Evliya Çelebi - Traveler on behalf of the Sultan
- Written by Portal Editor
The son of Dervis Mehmed Zilli Efendi and his wife, a lady-in-waiting from the Caucasus, Evliya Çelebi was born on March 25, 1611 in the Unkapanı district of İstanbul.
Due to the very good living conditions as the son of the first court goldsmith Sultan Ahmed I and the associated income of the father, who was also called Derviş Mehmed Ağa or Derviş Mehmed Ağa-i Zıllî and was a well-known personality in Istanbul at the time, Evliya Çelebi had one carefree childhood. After the Ottoman conquest of Istanbul, his ancestors, originally from Kütahya, had moved to Istanbul.
These living conditions allowed Evliya Çelebi to study at the Medrese Şeyhülislâm Hâmid Efendi, after which he received the post of Koran reciter in the Seraglio. This is how he met Keçi Mehmed Efendi, who was responsible for his further education in Arabic grammar, music, calligraphy and in-depth study of the Koran at the Sultan Palace High School. Evliya Çelebi has always shown himself to be a very teachable student, who is talented and continued his education on his own.
Evliya Çelebi began to travel the first parts of Ottoman Empire
His travels, which he documented extensively in writing, continued to lead, as a result of which he increasingly became a writer of travel books (Seyahatnâme) and reported as a contemporary witness about the Ottoman world of the late 17th century. He became a messenger for the army commanders in Epirus, worked as an accountant for the governor-general in Erzurum, which enabled him to travel to Azerbaijan and Georgia. Evliya Çelebi did not return to Istanbul for a short time until 1648, but traveled to Damascus a little later. In 1651, Evliya Çelebi traveled through Rumelia, staying in Sofia and Silistra for a long time and, after the Battle of St. Gotthard, also visited the city of Buda in Hungary and Lake Balaton. Between 1665 and 1670 he traveled through Austria, Albania, Dalmatia, Thessaly, Crete, Komotini and Thessaloniki. Evliya Çelebi died probably in 1683 on his last great journey, which took him to Egypt.
Evliya Çelebi describes the location and orientation of fortresses
However, all of these descriptions are made without any real systematic approach. These descriptions can also be assigned less to a main scientific topic. He just describes the things that seem essential to him, sometimes consciously describing in such a way that the reader would like to continue reading with interest, in short, there are also exaggerations, just as he doesn't take the numbers so precisely.
Ten volumes of his logbook "Seyahatnâme"
The author was probably not aware that these works are still one of the most important sources for life and culture in the Ottoman Empire of the 17th century. Words of the same root can often be found in different cultures, which he recorded and thus provide linguists with information about migrations and language mixing today. He describes the special features by including his feelings, even comments and thoughts.
The ten volumes of his logbook "Seyahatnâme"
1. Istanbul and Surroundings (1630)
2. Anatolia, the Caucasus, Crete and Azerbaijan (1640)
3. Syria, Palestine, Kurdistan, Armenia and Rumelia (1648)
4. Iraq (1655)
5. Russia and the Balkan Peninsula (1656)
6. the Hungarian campaigns (1663/64)
7. the Austrian Empire, the Crimea and again the Caucasus (1664)
8. Greece, again the Crimea and Rumelia (1667-1670)
9. the Hajj (pilgrimage) to Mecca (1671)
10. Egypt and Sudan (1672)
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