music schools (another novelty) were an effective means to broaden its base, reach
out to more people and bring them into the music community. The outcome, which
is learning music according to the age categories, confirm the argument that the
students of these institutions were coming mainly from the families with a low level
of interest in music, if any. Thus, I called those “outsiders” to the musician
community, due to the fact that they entered into the art late in life as compared to
the majority of musicians (see the relevant outcomes in the Chapter Five).
All these music-related issues are significant to understand the effects of music
schools. The available literature that consisted of memoirs, journal articles, books
and academic studies inform in detail the names of the founders, teaching staff, the
musical activities, music education models, students, so on.228 However, none of
them calls into question the social role they played. A whole new approach to the
music schools will provide an alternative view to the issue. Apart from their musical
contribution, which I pointed above, my question is why did these schools emerge?
In England, for instance, musicians came together to discuss the problems they
faced and to improve their living standards towards the end of the nineteenth
century. The Society of Professional Musicians was founded in 1892 (renamed as
the Incorporated Society of Musicians in 1896), and the Union of Graduates in
Music in 1893. Indeed, similar organizations were opened in the provincial cities of
England. Although they were to provide financial support to deprived musicians, the
real motivation behind these organizations may be summarized under three
headings: obtaining legal recognition (and license), forming musician unions similar
to other professional unions and improving music education. In order to aid
228 Hüsnü Tüzüner, “Gülşenî Musiki Mektebi Hatıralarım”, Türk Musikisi, Vol. 2, Issue 19,
May 1949, p. 7 and Vol. 20, June 1949, p. 6; Laika Karabey, “Şark Musiki Cemiyeti Nasıl
Teşekkül Etti ?”, Musiki Mecmuası, Vol. 60, 1 February 1953, pp. 356-360; Cem Atabeyoğlu,
“Musiki âlemimizden…”, p.21, Taha Toros Archive, No. 001527875006, İstanbul Şehir
University; Güntekin Oransay, “Cumhuriyetin İlk Elli Yılında Geleneksel Sanat Musikimiz”,
Ankara Üniversitesi İlâhiyat Fakültesi Yayınları, No. 117, Ankara, 1973, pp. 227-272; Nuri
Özca, “Dârülmûsikî-i Osmânî”, DİA, Vol. 8, 1993, p. 553; Dârütta’lîm-i Mûsiki”, DİA, Vol. 9,
1994, pp. 9-10; Nuri Güçtekin, “İlk Türk Mûsikî Cemiyeti: Dârülmûsikî-i Osmanî Cemiyeti
(Mektebi) ve Faaliyetleri (1908-1914)”, Rast Müzikoloji Dergisi, Vol. 3, Issue 1, 2015, pp. 42-
58.
240
unemployed and elderly musicians, they organized charity concerts, collected
membership dues and sought the economic support of the wealthy people.229 I
argue that the music schools that emerged from the late Ottoman to the Turkish
Republic might be considered in the similar context. It is obvious that they were not
a kind of guild or labor union but were music schools. Although they did not declare
such a mission, the ways they operated allows this study to perceive them as such.
The first characteristic to be underlined was collectivity. The majority of these
schools were a joint enterprise of musicians. Probably the only example of support
given by a patron was Şark Musikî Cemiyeti that was established in 1918 in the
Kadıköy district. The financial support provided by Süreyya Pasha (İlmen, 1874-
1955), albeit for a limited period of time, did not change the fact that the school
was founded by a group of musicians. Due to the projects he designed for the
school, it might be said that the school was not more than a profit-making
enterprise for the Pasha.230 The motivation of financial gain, nevertheless, was not
unique to Şark Musikî Cemiyeti. Almost all the schools that operated in Istanbul
undertook similar paid activities, including public concerts, regular music training,
sheet-music publishing, and contract with record companies.
My approach to these schools as the financially autonomous, collective effort of
musicians as well as a means of support for the employed musicians does not
encompass Dârü’l-Bedayî-i Musikî and Dârü’l-Elhân Conservatory due to the fact
that both were state sponsored projects.
229 Cyril Ehrlich, The Music Profession in Britain since the Eighteenth Century: A Social
History, pp. 126-129; Deborah Rohr, The Careers and Social Status of British Musicians,
1750-1850, pp. 182-183.
230 Laika Karabey’s article elaborately explains the formative period of the school, which
also provides the letter of Süreyya Pasha written on the subject matter, “Şark Musiki
Cemiyeti Nasıl Teşekkül Etti ?”, pp. 356-360.
241
Cemil Pasha (Topuzlu, 1866-1955) established the former as an imperial theatre in
1914, which included music branch and was administrated by Istanbul Municipality,
whereas the Ministry of Education founded the latter in 1917.231
The second significant feature is that the musicians of these schools were mainly
former official functionaries. Such a characteristic, which went unnoticed by the
historiography, is revealed through the social background analysis of musicians.
Although these schools also employed musicians who were never involved in
governmental jobs, it does not undermine the argument. The critical figures of
these schools were former officials. Dârü’l-Musikî-i Osmanî was the first music
school to be opened in Istanbul in 1908. The school was a collective initiative of
musicians, among which the majority was former official functionaries: Hacı Kiramî
Efendi (Ministry of Military Affairs), Kazım Uz (Ministry of Post and Telegraphs and
Ministry of Finance), Santurî Edhem Efendi (Ministry of Finance), Kaşıyarık
Hüsameddin Efendi (mu’addhin in the palace), Ekrem Bey (Ministry of Finance) and
Kanunî Arif Bey (Ministry of Post and Telegraphs). The school was reorganized a
year later and moved to the Fatih district with a new name, Musikî-i Osmanî, and a
new teaching staff, many of whom were again former officials: İsmail Hakkı Bey
(first mu’addhin in the palace), Fahri Bey (Council of State [Şûrâ-yı Devlet], Ministry
of Military Affairs), İzzeddin Hümayî Bey (Ministry of Justice), İhsan Aziz Bey
(Ministry of Justice).
231 Yavuz Daloğlu, [Türk Devrimi’nin] Tiyatro ve Opera Komitesi Raporu, Opus, İstanbul,
2013, pp. 20-22; Erhan Özden, “Arşiv Belgeleriyle Dârülelhan”, Conservatorium, Vol. 5, Issue
1, Istanbul University Press, 2018, pp. 97-130.
