A Monumental Struggle to Preserve Hagia Sophia
In Istanbul, secularists and fundamentalists clash over restoring the nearly 1,500 year-old structure
- By Fergus M. Bordewich
- Photographs by Lynsey Addario
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2008, Subscribe
Zeynep Ahunbay led me through the massive cathedral's cavernous nave and shadowy arcades, pointing out its fading splendors. Under the great dome, filtered amber light revealed vaulted arches, galleries and semi-domes, refracted from exquisite mosaics depicting the Virgin Mary and infant Jesus as well as long-vanished patriarchs, emperors and saints. Yet the overall impression was one of dingy neglect and piecemeal repair. I gazed up at patches of moisture and peeling paint; bricked-up windows; marble panels, their incised surfaces obscured under layers of grime; and walls covered in mustard-colored paint applied by restorers after golden mosaics had fallen away. The depressing effect was magnified by a tower of cast-iron scaffolding that cluttered the nave, testament to a lagging, intermittent campaign to stabilize the beleaguered monument.
"For months at a time, you don't see anybody working," said Ahunbay, a professor of architecture at Istanbul Technical University. She had directed a partial restoration of the building's exterior in the late 1990s and is regarded by conservators as its guardian angel. "One year there is a budget, the next year there is none," she said with a sigh. "We need a permanent restoration staff, conservators for the mosaics, frescoes and masonry, and we need to have them continuously at work."
Greeting her with a deferential salute, a workman beckoned us to accompany him through a massive wooden door, half hidden in shadow beneath an overhead gallery. Following the beam of his flashlight, we made our way across a pitch-dark antechamber and up a steep cobblestone ramp littered with fallen masonry and plaster. The incline may have been built to enable the sixth-century builders to cart construction materials to the second-story gallery. "There are problems here too," said Ahunbay, pointing to jagged cracks in the brick vaulting overhead.
Visible for miles across the Sea of Marmara, Istanbul's Hagia Sophia, with its giant buttresses and soaring minarets, symbolizes a cultural collision of epic proportions. (The name translates from the Greek as "Sacred Wisdom.") The structure stands not only as a magnificent architectural treasure but also as a complex accretion of myth, symbol and history. The landmark entwines the legacies of medieval Christianity, the Ottoman Empire, resurgent Islam and modern secular Turkey in a kind of Gordian knot, confounding preservationists who want to save it from decay and restore its former glory.
In addition to the obvious challenges—leaks, cracks and neglect—an invisible menace may pose an even greater danger. Istanbul sits squarely atop a geologic fault line. "There most definitely are seismic threats to Hagia Sophia, and they are great," says Stephen J. Kelley, a Chicago-based architect and engineer who consults on Byzantine churches in Turkey, the former Soviet Union and the Balkans. "One tremor and the whole thing could come falling down."
"Conservationists are very concerned about Hagia Sophia," says John Stubbs, a vice president of the New York-based World Monuments Fund, which contributed $500,000 and raised another half million in matching funds for urgent repairs during the last decade."It's an unbelievably complex structure. There's the roof, the stonework, marble, mosaics, paintings. We don't even know all that's in play in there. But we do know that it requires ongoing, vigilant attention. Hagia Sophia is an utterly unique building—a key monument in the history of architecture and a key symbol of the city of Constantinople right through to our time."
Constantinople, as Istanbul was known for centuries, owed its importance to the Emperor Constantine, who made it the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire in A.D. 330. Although an earlier basilica of the same name once stood on the site, today's Hagia Sophia was a creation of the Emperor Justinian, who rose from humble origins to become the greatest of the early rulers of the empire that historians would call Byzantium. During his 38-year reign, from 527 to 565, Justinian labored to bring harmony to the disputatious factions of the Eastern Orthodox Church; organized Roman law into a code that would influence European legal systems down to the present; and set his armies on the march, enlarging the empire until it reached from the Black Sea to Spain. He also erected hundreds of new churches, libraries and public edifices throughout the empire. Hagia Sophia, completed in 537, was his crowning architectural achievement. Until the 15th century, no building incorporated a floor space so vast under one roof. Four acres of golden glass cubes—millions of them—studded the interior to form a glittering canopy overhead, each one set at a subtly different angle to reflect the flicker of candles and oil lamps that illuminated nocturnal ceremonies. Forty thousand pounds of silver encrusted the sanctuary. Columns of purple porphyry and green marble were crowned by capitals so intricately carved that they seemed as fragile as lace. Blocks of marble, imported from as far away as Egypt and Italy, were cut into decorative panels that covered the walls, making the church's entire vast interior appear to swirl and dissolve before one's eyes. And then there is the astonishing dome, curving 110 feet from east to west, soaring 180 feet above the marble floor. The sixth-century historian Procopius marveled that it "does not appear to rest upon a solid foundation, but to cover the place beneath as though it were suspended from heaven by the fabled golden chain."
