The present study includes 82 Ottoman public drinking fountains (çeşme) from different regions of present-day Bulgaria, built in the period from fifteenth to the late nineteenth century. The monuments аre considered in a historical and cultural perspective and are subjected to historical-typological and functional-artistic analysis.
Prior to the Ottoman conquest in the late fourteenth century there were not public drinking fountains in the Bulgarian lands. It was the Ottomans who — due to the prescriptions of Muslim faith — introduced such fountains to the newly conquered territories.
Such fountains were initially attached to mosques. Afterwards, however, the mosque fountains served as a pattern for the erection of public drinking fountains in other locations such as marketplaces and neighborhoods, as well as alongside the main routes in order to supply drinking water for travelers and livestock. As for the late eighteenth century the Bulgarians started to adopt the Ottoman fountain tradition and to erect such structures in settlements populated by Bulgarians only.Introduction
List of Ottoman public fountains under study [in English]
Emergence, spread and typology of Ottoman public fountains in the Bulgarian lands
Fountains at mosques
Fountains attached to other Ottoman buildings
Town fountains (located in neighborhoods, squares and marketplaces)
Countryside fountains
Importance and specifics of fountain inscriptions
Bulgarian public fountains of the Revival period
Bibliography
Glossary of Turkish-Arabic-Persian terms and names
Illustrations
Annotation of the illustrations (in English)
Summary (in English)
Details | |
Publisher | Grand Mufti's Office of the Muslim Denomination in Republic of Bulgaria |
Language | Bulgarian |
Pages | 170 |
Illustrations | b/w and color figures |
Binding | hardback |
ISBN | 978-619-7406-24-5 |
Creation date | 2020 |
Size | 24 x 16 cm |