242
Photo 6.2. İsmail Hakkı Bey (1865-1927) and his Musikî-i Osmanî School
He sits at the center, poses with the staff and students of his music school, which he
opened it in 1909.
Source: Şehbal, Hüseyin Sadeddin, Vol. 7, 1 Temmuz 1325, İstanbul, p. 134.
One encounters the names of Fahri Bey and İhsan Aziz Bey this time among the
founders of Dârü’t-Talîm-i Musikî in the Fatih district in 1912. There are more
schools revealing the same pattern: Bestenigâr Ziya Bey (1877-1923) was among the
founders of the Şark Musikî Cemiyeti in 1915. He retired from the Ministry of
Military Affairs in 1916. Abdülkadir Bey (Töre, 1872-1945), who was an official in the
Ministry of Interior and Ministry of Foreign Affairs respectively, founded Gülşen-i
Musikî in 1918 in his home at Cerrahpaşa. Following his retirement from the
Ministry of Justice, Ali Salahî Bey (1878-1945) founded Terakki-i Musikî in the Eyüp
district with a group of musicians, among whom there was Fahri Bey (Council of
State [Şûrâ-yı Devlet]). Ata Bey (was nicknamed Telgrafçı, d. 1934) restored the
Dârü'l-Feyz-i Musikî under the name of Üsküdar Musikî Cemiyeti in 1923. Emin
Ongan (Tobacco Monopoly) was another critical figure of the school. As mentioned
before, many of these officials were dismissed due to the reorganization of the
243
Ottoman bureaucracy in 1909 (tensikât) or retired around the time as the music
schools began to increase in number in Istanbul. Thus, the concentration of the
former official functionaries in the music schools could not happen by chance and
should be explained.
Given the official status of these people, being a music teacher was more respected
than playing in the music halls or in the coffee houses, where the musicins had to
work for long and irregular hours. On the one hand, music schools seemed to
provide protection against the tough working conditions of performing music
outside, and integrated them smoothly into the music market, on the other. Table
22 (Fourth Chapter) showed this process of integration, the musicians of these
schools gave public concerts just like the (fasıl) groups of Aşkî Efendi or Tahsin
Efendi in the very same places. But the difference was eye-catching on the ground
that they were on stage as a representative of the schools they were bound to. The
performances were made in the name of schools. The process might be defined in
terms of formalizing an institutional identity that would eventually provide prestige
and status. The photograph of İsmail Hakkı Bey’s Musikî-i Osmanî School (Photo 6.2)
confirms the argument. The uniform clothing, the tidy arrangement of the people
posing for the photographer, and above all the expression of seriousness on faces
convey the messages of authority, order and above all dignity. It seems that İsmail
Hakkı Bey wanted to retain his training from those old days in the Imperial Music
Academy (mûzîka-i hümâyûn).
One alternative way to look at the subject matter is from the statistical perspective.
Table 5.25 explored the most active nine music teachers in the late Ottoman
Istanbul. Hüseyin Fahreddin Dede (1853-1911) was the only one on the list who did
not connect himself to music schools either as a practitioner or as a teacher. His
base was a Sufi lodge. All the rest of the most popular music teachers were either
the founders of one, some were more than one, or actively involved musicians in
the schools that I stated above. Hence it might be interpreted that their popularity
was not about transmitting music better than others but they were simply in a more
advantageous position.
244
The second relevant outcome is that 107 musicians in the sampling were schoolaffiliated
musicians, 42 % of the total. The number of musicians who received music
training in one of those schools was 35, which make 14 % of the total. The
proportion seems insignificant but should not be overlooked given the number of
musicians in the sampling that had received music training before the schools were
established (see “Age Composition Characteristics” in the Third Chapter regarding
the precise amount of younger generation of musicians who were born at the turn
of the twentieth century). The proportion of the school-affiliation for the older
group of musicians, on the other, increases that 72 musicians participated in them
both as a teacher and performer, 28 % of the total.
All in all, my argument was that the dynamics of change in music was strongly
related to the issue of music schools. Thus, the statistical outcomes and social
network analysis of musicians alternatively underestimated the expanded influence
of music schools at the time period in question. I argue that the effect of the music
school-centered change in music stood at the center up to the formation of state
radio in Istanbul (1927-1938) and in Ankara (1938-1949).
6.3. Radio Broadcast: An Opportunity or Threat to Ottoman Music?
The onset of radio broadcasts in Istanbul was in 1927. It is noteworthy that the
radio began to operate quite early when one considers that the first regular
broadcast in the world became possible only in the 1910s.232 According to this
study, music schools triggered the first critical change in music after the turn of the
twentieth century, the underlying reasons and consequences of which were
discussed above. I argue that the second change was the establishment of the state
radio in 1927. Although its influence on music and musicians was not similar to that
of the music schools, it seems that they both dominated gradually the musicians’
world.
232 Studying astronomy and physics at Stanford University, Charles Herrold (1875-1948)
unintentionally discovered the radio broadcast while he was working to improve wireless
telephony in 1909, Gordon Greb and Mike Adams, Charles Herrold, Inventor of Radio
Broadcasting, McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, Jefferson, North Carolina, and
London, 2003, pp. 15-18.
245
As mentioned before, the beginning of radio broadcasting marks the time limit of
this thesis. Even though it created a unique platform for music and hence the
musicians, it coincidentally imposed uniformity and undermined plurality. Hence,
the bulk of the musicians in the sampling appeared to be the last generation who
carried the cultural plurality of the imperial ages. Rona’s book, 20. Yüzyıl Türk
Musikisi: Bestekârları ve Besteleri Güftelerile, evidently confirms my argument.233
Why my thesis does not extend the time limit is also related to the issue of state
intervention in music through the cultural policies, the implementation of which
coincided with the onset of radio broadcasts. Cultural historians stated different
opinions regarding the roles the radio played from its emergence to the 1950s.234
However, from the statements of Mesud Cemil, it is clear that particularly the first
period of Istanbul radio (1927-1938) should not be considered within the same
political context as the Ankara radio (1938-1949):
“…at the beginning, our audience seemed to be between 3.000 to 5.000
people. …It might be said that the programs were better in quality [he
compares it to the Ankara Radio]. …The popularity was limited and
233 In fact, the author changed the title of the book, however, it is the expanded version of
his first book, 50 Yıllık Türk Musıkisi and contains about four hundred more pages. The
book’s newly added musicians were born in the first two decades of the twentieth century.