Magnificent as it was, Hagia Sophia contained none of its splendid figurative mosaics at first. Justinian may have acceded to the wishes of his wife, Theodora (who reputedly began her career as an entertainer and prostitute), and others who opposed the veneration of human images—later to become known as "iconoclasts." By the ninth century, those who worshiped such images, the "iconodules," gained ascendancy, commissioning artists to make up for lost time. Medieval pilgrims were awed by the mosaics, ranging from depictions of stylized angels to emperors and empresses, as well as a representation of an all-seeing Christ looming from the dome. Many of these images are lost; those few that remain are unique, says art historian Natalia Teteriatnikov, former curator at Dumbarton Oaks, in Washington, D.C., where a center for Byzantine studies is housed. "They cover almost the entire history of Byzantium, from 537 through the restoration of the icons and on up to imperial portraits from the late 14th century. No other Byzantine monument covers such a span of time."
For more than 900 years, Hagia Sophia was the most important building in the Eastern Christian world: the seat of the Orthodox patriarch, counterpart to Roman Catholicism's pope, as well as the central church of the Byzantine emperors, whose palace stood nearby. "Hagia Sophia summed up everything that was the Orthodox religion," says Roger Crowley, author of 1453: The Holy War for Constantinople and the Clash of Islam and the West. "For Greeks, it symbolized the center of their world. Its very structure was a microcosm of heaven, a metaphor for the divine mysteries of Orthodox Christianity." Pilgrims came from across the Eastern Christian world to view its icons, believed to work miracles, and an unmatched collection of sacred relics. Within the cathedral's holdings were artifacts alleged to include pieces of the True Cross; the lance that pierced Christ's side; the ram's horns with which Joshua blew down the walls of Jericho; the olive branch carried by the dove to Noah's ark after the Flood; Christ's tunic; the crown of thorns; and Christ's own blood. "Hagia Sophia," says Crowley, "was the mother church—it symbolized the everlastingness of Constantinople and the Empire."
In the 11th century, the Byzantines suffered the first in a series of devastating defeats at the hands of Turkish armies, who surged westward across Anatolia, steadily whittling away at the empire. The realm was further weakened in 1204 when western European crusaders en route to the Holy Land, overtaken by greed, captured and looted Constantinople. The city never fully recovered.
By the mid-15th century, Constantinople was hemmed in by Ottoman-controlled territories. On May 29, 1453, after a seven-week siege, the Turks launched a final assault. Bursting through the city's defenses and overwhelming its outnumbered defenders, the invaders poured into the streets, sacking churches and palaces, and cutting down anyone who stood in their way. Terrified citizens flocked to Hagia Sophia, hoping that its sacred precincts would protect them, praying desperately that, as an ancient prophesied, an avenging angel would hurtle down to smite the invaders before they reached the great church.
Instead, the sultan's janissaries battered through the great wood-and-bronze doors, bloody swords in hand, bringing an end to an empire that had endured for 1,123 years. "The scene must have been horrific, like the Devil entering heaven," says Crowley. "The church was meant to embody heaven on earth, and here were these aliens in turbans and robes, smashing tombs, scattering bones, hacking up icons for their golden frames. Imagine appalling mayhem, screaming wives being ripped from the arms of their husbands, children torn from parents, and then chained and sold into slavery. For the Byzantines, it was the end of the world." Memory of the catastrophe haunted the Greeks for centuries. Many clung to the legend that the priests who were performing services that day had disappeared into Hagia Sophia's walls and would someday reappear, restored to life in a reborn Greek empire.
