with Heghnar Watenpaugh hosted by Chris Gratien and Emily Neumeier While architectural historians are often concerned with the design, inception, and construction of buildings and objects, writing the history of architecture also includes the study of renovations, modifications, and changes in use of such spaces embedded in political and social contexts. In this episode, Heghnar Watenpaugh revisits her 2004 monograph entitled The Image of an Ottoman City in a discussion of Ottoman interventions into the historical urban geography of the empire's third largest city, Aleppo, and talks about methods of reconstructing the lived urban environment of a city in Ottoman Syria. Stream via Soundcloud PARTICIPANT BIOS Heghnar Watenpaugh is an Associate Professor of Art History at University of California-Davis. (see academia.edu)Chris Gratien is a doctoral candidate at Georgetown University researching the social and environmental history of the Ottoman Empire and the modern Middle East. (see academia.edu)Emily Neumeier is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Art History at the University of Pennsylvania researching art and architecture in the Ottoman world. (see academia.edu) CREDITS Episode No. 157 Release Date: 31 May 2014 Location: Beyoğlu, Istanbul Editing and Production: Chris GratienMusical Excerpts: Sabah Fakhri - Ya Mal ash-ShamImages courtesy of Heghnar Watenpaugh (sources below) This episode is part of our series on Urban Space in the Ottoman World IMAGES Heghnar Watenpaugh during fieldwork at the Dervish Lodge of Shaykh Abu Bakr, 1999G. J. Grelot, Panorama of the city of Aleppo, from Viaggio e giornale per parte dell’Asia di quattro anni incirca fatto da ma Ambrosio Bembo Nobile Veneto (Travels and Journal through Part of Asia during about Four Years Undertaken by Me, Ambrosio Bembo, Venetian Noble). Venice, ca. 1676. from James Ford Bell Library, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Ms. 1676 fBe, fol. 10–11.Aleppo from Southwest, with citadel visible (Source: LOC) Khusruwiyya and Adliyya mosques (Source: Sauvaget, Alep) Great Mosque of Aleppo, collapsed minaret (Source: BBC) PUBLICATIONS OF HEGHNAR WATERNPAUGH Additional papers available for download on academia.edu Monograph The Image of an Ottoman City: Imperial Architecture and Urban Experience in Aleppo in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 2004), xxii, 278 pp., 57 illus. (Winner of the Spiro Kostof Book Award from the Society of Architectural Historians, 2006) Journal Articles “Architecture without Images,” International Journal of Middle East Studies, Roundtable: Studying Visual Culture, edited by Zeynep Çelik, 45:3 (August 2013). 585-588. “The City’s Edge: Rethinking Sources and Methods for the Study of Urban Peripheries,” Annales Islamologiques 46 (2012): 129-144, special issue: “L’exercice du pouvoir à l’âge des sultanats. Production, manifestation, reception,” [Exercising Power in the Age of the Sultanates: Production, Manifestation, Reception], edited by Sylvie Denoix and Irene Bierman. “An Uneasy Historiography: The Legacy of Ottoman Architecture in the Former Arab Provinces,” Muqarnas: An Annual on the Visual Culture of the Islamic World, vol. 24 (2007), special issue: Historiography and Ideology: Architectural Heritage of the “Lands of Rum,” ed. Gülru Necipoglu and Sibel Bozdogan. 27-43. “Deviant Dervishes: Space, Gender and the Construction of Antinomian Piety in Ottoman Aleppo,” International Journal of Middle East Studies 37:4 (2005): 535-565. “A French Humanist in the Islamic City: The Chevalier d’Arvieux (1635-1702), Merchant and Consul in Aleppo,” Thresholds: The Critical Journal of Visual Culture 27 (2004): 18-22. Book Chapters “The Cathedral of Ani, Turkey: From Church to Monument,” in Sacred Precincts: The Religious Architecture of Non-Muslim Communities across the Islamic World, ed. Mohammad Gharipour. Leiden: E. J. Brill, in press. “Art and Architecture,” in Women and Islamic Cultures: Discip