It seems their differences are less than their similarities regarding the career patterns, most
of which ended up in state radios, see Mustafa Rona, 20. Yüzyıl Türk Musikisi: Bestekârları
ve Besteleri Güftelerile, Türkiye Yayınevi, İstanbul, 1970.
234 Meltem Ahıska argues that the transfer of radio to Ankara in 1938 was analogous to that
of making Ankara the capital of the new republic. Symbolically, Istanbul was the center of
extreme Westernization and thus degeneration, also the center of anti-republicans and the
supporters of the Islamist policies. Hence, the authorities of the new order had to keep a
distance with Istanbul. However, the gap between the ideal and the reality was immense
regarding the sociocultural level of Ankara compared to Istanbul. Within this cultural
struggle, the radio was one of the strong instruments to decrease that gap. The author
states that the decision to cease the Istanbul radio until 1949 was a part of that plan.
Meltem Ahıska, Radyonun Sihirli Kapısı: Garbiyatçılık ve Politik Öznellik, Metis, İstanbul,
2005, p. 27-31. Tamer Kütükçü approaches the issue from a rather more musical
perspective as compared to Ahıska. He argues that the Ottoman music found a proper
channel to reach more people than it was possible in the Ottoman era, despite the
unwillingness of the new political elites. The second issue he made a point of was that the
political intervention was very limited, particularly in the Istanbul radio and thus musicians
were selected with respect to the musical talent they had. As a consequence, the standard
of broadcast was praiseworthy thanks to the musicians of fine quality. Tamer Kütükçü,
Radyoculuk Geleneğimiz ve Türk Musikisi, Ötüken, İstanbul, 2012, pp. 51-55.
246
hence we could work with any musician we wanted to without
bureaucratic barriers…”235
What Mesud Cemil implied was that the radio broadcast was not yet an area of
interest for political authorities, and it appears that the logic behind it was to
entertain the public rather than using it as a means of conveying political
propaganda. However, things would turn out to be very different during the Ankara
radio period.
From the standpoint of this thesis, the argument that the radio undermined the
plurality in music is derived from the radio-affiliated musicians’ career tracks. The
system identified 88 radio-affiliated musicians, the majority of whom had similar
social backgrounds and career paths, which I will demonstrate through statistical
outcomes.
Table 6.3. Musicians’ distribution between
Istanbul and Ankara radios
Radio Frequency Percent
Istanbul Radio 48 18.7
Ankara Radio 14 5.4
Both 26 10.1
TOTAL 88 34.2
It is noteworthy that 48 musicians in the sampling have died before the onset of
radio broadcast in 1927. Hence the radio-affiliated musicians make 42 % of the
musicians in the sampling. Regarding the “both” group, Ankara radio started to
operate in the same year the Istanbul radio was closed. Therefore, the majority of
those musicians in the “both” group were transferred to the new radio in Ankara.
Yet five musicians employed in the “Istanbul Radio” group died before the opening
of the Ankara radio in 1938.
235 Ayhan Dinç, “İstanbul Radyosu’nun Öyküsü”, in İstanbul Radyosu: Anılar, Yaşantılar,
Ayhan Dinç, Özden Çankaya, Nail Ekici (eds), YKY, İstanbul, 2000, p. 74.
247
The outcome on the instrument specialty of those 88 musicians shows that voice
took the leading (n = 27), followed by oud and violin (13 for each), ney (n = 8),
kemenche (n = 7), tanbur and kanun (6 for each) and other instruments in smaller
numbers. The proportions run parallel to the outcomes regarding the general
instrumental specialty in the sampling.
The income source of radio-affiliated musicians shows that the largest proportion
belongs to the musicians that made a living by performing music: 58 % were
professional musicians. The former official functionaries’ participation in the radio
was only about 19 %. As stated before, the proportions ran in the opposite direction
for the music schools, in which the majority were former officials and the
association of professional musicians was at an insignificant level. It might be
interpreted that music schools and radio stood at the two different sides of the
change facing one another. Yet in their relationship there was more than meets the
eye. The life stories of the 55 out of 88 radio-affiliated musicians revealed the
connection. They were part of those music schools, either as students, performers
or teaching staff, which makes 62.5 %. More precisely, 26 out of those 55 received
music education in the music schools founded by the former official functionaries
(47 %). The music schools employed the rest as music teachers or as members of
their music groups.
248
Photo 6.3. Musicians of Istanbul radio in the early period
(Standings, left to right) Nevres Bey, Refik Fersan, Ali Rıza Şengel, Mesud Cemil,
Selahattin Demircioğlu.
(Seated, left to right) Hayriye Örs, Vecihe Daryal, Ruşen Ferit Kam
Source: Ayhan Dinç, “İstanbul Radyosu’nun Öyküsü”, p. 73.
A distinctive feature of the radio was the employment of the female musicians, as it
is seen in the Photo 6.3. In fact, defining 23 female musicians’ occupation was a
challenge for me because the majority did not have a definable occupation. As the
biographical accounts revealed, some were born into upper-class families, which
presumably provided them with an income and inherited wealth and they did not
need to work. Leyla (Saz) Hanım’s (1850-1937) father was Hekim İsmail Pasha
(1807-1880), while İhsan Raif Hanım’s (1877-1926) father was Mehmed Raif Pasha
(Köse, 1836-1911). Both Pashas served as ministers in the Trade and Public Works
(Nafia ve Ticaret Nezâreti). Nigâr Galip Hanım (1890-1966) was the granddaughter
of Ahmet Mithat Efendi (1844-1912) and the daughter of Muallim Naci (1849-1893).
The father of Neveser Kökdeş (1904-1962) was in the close circle of Abdulaziz,
başmabeynci Hurşit Bey. She was one of the rare musicians under study who
graduated from a foreign school (Notre Dame de Sion). I have already stated the
249
cases of Faize Ergin (1894-1954) and Fahire Fersan (1900-1997) while discussing the
tragic life story of their father, Mabeynci Faik Bey (1870-1937). In fact, only three
female musicians’ occupations were definable. Nezahat Adula (1901-1959) taught
music, while Mualla Anıl (1909-1985) taught literature in public schools. Sabiha
Tekad (b. 1911) was a civil servant in the Supreme Court. The significant point about
the radio broadcast is that 15 out of 23 females in the sampling participated in the
radio broadcast either as contracted-musicians or as permanent staff (65 %).