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Comments (32)
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The article in error. The Fall of the Roman Empire in 1453 was an empire that endured for 1500yrs. Claiming otherwise is Western European revisionist history. The so called "Byzantine" Empire never existed aside from being coined western scholars.
Posted by Daniel Homiak on November 18,2012 | 09:53 PM
Where does all the money go that is collected from entrance feesAt $15 for the millions of visitors each year it would seem that some major continual preservation project could be funded. The same could to asked regarding other nearby monuments?
Posted by Michael on June 12,2012 | 06:16 AM
It is interesting that your article has mentioned the capture of Istanbul by Turks with the use of a lot words putting attention to violence. But when it comes to invasion by the crusaders it only mentions "The realm was further weakened in 1204 when western European crusaders en route to the Holy Land, overtaken by greed, captured and looted Constantinople. The city never fully recovered."
It was well documented that the devastation caused by Catholic christians was no match to that of Turks. So It should have deserved a much bigger mention. Here I mentioned it. With 4th Crusade, Christians invaded Constantinople and have done unspeakable crime. They have murdered, raped, ruthlessly violated the city's churches and monasteries, destroying or stealing many of the ancient works. Venetians were good at stealing while French was into drinking wine, violating nuns, murdering Orthodox clerics and destroying the city. Hagia Sophia was not spared from these vandalizations.
I thought the article wouldn't be complete without it.
Posted by Deveci on November 26,2011 | 04:40 PM
How sad to read some of the commenter's attitude towards the Turkish nation. Hagia Sophia will and should remain as a museum not a place of worship, a great population of Turkish Republic are Muslims. We do not want arguments, all we need and want is a common ground, which is common sense. Wake up people! This is 21st century, and let us enjoy being in this magnificent structure! I love breathing equally in the Sultan Ahmed Mosque and in Saint Sophia, inhale the peace. Hagia Sophia needs tender loving care not conflicting ideas...
Posted by T.G. on May 28,2011 | 07:29 PM
Ethan...
Your post about K.S area schools caught my attention... since the Turks won Istanbul just as righteously as any Christian military victory, it seems wrong to at all expect them to sponsor the Haga Sophia as a Christian church...especially in light of how mosques have been treated in the nearby countries where christian nations retook territory. Interesting that the Crusaders famously looted and disrespected the church, whereas the victorious Sultan personally forbid looting, desecration, or destruction of the marvelous scred site. That being said, a joint use idea, where both the main general faiths with a strong vested interest historically; Christian and Muslim... might help with maintenance of the building, as well as allow for sacred use.... which is what it was meant to host. The Kansas City Institute of Arts might be a school which could provide a base of studies, if you are strongly interested in the architectural and art aspects, of the Byzantine culture. It's a great little place, is the impression I have of the school... with a richness in how they connect with History. All The Best...
Posted by Peter on September 15,2010 | 06:36 PM
I support 100% any effort to restore the Hagia Sophia...but NOT as a tourist attraction. The Hagia Sophia is neither secular or Muslim...it is Christian. It rightfully belongs to the Orthodox church! The Muslims stole Hagia Sophia from Orthodox Christians back in the 15th Century, and then profaned and violated it! If Turkey wants to be taken seriously as a potential member of the EU, then they need to give back what was stolen from the Church, so that the Hagia Sophia may be proplerly and lovingly restured and then used for its original purpose...a spiritual center for Christianity! Turkey, if they are truly committed to human rights, and respecing all regardless of ethncity or religion, needs to right this horrible wrong that was committed long ago.
Posted by Sabrina on June 27,2010 | 12:58 AM
The Hagia Sophia is, undoubtedly, one of the world’s greatest cultural heritage of human beings nowadays.I have learned from this article that the Hagia Sophia was built in the year 537,which means it has such a long history of more than 1400 years. And I think it’s a miracle that the Hagia Sophia can suffer from various wars, revolutions and changes in the river of history.Maybe it’s no more splendid as what it was, but it’s still of great significance to not only the Turk but also the Christians all over the world. I think it’s really inadvisable for the debate between the secular Turks and the Christians around whether to bring the Hagia Sophia into a mosque. Actually, we should focus on the recovery of the Hagia rather than whether change it into a mosque. As the geographer mentioned in the article, Istanbul sits squarely atop a geologic fault line. "There most definitely are seismic threats to Hagia Sophia, and the potential ganger are great. As a result, what come first should we do is raise the people all around the world to do recovering work to protect this great cultural and historical heritage of humans-the Hagia Sophia.
