Damat Ali-Paša's Turbeh
History
After the withdrawal of the Turkish army in 1867, the turbeh served as a storage building and then as a museum of old weapons and trophies. During the bombing of Belgrade in 1915, the portal and one part of the niche where the original inscription was located, were completely destroyed. Soon after that, in 1915, the Austrians began reconstructing the turbeh. The work on the final reconstruction were undertaken by the Municipality of Belgrade in the 1930s. In place of the old, broken plaque with the inscription, a new plaque was set in the niche above the portal.
Research and scholarship
Over the past hundred years, a number of scholarly research publications have appeared relating to Damat Ali-Paša's turbeh. A former clerk of the Turkish embassy in Belgrade, Теvdih Remzi, managed to restore the text of the damaged memorial plaque above the portal of the turbeh and identified the structure as the burial place of Hadži Mustafa Pasha, a Belgrade vizier, murdered in 1801. During his stay in Belgrade during the First World War, 1916–17, Remzi corrected this assertion, with a more precise rendering of the text from the plaque as: "With the effort of Hadži Mustafa Paša, Šehid Ali Paša's turbeh was repaired", thus identifying the turbeh as the memorial to the eminent Turkish commander Damat Ali-Paša. This identification challenged the widespread belief that the turbeh was the burial place of Kara Mustafa Pasha, who, in 1683, after the defeat near Vienna, was murdered in Belgrade by the order of sultan Mehmed IV. During research conducted in 1936–37, and following restoration works on the turbeh conducted by Меhmed Delić on the burial site in the turbeh, a broken scope was found with an inscription on it from 1818/19. The restored text from the scope proves that the structure was originally erected at the burial site of Damat Ali-Paša, and that it was rebuilt in 1818–1819. In a 1977 study of Ottoman architecture in Belgrade, Divan Đurić-Zamolo argued that the structure dated back to 1716–1717; and the architect I. Zdravković concurred with this view. The largest and most detailed study to date was published by Marko Popović in 1991, and demonstrates that the turbeh was erected in 1784 as the memorial to Izzet Mehmed Pasha.
References
- ^ "Belgrade Fortress; Welcome". Retrieved Dec 3, 2016.
- ^ Mirjana Marković, Unknown inscription from Damad Ali-Paša`s turbeh in the Upper town of the Belgrade fortress, GGB XXXVIII, Belgrade 1991. p. 71. http://www.mgb.org.rs/images/godisnjaci/1991-XXXVIII/061-070Godisnjak%20grada%20Beograda%201991.pdf
- ^ Divna Đurić-Zamolo, Belgrade as an oriental town under the Turks 1521–1867, Belgrade 1977. p. 75.
- ^ Маrko Popović, The turbeh in the Upper town of the Belgrade fortress, GGB XXXVIII, Belgrade 1991. p. 61. http://www.mgb.org.rs/images/godisnjaci/1991-XXXVIII/061-070Godisnjak%20grada%20Beograda%201991.pdf