Although it provided a safe environment, it was the radio through which women
eventually found a platform to perform music in public and to assert themselves as
musicians.
Consequently, radio functioned differently than music schools in certain ways:
i. The social basis of schools was quite different than the radio in that the former
emerged as collective effort of musicians, whereas the latter was a state-sponsored
project.
ii. The music schools might also be viewed as an attempt to increase the status of
musicians but particularly the music teachers in the Ottoman urban society.
Musicians of those schools derived status but not wealth by formalizing institutional
identity.
iii. Yet the schools provided an open platform for the participants who hoped to
excel at music. The radio was not a school –albeit Ankara radio held classes for a
while but only to the musicians under contract, the space was restricted only to
musicians.
iv. Music schools -albeit more limited, but particularly the radio had a discernable
effect on the careers of women musicians. The integration of female musicians into
music has transformed the field into a more egalitarian one, even though the
decision-making roles in music continued to be held mostly by the male members.
v. More importantly, the radio produced a prototype musician, which eventually
250
became a role model. As employees for the government, they became embedded in
the state organization. The situation, however, was highly different from the case of
the musicians who served in the Ottoman bureaucracy. As I tried to underline by
quantitative and qualitative methods throughout the thesis, music was part of the
Ottoman urban culture and only a small portion of the musicians was earning a life
out of music. With the emergence of state-run institutions, such as the state radio,
the diversity that nourished this culture started to fade away, particularly due to the
professionalization of musicians. It was true that musicians were financially secured
more than ever through state-run institutions, however the amateur spirit started
to lose ground. When the state policies turned against the Ottoman music in the
1930s, the bulk of the musicians were not in a position to oppose the state, since
they were the state functionaries. Sadly, very few of the music schools that
emerged as a result of the collective efforts of musicians after the 1910s, that might
have provided a shelter from the storm, still existed since most of the musicians had
become radio artists.
251
CHAPTER 7
CONCLUSION
This thesis collectively analyzed the musicians who lived during the late Ottoman
and in the Early Republican years, a method of that has not yet been employed for
the time period in question. The aim of gathering a significant amount of musicians
was to reveal their social characteristics. Calling into question what sort of typical
patterns they have generated and to what extent they differed from each other
yielded valuable returns, thanks to which sociocultural complexities have became
discernable.
This study aimed to shed light on the socio-historical basis of the Ottoman urban
music. The family background of musicians demonstrated the social diversity of
musicians. They were born into families of state officials, religious functionaries,
military personnel, Sufi sheikhs, musicians, artisans, traders, laborers and so on.
Another noteworthy aspect was that they were predominantly coming from
average, middle-rank families. These research findings expressed clearly that music
connected many different layers of society in Istanbul. Moreover, the music did not
belong to a particular group of people or class; each member of the musician
community has participated on equal terms. It appears that these characteristics
did not undergo an important change since the time of Es’ad Efendi (d. 1753). It is
noteworthy that, they were probably the last generation of musicians that
maintained this type of plurality of social profile. If I had employed the method to a
group of musicians that were born after the turn of the twentieth century, there
would have been major proportional differences between the musicians who
earned a living out of music and those who did not.
Calling these issues into question was instrumental in understanding whether music
was a profession in the late Ottoman urban society. Notwithstanding that less than
one third of the population of musicians sought career opportunities in music, from
the standpoint of this thesis; it was a profession in the marginal sense. The
252
perspective that I have offered, considered music as a part of the urban culture and
one of the ways to express urban identity. The fact that a greater proportion of
musicians engaged in music on an unpaid basis reinforces this argument.
The study attempted to explore living conditions in order to better understand the
socio-economic position of musicians in society. Scholarship regarding poverty and
social isolation in the Ottoman urban centers does not provide much guidance. Yet,
the study demonstrated that musicians suffering from poverty were not few. It is
noteworthy that most of the destitute musicians were either former official
functionaries or were the members of the Imperial Music Academy. Given the
complexity of the issue, I continued to examine the individual life stories to better
grasp the common problems they faced. It appears that both internal and external
factors were at play. I showed that the socio-political changes the Ottoman state
went through by the turn of the century were traumatic for many musicians. The
majority of the musicians in the official service were dismissed with a meager
retirement income due to the reorganization of the Ottoman bureaucracy in 1909.
It was only in music that they could pursue a career. The study revealed that some
musicians were more fragile when they had to confront financial problems of music,
including unemployment, underemployment, and irregular job vacancies, who
eventually faced poverty in retirement. Some of the former official functionaries, on
the other hand, sought ways to survive, better adapted to change and played a
critical role in transforming the music world.
From a broader perspective, the thesis tried to link the political crises the Ottoman
state experienced after the turn of the century to the changes in music. More
precisely, by approaching the Ottoman bureaucracy from a musical perspective, the
thesis attempted to understand the transformations in music by following the
career paths of civil officials, which predominantly constituted the musicians under
study. From this viewpoint, the members of the bureaucracy were the individuals
who generated the Ottoman urban culture, and also its music.
253
Focusing on the spatial networks of musicians throughout the city was a particular
way of viewing the issue, offering a new understanding on the music performed in
the city and introduced new perspectives to Ottoman urban studies as well. With a
view to identify the habitual practices of musicians and hence to draw the musical
map of the city, geographically definable networks of musicians were visualized
through historical maps and graphics. To do that, the thesis statistically recorded
every single move of musicians mentioned in the biographical accounts. The places
where the music was heard, including places of music classes, music schools, Sufi
lodges as well as the houses where the musical gatherings were carried out. Indeed,
the statistical analysis also covered coffee houses, theatres, music halls, and picnic
areas as the places of musical performances. This frequency analysis produced two
significant outcomes: The first outcome was the neighborhoods where the musical
activities were mostly concentrated. Secondly, the frequency analysis displayed the
musical interactions between neighborhoods.
