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The houses of Phanar, revisited

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Philliou, Christine

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eng

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Koç University Press

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Philliou, Christine. "The Houses of Phanar, Revisited." In All Phanar Is Here: Household, Neighborhood, Court, and the City, edited by Namık Günay Erkal, Firuzan Melike Sümertaş, and Haris Theodorelis-Rigas, 18–28. Koç University Press, 2026.

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All phanar is here: household, neighborhood, court, and the city
(Koç University Press, 2026) Ballian, Anna; Benaki Museum; Coşkun, Seray Türkay; TED University; Erkal, Namık Günay; TED University; Mackridge, Peter; University of Oxford; Majuru, Adrian; The Bucharest Municipality Museum; Papageorgiou, Nikos; Yeniköy Panagia Greek Orthodox Church; Pechlivanos, Miltos; Freie Universität Berlin; Philliou, Christine; University of California; Uçar, Başak; TED University; Vintilă, Constanţa; Nicolae Iorga Institute of History; Xydakis, Markos; Freie Universität Berlin; Erkal, Namık Günay; TED University; Sümertaş, Firuzan Melike; ASCSA, The Gennadius Library; Theodorelis-Rigas, Haris; Albay, Aymesey (English-Turkish | Turkish-English); Gümüş-İspir, Can (English-Turkish); Theodorelis-Rigas, Haris (Greek-English)
This volume accompanies the exhibition All Phanar Is Here: Household, Neighborhood, Court, and the City, held at the Koç University Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations (ANAMED). In addition to bringing together the full range of textual and visual materials presented in the exhibition—including contextual essays, original historical excerpts, images and books drawn from numerous collections, drawings of specially-produced architectural and urban models, and views from three-dimensional reconstructions—it also serves as a major scholarly resource featuring original essays by leading researchers on Phanariot material culture. The essays trace the Phanariots—those beys appointed as rulers (princes or voivodes) of Wallachia and Moldavia during the “long” eighteenth century of the Ottoman Empire—their families, and the extensive networks of power surrounding them, together with their spatial and cultural traces. Beginning from the houses they inhabited in Phanar, Istanbul, and extending along the routes leading to Wallachia and Moldavia and back to the Bosphorus, the contributions examine the Phanariots through a variety of themes. Particular attention is devoted to their unique and privileged position within the Ottoman imperial system, their intertwined existence with local elites in Wallachia and Moldavia, their patronage practices and ceremonial culture, their literary and musical production, and their traces within the urban landscapes of Istanbul and Bucharest. While making the Phanariots and the heritage they left behind more visible within the fields of history and art history, this exhibition book also discusses the methodological and curatorial challenges involved in reconstructing, reuniting, and exhibiting the fragmented and dispersed remains of their material culture.

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