Posted by YuanPan on December 13,2009 | 01:05 AM
Beautiful"Sophia"Cathedral, really besutiful! In fact, the church set religion, philosophy, aesthetics, literature, sculpture, painting, music, art forms, etc.as a whole. It is that people create and change the world of dynamic activities in the realization of reality, It is also the ctystallization of human wisdom and valuable cultural heritage. But the church was originally created as a vehicle for religion, so they were damaged bu the radical. However,according to historical materialist point of view, the emergence of religion is also a progressive history. The emergence of the church is the physical embodiment of religion.
The Church of Hagia Sophia was built in 537 years, a collection of Roman wisdom, which is a symbol of the Byzantine period, until the Muslim army conquered Istanbul. Then the church became a mosque, and it becomes the Ottoman Empire's most famous mosques.
Needless to say, it is one of the most beautiful buildings in the legacy of history. The great,spectacular, magnificent Sophia Cathedral is the world's only example of religious architecture,is a producct of convergence of Eastern and Western cultures. this great building is one of the survived legacu in the architectural history of mankind.We must protect the legacy of our ancestors.Let our future generations could see their achievements.
Posted by He yanwei on December 7,2009 | 07:31 PM
From the Internet, I know that Hagia Sophia is the starting point passing the torch of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games in Istanbul. As one of the world's top ten desirable churches, the exterior seems less spectacular than Sultanahmet Camii - another famous structure in Istanbul, but the history of Hagia Sophia is more time-honored that Sultanahmet Camii could never compare with. Thank you for this article!
Posted by Lv Xin on December 5,2009 | 12:36 AM
very good
Posted by hh on December 3,2009 | 09:04 AM
Force of Arms”, in latin referred to as “Vi et Armis” or “Armorum VI”, in which ownership has always been established by force; originally by the "Force of Arms and latterly by the force of law. We are all descendants and have become the successors in title to the goods taken from our ancestors by "Force of Arms". As stated, the Hagia Sophia belongs rightfully to the Turkish Government and therefore they are under no moral obligations.
Posted by Williams on May 29,2009 | 11:46 PM
"Force of Arms" is a completely legitimate way of transferring ownership of territory,treasure and artifacts etc, even when good guys lose. Just ask the Americans they are experts on "Force of Arms". The Hagia Sophia belongs rightfully to the Turkish Government and therefore they are under no moral obligations.
Posted by Williams on May 28,2009 | 10:27 PM
The Agia Sophia is a place of worship. I traveled to Istanbul and I saw the present state of the building and this is sad. Why should a building of this magnitude and history be falling apart. Shame on you Turkey for neglecting this site and leaving the hundreds of other Byzantine sites to simply fall apart. The European Union should take action and the world alike to bring and end to Byzantine history which is being threatened because of neglect and stupidity. LETS DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!
Posted by John Dedes on May 18,2009 | 02:11 PM
To the Byzantinist: Please remember that Byzantine Empire is a term invented by the French Historian Montesqueu in 18th Century. The Ionian Megeran Byzas established the first settlement and the polis in 6th century BCE and Montesqueu adapted the name from that. The city was named Constantinopolis after the Roman Emperor Constantine made it the Roma Capital in 313CE and built the first Saint Sophia Church. The Emperors and the population of Constantinopolis identified themselves as Romans. There is no written or archeological record of them ever calling themselves as the Byzantine Empire, Byzantines, Hellen, or Greek. Quite the contary, being a multi deity culture, many Hellens strongly reacted to the Roman State imposed Christianity and there were several returns to Hellinic Gods (Such as the Emperor Julian the Apostate period when the Christian religion olmost perished).
Posted by Demir Karsan on January 8,2009 | 07:18 PM
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