The quantitative outcomes showed that Fatih, Beşiktaş and Üsküdar are the
residential, whereas the Beyoğlu and Fatih districts are the performance centers of
Istanbul. The two neighborhoods together almost had half of the recorded musical
activities in Istanbul. However, characteristic differences separated them. What
made Beyoğlu musically significant was the frequency of places for entertainment.
Innumerable music halls, taverns and theatres characterized the district. Indeed,
innumerable music stores, sound recording companies, and the emergence of radio
broadcast in 1927 made the neighborhood even more musical. Yet, the presence of
prominent Sufi lodges, including the Galata Mevlevî lodge and the Tophane Kadirî
lodge, contributed further to the diversity of the area.
The study recorded most of the musical house gatherings in Fatih. It was mainly due
to the fact that musicians predominantly lived in the old city (33.3 %). Sufi lodges in
Fatih were the places, in which religious music was performed continuously, such as
Yenikapı Mevlevî lodge, Nişancı lodge, Nureddin Cerrahî lodge, Sertarikzâde lodge,
and so on. Coffee houses were another characteristic of Fatih, where musicians
gathered to socialize and to perform music. Above all, Fatih seemed to have
254
foreseen the change ahead and responded accordingly. The emergence of music
schools was revolutionary in many ways that set the music on a new path. Most of
these institutions were opened in the neighborhood. Therefore, it would not be
wrong to argue that Fatih stood at the center of the change in music.
On the part of the musical interactions between neighborhoods, Üsküdar was the
place of the most mobile musicians in the sampling. They carried out most of the
local music activities, also frequented even most distant places, such as performing
music in the picnic areas of Sarıyer. Although Eyüp and Üsküdar corresponded to
each other in terms of their religious character, which was disseminated through
the notable religious architecture and dynamic Sufi presence, the latter revealed
more musical diversity. Particularly theatres and theatrical organizations, mainly
concentrated around the Doğancılar and Bağlarbaşı areas that meant more musical
opportunities for musicians.
Exploring the network structures that linked the musicians to one another created
circumstances to open up even the isolated interactions. Above all, the approach
brought an alternative perspective to re-evaluate the existing historical material
and shed light on the issues, many of which were the least-visited in the history of
music.
Firstly, musicians predominantly learned music before the age of 10 and the family
involvement in the process of music education was characteristic for those
musicians. The majority of the rest who learned music when older, were born into
families with a lesser musical interest. The music schools were the main address to
learn music for many of those “outsiders”, which showed clearly that the schools
brought a novel group of people into the music community, thereby music gained a
new ground.
Secondly, contrary to what is commonly tought, the musical interactions between
Muslim and non-Muslim musicians were very limited in the process of music
training. Non-Muslim groups of musicians revealed a very conservative character in
255
that they were almost always educated musically either within the family or
through their religious institutions. Muslim musicians, on the other hand, revealed a
more liberal pattern in music education and had more connections with the non-
Muslim music teachers.
An analysis of the personal connections among musicians, revealed Zekai Dede (d.
1897) and his son Ahmet Irsoy’s (d. 1943) position in music clearly. Based on the
statistical outcomes, it is possible to argue that the family was the most active as
well as fertile transmitter of Ottoman music from the middle of the nineteenth
century to the Republican era. Without failing to notice nevertheless other critically
significant actors. The network analysis revealed alternative names such as Sheikh
Cemal Efendi (d. 1937), who was barely discernible in the music history. He was an
authority particularly in the religious repertoire and played an important role in
transmitting it to younger generations of musicians.
Historiography of Ottoman music has produced a dense literature on the reformulation
of music in the 1930s. Historians have focused on this cultural shift,
which was the nationalization, thereby, the Turkification of music. The novelty of
this thesis is that it puts the music schools at the center of attention. The study
considered their emergence by 1908 as the first critical change in music after the
turn of the century. In accordance with that, the radio broadcast (1927) marked the
second turning point in music for the thesis. Why these institutions were worthy of
re-consideration was that they offered insights into the argument of music as a
“profession” and were instrumental in understanding change and continuity in
music.
The way the study approached the music schools suggested a new perspective in
which more emphasis was given to their socio-historical basis. In contrast to
conventional historiography, I sought to discover the reasons for their emergence.
Based on the statistical findings, the thesis linked the reorganization of the Ottoman
bureaucracy in 1909 with the appearance of the music schools in Istanbul in order
to explain the concentration of the former officials in those schools. More precisely,
256
out of the political crises, music schools emerged as a whole new ground in music. I
have argued that, apart from music training, they functioned to advance the status
of musicians in society. The former officials while integrating gradually to the music
market through the institutional identity of those schools, gained prestige and
status as musicians. Thus, these schools were significant as they represented the
initial steps towards professionalism, which would be achieved fully with the radio
broadcast in Istanbul (1927) and Ankara (1938).
The thesis attempted to shed light on the advantages of radio as well as the
problems it created to better grasp the musicians’ career paths towards
professionalism. From the standpoint of this study, the radio, just as music schools
stood at the center of the transformations in music. Yet, both had a different
impact on music. Under the state protection, music was recognized as a profession
with a regular income and predictable working hours. The positive effect was that
the musicians’ longing for status and respect was fulfilled. On the negative side,
radio deliberately eliminated the differences between musicians and homogenized
them. The uniformity, which gradually became a model for musicians, was
essentially against the idea and practice of music as financially rewarding. The
majority of musicians in the sampling did not build such a relationship with music,
which I emphasized throughout the thesis. In fact, the change defined in the career
paths of musicians should be interpreted as Ottoman music losing ground while
transforming itself into something new. I argued that what was obtained was not
equivalent to what was lost and it could not be recovered. For these reasons, I
considered radio as the second watershed in music history.
Furthermore, the impact of music schools and radio broadcast was also critical from
a gender perspective. Before the emergence of music schools and the radio, the
study regarded “stay-at-home” as a norm for the majority of women musicians. The
most positive effect, as I pointed out, these institutions helped musicians to gain a
proffssional status in society and the increased visibility of women musicians
supported the argument.
257
One of the contributions of this thesis is to emphasize musicians that were largely
forgotten by the historiography. The biographical studies on Bülbülî Salih Efendi (d.
1923), İhsan Aziz Bey (d. 1935), Mabeynci Faik Bey (d. 1937) and Sheikh Cemal
Efendi (d.1937) remain to be written. The thesis pointed out that more biographical
material would enable us to better understand the sociocultural changes in music
and would bring new perspectives to the field. I also have to admit that this
collective biography study would have been more comprehensive, if we had more
biographies particularly on the non-Muslim musicians and musicians who
performed in various music venues of Istanbul.
Eventually, the present thesis offered an unconventional approach to the musicians
that lived from the late Ottoman to the Early Republican years in Istanbul. To
uncover the social history of music, the study attempted to connect the musicians’
responses to changes that the Ottoman state underwent. I hope that this research
will bring about new questions that would lead to new research initiatives and in
this way may have an impact on the future studies dealing with social history in the
late Ottoman period.
258
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APPENDICES
A. The Full List Of Musicians Under Study
ID NAME
BIRTH_
PLACE
DATE_
BIRTH
DATE_
DIED
58 Fehmi Efendi (Cerrah) Islimye ? ?
81 Ibrahim Efendi (klarnet) ? ? ?
32 Behlul Efendi Fatih ? 1895
206 Hadi Bey (Yenikoylu) Yenikoy ? 1920
161 Salih Efendi (Kemani, Bulbul) Istanbul ? 1923
196 Mehmed Esref Efendi Istanbul ? 1930
224 Ata Bey Istanbul ? 1934
152 Rifat Bey (Miralay) Istanbul 1820 1896
189 Zekai Dede Eyub 1824 1897
162 Salim Bey Uskudar 1830 1894
11 Ali Bey (Enderunlu, Kel) Tosya 1831 1899
140 Bolahenk Nuri Bey Karagumruk 1834 1911
26 Aziz Dede Uskudar 1835 1905
104 Mahmut Celaleddin Pasa Vefa 1839 1900
170 Mehmet Sadi Bey Cengelkoy 1839 1904
220 Husameddin Efendi (Kasiyarik) Istanbul 1840 ?
61 Haci Kirami Efendi
Mevlevihane
kapi 1840 1909
23
Astik Aga (Asadur
Hamamciyan) Ortakoy 1840 1913
124 Mustafa Servet Bey Istanbul 1840 1918
143 Osman Efendi (Hafiz, Musullu) Musul 1840 1920
123 Mustafa Nuri Bey
Kahramanma
ras 1841 1906
168 Servet Bey (Mustafa) Istanbul 1841 1917
29 Aziz Efendi (Medeni) Medine 1842 1895
279
24 Ataullah Efendi Topkapi 1842 1910
46 Emin Efendi, Notaci Beylerbeyi 1845 1907
183 Vasilaki Efendi Silivri 1845 1907
245
Mehmed Cemal Efendi
(Zakirbasi) Eyup 1847 1916
154
Sabri Bey (Mehmet,
Tophaneli) Istanbul 1848 1914
37 Celaleddin Dede Efendi Topkapi 1849 1908
193 Ziya Yusuf Pasa Istanbul 1849 1929
103 Leyla Hanim (Saz) Istanbul 1850 1937
2 Afet (Hapet) Misirliyan Kumkapi 1850 1922
22 Asim Bey (Giriftzen)
Yenisehir,
Fener 1851 1929
218 Refik Bey (Manyasizade) Istanbul 1853 1910
72 Huseyin Fahreddin Dede Besiktas 1853 1911
219 Ahmed Celaleddin Dede Gelibolu 1853 1946
3 Ahmet Arifi Bey Istanbul 1855 1908
209 Ali Riza Bey (Vefali) Bayezid 1855 1923
51 Edhem Efendi (Santuri) Bayezid 1855 1926
86 Ismail Fenni Ertugrul Tirnova 1856 1926
28 Aziz Efendi (Hafiz) Istanbul 1856 1929
188 Yusuf Efendi (Hafiz) Hanya 1857 1925
115
Melekzet Efendi (Mustafa
Nuri) Istanbul 1857 1937
182 Tatyos Efendi (Keseryan) Ortakoy 1858 1913
79 Husnu Efendi (Enderunlu) Uskudar 1858 1919
107 Mehmet Bey (Kanuni) Beykoz 1859 1927
178 Sevki Bey Fatih 1860 1891
52 Edhem Efendi (Ibrahim) Fatih 1860 1934
102 Leon Hanciyan Efendi Haskoy 1860 1947
91 Izzet Bey Isanbul 1861 1894
280
19 Arif Bey (Kanuni) Istanbul 1862 1911
221 Said Özok Istanbul 1863 1945
147 Rahmi Bey (Mehmet) Istanbul 1864 1924
9 Ahmet Rasim Bey Fatih 1864 1932
41 Cemil Bey (Hanende) Fatih 1865 1926
87 Ismail Hakki (Muallim) Balat 1865 1927
142 Nuri Seyda Bey Istanbul 1866 1901
40 Cemil Bey (Sekerci, udi) Sehzadebasi 1867 1928
116 Memduh Efendi Ayvansaray 1868 1938
63 Hasan Sabri Bey Uskudar 1868 1922
5 Ahmet Avni Bey (Konuk) Istanbul 1868 1938
100 Kirkor Culhayan Efendi Kumkapi 1868 1938
14 Ali Galip Turkkan Istanbul 1868 1949
246 Nuri Korman Ortakoy 1868 1951
62 Hamit Husnu Bey Istanbul 1868 1952
222 Ziya Santur Kanlica 1868 1952
4 Ahmed Bey (Selanikli) Selanik 1869 1926
13 Ali Rifat Cagatay Ayvansaray 1869 1935
6 Ahmet Irsoy Eyub 1869 1943
30 Azmi Bey ? 1869 1944
112 Mehmet Suphi Ezgi Uskudar 1869 1962
27 Aziz Mahmud Bey Istanbul 1870 1929
38 Cemal Efendi (Hafiz) Kasimpasa 1870 1937
101 Lemi Atli Uskudar 1870 1945
149 Rauf Yekta Bey (Mehmet) Aksaray 1871 1935
243 Yusuf Dagseven Uskudar 1871 1945
56 Faiz Kapanci Selanik 1871 1950
110 Mustafa Nezih Albayrak Vefa 1871 1964
42 Cemil Bey (Tanburi) Aksaray 1872 1916
146 Ovrik Efendi (Kazasyan) Kumkapi 1872 1936
1 Abdulkadir Bey (Tore) Kasgar 1872 1945
281
35 Bogos Efendi (Asdikzade) Ortakoy 1872 1945
94 Karnik Garmiryan Beyoglu 1872 1947
148 Rakim Elkutlu Izmir 1872 1948
133 Nevres Bey Malatya 1873 1937
34 Bimen Sen (Dergazaryan) Bursa 1873 1943
95 Kazim Uz Draman 1873 1943
247 İhsan İyisan Uskudar 1873 1946
73 Huseyin Fahri Tanik Lofca 1873 1953
177 Sevket Gavsi (Ozdonmez) Istanbul 1873 1954
169 Servet Yesari (Mehmet) Istanbul 1874 1943
199 Hafiz Sami Filibe 1874 1943
39 Cemal Efendi Izmir 1874 1945
179 Sukru Senozan
Suleymaniye,
Ist. 1874 1954
77 Huseyin Husnu Sonat Selanik 1875 ?
92 Izzettin Humai Bey
Fatih,
Nisanca 1875 1950
98 Kemal Emin Bara Sehzadebasi 1876 1956
163 Sami Bey (Udi) Aksaray 1876 1939
83 İhsan Raif Hanim Beyrut 1877 1926
192 Ziya Bey (Bestenigar) Uskudar 1877 1923
106 Mehmet Baha Pars Bursa 1877 1953
111 M. Nuri Duyguer Kadikoy 1877 1963
16 Ali Riza Sengel (Eyyubi) Eyub 1878 1953
18 Ali Salahi Bey Istanbul 1878 1945
76 Huseyin Sadeddin Arel Vefa 1878 1953
80 Hosep Efendi (Ebeyan) Uskudar 1878 1966
210 Tevfik Kolayli Bodrum 1879 1953
47 Ekrem Bey Fatih 1879 1934
82
Ibrahim Efendi (Avram Hayat
Levi) Halep 1879 1948
282
248 Nurullah Kilic
Merkez
Efendi 1879 1975
20 Arsak Efendi (Comlekciyan) Gedikpasa 1880 1930
17 Ali Riza Bey (Kaptanzade) Kanlica 1881 1934
125 Mustafa Sunar Draman 1881 1959
8 Ahmet Nuri Canaydin Fatih 1881 ?
50 Emin Yazici Tophane 1881 1945
74 Huseyin Kazim Tav Fatih 1881 1957
254 Osman Efendi (Guvenir) Istanbul 1882 ?
244 Kemal Gurses Sehremini 1882 1939
68 Haydar Gunemek Fatih 1882 ?
174 Semsettin Ziya Bey Vefa 1882 1925
113 Mehmet Yuru (Nasibin) Kanlica 1882 1953
109 Mehmet Munir Kökten Eyub 1882 1969
44 Cevdet Refik Kalpakcioglu Fatih 1883 1959
129 Nail Okte Cihangir 1884 ?
130 Nazim Bey (Ama, Kanuni) Uskudar 1884 1920
215 İhsan Aziz Bey Istanbul 1884 1935
121 Musa Sureyya Uskudar 1884 1932
173 Sekib Bey Istanbul 1884 1938
119 Muhiddin Erev Seres 1884 1952
99 Kirkor Berber (Udi) Istanbul 1884 1959
84 Isak Varon Gelibolu 1884 1962
141 Nuri Halil Poyraz Inebolu 1885 1956
54 Fahri Kopuz Istanbul 1885 1968
21 Artaki Candan (Terziyan) Selanik 1885 1948
45 Durru Turan Fatih 1885 1960
96 Kemal Niyazi Seyhun Akka 1885 1967
137 Nubar Efendi (Kanuni) Istanbul 1885 ?
7 Ahmet Mukerrem Akinci Fatih 1885 1940
167 Serkis Suciyan (Kemani) Besiktas 1885 1943
283
64 Hasan Fehmi Mutel Beylerbeyi 1885 1964
184 Yasar Okur
Kocamustafa
pasa 1885 1966
236 Ali İcinger (Bulbul Ali) Edirne 1886 1976
90 Istepan Gedik Konya 1886 1970
171 Suphi Ziya Ozbekkan Istanbul 1887 1966
118 Mildan Niyazi Ayomak Safranbolu 1887 1947
59 Fehmi Tekce Fethiye 1888 ?
25 Avni Aktunc Eyub 1888 1961
238 Izak Elgazi Izmir 1889 1950
157 Sahak Hocasar Besiktas 1889 1946
120 Muhlis Sabahattin Adana 1889 1947
60 Fehmi Tokay Uskudar 1889 1958
145 Osman Sevki Uludag Bursa 1889 1964
136 Nigar Galip Hanim (Ulusoy) Cibali 1890 1966
151 Resat Erer Istanbul 1890 1940
164 Sedat Oztoprak Konya 1890 1942
202 Kadi Fuad Efendi Istanbul 1890 1920
201 Hikmet Bey Istanbul 1890 1923
12 Ali Galip Alnar Istanbul 1890 1951
53 Faik Mis ? 1890 1959
67 Haydar Tatliyay Drama 1890 1962
15 Ali Riza Sagman Unye 1890 1965
117 Memduh Imre Topkapi 1891 1956
208 Munir Mazhar Kamsoy Uskudar 1891 1973
181 Tahsin Karakus
M. Kemal
Pasa 1892 1959
10 Aleko Bacanos Silivri 1892 1950
176 Serif Muhiddin Bey Istanbul 1892 1967
150 Refik Fersan Sehzadebasi 1893 1965
231 Sevki Sevgin Istanbul 1893 1969
284
88 Ismail Hakki Nebioglu Besiktas 1893 1975
33 Besim Serif Ustunoz Uskudar 1893 1970
69 Hayri Yenigun Kumkapi 1893 1979
97 Kemal Batanay Fatih 1893 1981
57 Faize Ergin Istanbul 1894 1954
213 Refik Talat Bey (Alpman) Bebek 1894 1947
249 Huseyin Efendi (Sebilci) Istanbul 1894 1975
237 Sadettin Kaynak Fatih 1895 1961
234 Fatma Enise Can (Elizavet) Istanbul 1896 1975
31 Bedriye Hosgor Konya 1896 1968
194 Cevdet Kozanoglu Kasimpasa 1896 1986
190 Zeki Arif Ataergin Besiktas 1896 1964
232 Ahmet Yatman Istanbul 1896 1973
65 Hasan Guler Drama 1896 1984
105 Marko Colakoglu Nigde 1896 1957
159 Sadi Erden Kiziltoprak 1896 1963
197 Hafiz Burhan
Kocamustafa
pasa 1897 1943
228 Ahmed Celal Tokses Marmaris 1898 1966
186 Yesari Asim Ersoy Drama 1898 1992
175 Serif Icli Besiktas 1899 1956
160 Sadi Isilay Laleli 1899 1969
158 Sadettin Heper Eyup 1899 1980
240 Fahire Fersan Divanyolu 1900 1997
233 Mustafa Zeki Caglarman Fatih 1900 ?
66 Hasan Tahsin Parsadan Kars 1900 1954
187 Yorgo Bacanos Istanbul 1900 1977
128 Munir Nurettin Selcuk Sariyer 1900 1981
139 Nurettin Cemil Sangan Sehzadebasi 1900 1979
135 Nezahat Adula Findikli 1901 1959
70 Hirant Emre, Kenkiloglu Adapazari 1901 1978
285
205 Mesud Cemil Aksaray 1902 1963
204 Rusen Ferit Kam Beylerbeyi 1902 1981
43 Cevdet Cagla Acibadem 1902 1988
198 Hayri Tumer Zeyrek 1902 1973
252 Naci Tektel Istanbul 1902 1975
172 Suleyman Erguner SultanSelim 1902 1953
165 Selahaddin Pinar Uskudar 1902 1960
195 Gavsi Baykara Yenikapi 1902 1967
71 Hulusi Gokmenli Besiktas 1902 1975
131 Nebahat uner Bebek 1903 1955
223 Zuhdu Bardakoglu (Santuri) Tophane 1903 ?
132 Neveser Kokdes Drama 1904 1962
239 Mebruke Cagla Istanbul 1904 1982
122 Mustafa Nafiz Irmak Istanbul 1904 1975
55 Faruk Arifi Istanbul 1904 ?
203 Fuat Sorguc Uskudar 1904 1970
48 Ekrem Karadeniz Rize 1904 1981
212 Omer Altug Sivas 1905 1965
138 Nubar Tekyay Istanbul 1905 1955
216 Burhanettin Okte Istanbul 1905 1973
225 Halil Can Uskudar 1905 1973
185 Yekta Akinci Sarachane 1905 1980
144 Osman Nihat Akin Bakirkoy 1905 1959
211 Fatma Nihal Erkutun Amasya 1906 1989
235 Emine Fulya Akaydin (Panfilia) Istanbul 1906 1975
49 Emin Ongan Edirne 1906 1985
108 Halil Dikmen Istanbul 1906 1964
126 Mustafa Sirin Fatih 1906 ?
180 Sukru Tunar Edremit 1907 1962
226 Hakki Derman Kabatas 1907 1972
191 Zeki Duygulu Beyrut 1907 1974
286
89 Ismail Safa Olcay Amasya 1907 1969
251 Nefise Ozses Istanbul 1908 ?
227 Laika Karabey Asir, Yemen 1908 1989
155 Sabri Suha Ansen Bursa 1908 1990
256 Mualla Anil Edirne 1909 1985
207 Mustafa Caglar Midilli 1910 1961
217 Izzettin Okte Istanbul 1910 1990
156 Sadi Hosses Istanbul 1910 1994
127 Muzaffer İlkar Istanbul 1910 1987
257 Feyzi Aslangil Bayezid 1910 1965
78 Huseyin Tolan (Hafiz) Karaferye 1910 1976
200 Mehmet Resat Aysu Tekirdag 1910 1?
153 Sabiha Tekad Beylerbeyi 1911 ?
36 Cahit Gozkan Fatih 1911 1?
230 Vecihe Daryal Beylerbeyi 1912 1970
242 Vedia Tunccekic Istanbul 1912 1982
229 Haldun Menemencioglu Uskudar 1912 1972
85 Ismail Baha Surelsan Bursa 1912 1998
253 Rustu Eric Iskece 1912 ?
93 Kadri Sencalar Eyup 1912 1989
250 Salahaddin Demirtas Kasimpasa 1912 1997
166 Semahat Ergokmen Uskudar 1913 2008
241 Nezahat Soysev Istanbul 1915 ?
134 Nevzat Akay Kanlica 1915 1969
214 Vecdi Seyhun Kanlica 1915 1984
75 Huseyin Mayadag Selanik 1915 1965
255 Rustu Sardag Halep 1915 1994
114 Melahat Pars Fatih 1918 2005
287
VITA
Personal Information:
First Name & Last Name: Onur Öner
E-mail (1): onuroner@sehir.edu.tr
E-mail (2): onur.ioa@gmail.com
Education:
2000 – 2006 …………………………. BA in Philology, Istanbul University, Turkey
2011 – 2013 …………………………. MA in History, Istanbul Sehir University, Turkey
Work Experience:
2009 – 2010 ……………… Greek Language Instructor at the School of Languages in
the Turkish Land Forces Command, Istanbul
2011 – 2013 ………………. Graduate Assistant at Istanbul Sehir University
2013 – 2016 ………………. TUBITAK project (No. 113K156) fellowship, Armenians in
the Ottoman Bureaucracy (1839-1909). Project supervisor: Prof. Abdulhamit Kırmızı
Publications:
1. İskender Goçe’nin İstintâknâmesi: Pindus Dağları’nda Bir Eşkıyânın İzini Sürerken,
Kebikeç, No. 34, 2012, pp. 25-40.
2. Book review of Bob Van Der Linden, Music and Empire in Britain and India:
Identity, Internationalism, and Cross-Cultural Communication, Palgrave Studies in
Cultural and Intellectual History series. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013,
published in Dîvân: Disiplinlerarası Çalışmalar Dergisi, Vol. 23, No. 44, 2018/1, p.
209-212.
288
3. Book review of Güneş Ayas, Mûsiki İnkılâbı’nın Sosyolojisi Klasik Türk Müziği
Geleneğinde Süreklilik ve Değişim, Doğu Kitabevi, İstanbul, 2014, published in
Insight Turkey, Vol. 17, No. 1, 2015, p. 243.;
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